Caring for the Caregivers
Once a patient is discharged from the hospital and returns home, the burden of care often falls to family and friends. But how do we care for the caregivers? A new initiative looks for answers.
A medical assistant who used to fear computers takes a digital fluency course that empowers her to provide better care for her patients—and her family.
This medical assistant used to fear computers. Now that she’s taken a digital fluency course, she is empowered to provide better care for her patients—and her family. Watch the video and then read more.
Once a patient is discharged from the hospital and returns home, the burden of care often falls to family and friends. But how do we care for the caregivers? A new initiative looks for answers.
Jerry Brown commends our Labor Management Partnership for making the state a better place to live and raise families.
The governor of California issued a proclamation on the 20th anniversary of our Labor Management Partnership, commending everyone involved for making California a better place to live and raise our families.
Voices from the front lines, reflecting on LMP's 20th anniversary—looking back on the past and on to the future.
Mutual respect sustains these National Claims UBT co-leads over the long haul.
These labor and management co-leads show how a focus on the core values of partnership can keep their unit-based team successful.
Su-Xian Hu and Runeet Bhasin make partnership look easy. The telemetry team co-leads at Downey Medical Center in Southern California share a relaxed rapport that belies the time, planning and occasional friction that are part of running a busy inpatient unit.
Together for more than a year, the pair attribute the success of their budding relationship to communication and a commitment to partnership principles—especially consensus decision making. Those core values came in handy recently when a disagreement arose about the best way to educate patients about medications.
Nurses preferred a less overwhelming one-page sheet, but managers wanted to switch to a detailed three-page form that had been adopted by other units in the hospital.
“It was a major issue,” says Bhasin, RN, a staff nurse and member of UNAC/UHCP who is the team’s labor co-lead. “We had to come up with a solution to fulfill management’s needs and labor’s needs.”
At the time of the disagreement, UBT members turned to consensus decision making to determine next steps they all could support. A subsequent test of change resulted in a short-term fix: Nurses used the short form with patients, while the longer handout was provided as a resource guide in patient rooms.
Managing in partnership was a new experience for Hu when she joined the team in April 2016 as assistant clinical director and became a co-lead. She previously had overseen a Kaiser Permanente inpatient nursing unit that was not part of the Labor Management Partnership. Bhasin, a co-lead with two years of experience, served as mentor and coach.
“Runeet was wonderful with helping to bring me onboard,” says Hu, who is also an RN.
Both say LMP training has given them a shared understanding of their roles as co-leads, the purpose of UBTs and how to use consensus decision making. A business literacy class both took proved especially fruitful: With the information they brought back, the team tackled an affordability project that reduced overtime costs by more than $95,000 last year.
“The UBT classes,” says Bhasin, “made me realize the real meaning of partnership, the collaboration of labor and management to work toward the same goal to provide high-quality care and to have a great work environment.”
The pair’s approach seems to be working. Their 75-member UBT is at Level 4 on the five-part Path to Performance, and it has earned accolades for outstanding patient care and gains in workplace safety and affordability.
“We want what is best for patients and for staff,” says Hu. “We might have differences, but we always come together with open and professional communication, sitting down together to solve those issues.”
The Labor Management Partnership often is described as a journey. You never know where it’s going to take you next. But it also has a few rules of the road that help us find our way.
Inspired by the United States Constitution, we take a comic look at the founding of the Labor Management Partnership.
The story behind the creation of our Labor Management Partnership, formed in 1997 after decades of strikes and discontent between Kaiser Permanente and its unions.
The story behind the creation of our Labor Management Partnership, which emerged in 1997 after years of strife between Kaiser Permanente and its unions. Leaders from Kaiser Permanente and some of the key Partnership unions, both past and present, share how they agreed to work collaboratively — a solution that ultimately improved care for members and provided job security for workers. Today, our partnership is the largest and most comprehensive of its kind.