Savings From Around the Regions
Find out how innovations such as eSignatures are helping teams save money while boosting quality and service in every KP region.
What can your team do to improve its own business literacy? And help patients make better decisions about their care?
Find out how innovations such as eSignatures are helping teams save money while boosting quality and service in every KP region.
How one behavioral health team improves care and helps save $1 million by educating patients about Emergency Department use.
When the Ridgeline Behavioral Health team members in Colorado decided to tackle outside medical costs, even they were surprised at how their small touch on a huge issue could result in such significant savings.
Team members identified two ways they thought they could have an impact—including finding out which of their patients were being seen frequently in the Emergency Department—while helping their patients get appropriate care.
“We know from evidence-based medicine that if patients are seeking care in the Emergency Department for mental health issues, it’s unlikely to provide a long-term improvement in symptoms,” explains Amy Martin, manager of Ridgeline Behavioral Health.
Team members began the project by researching which outside hospitals Kaiser Permanente prefers to have members and patients use. Armed with the new information, they created a flier explaining the options and shared it with the rest of the staff, who then shared it with patients. This way, when patients did access care, they were more likely to go to a facility that KP has a contract with and thus, cut costs.
The results were remarkable. The team’s patients’ visits to emergency departments decreased by 8.25 percent, which in turn reduced ED costs by 26 percent. The total impact for 2016: $1 million in soft-dollar savings.
Quality or service improvement projects often lead to more cost-effective care. Be sure you track the financial impact of your team’s performance improvement work and log it in UBT Tracker.
These tools will help:
What can your team do to work with other departments to improve patients' experiences?
When you’re busy with day-to-day patient care, tending to your personal career goals isn’t easy.
What can your team do to identify areas that need improvement? What else could your team do to shorten the time patients have to wait for service?
Format:
PPT
Size:
39 slides
Intended audience:
UBT co-leads, sponsors, UBT consultants, improvement advisors
Best used:
This PPT features presentations from three teams on creating a UBT culture: Rancho Cordova eye surgery team, Sunnyside (Northwest) emergency department and Northwest regional laboratory. Use to learn how three teams used UBT and performance improvement tools to create a team culture and get results.
Presentations from three UBTs that successfully created team cultures and achieved strong results. They were presented at a June 24, 2013 virtual UBT fair.
A team in South San Francisco that improved the surgery-scheduling process for patients and teams in San Diego that took a hard look at their service scores demonstrate what things look like when teams truly consider what's best for the patient as they make decisions.
What happens when teams truly walk a mile in their patients’ shoes? They often discover their own actions are making that mile a rocky one for patients—and as a result make huge breakthroughs in the way they deliver care.
In the case of South San Francisco’s multidepartmental pre-admission team, observing their processes from the other side of the gurney spurred them to dramatically streamline the pre-surgery and admitting process for patients. With the member at the forefront of their thinking, the team members turned a two-inch-thick packet of confusing, redundant information into a streamlined, one-page checklist. And a funny thing happened—while redesigning the process to help patients, the team improved the way it works.
“Patients would often get confused and weren’t sure what the next step in the process was,” says Brian Tzeng, MD, the Peri-operative Medicine director. “We realized we didn’t have a clear path for the patient to follow.”
Other teams throughout Kaiser Permanente are making similar realizations, framing their performance improvement work by asking the question, “What’s best for the patient?” If a possible solution doesn’t work well for the member and patient, then there’s more brainstorming to be done. These teams are taking the Value Compass to heart—organizing their work not just around the four points but examining what they’re doing from the patient’s perspective.
What does that mean for frontline teams? At the San Diego Medical Center, the Emergency Department sees up to 300 patients every 24 hours. Physicians and staff members are always on the go, delivering on the ultimate bottom line—saved lives. What could be more important? Clinical quality is high; patients are seen in a timely manner and the rate of unscheduled return visits is good.
Yet the results of a recent patient satisfaction survey bothered the team. The department scored well overall, but their patients gave it only 63 percent approval on one question: While you were in the Emergency Department, were you kept informed about how long the treatment would take?
In South San Francisco, Dr. Brian Tzeng, who’s an anesthesiologist, and others on the team say that working on the project through the unit-based team allowed them to understand each others’ roles and responsibilities better—and also gave them an opportunity to hear and contribute an opinion from that perspective.
“One of the great benefits of this group was it was an outlet for multiple providers at different levels to voice their concerns and actually be heard,” Dr. Tzeng explains. “The greatest frustration for many individuals is we all had great ideas but didn’t know how to make that happen. We realized through this group we had a means to make those changes.”
Dr. Tzeng is certain the team’s accomplishments are the result of every team member’s commitment to working out the best solution in the patient’s best interest. There were no politics, just concern for the member.
“To us, this is not a job,” says Debbie Taylor. “We come here to serve a patient.”
And what about Caballero’s initial concern, that patients weren’t getting enough advance notice about when they have to be at the hospital? The team has been slowly chipping away on that as well. In October, they expect to start giving patients two days’ advance notice of their arrival time at the hospital.