Teen Interns Jump-Start UBTs
UBT members at the Modesto Medical Center were initially skeptical that teenage summer interns could help them get the ball rolling on projects. But working with the interns made them believers.
UBT members at the Modesto Medical Center were initially skeptical that teenage summer interns could help them get the ball rolling on projects. But working with the interns made them believers.
How did one UBT in Georgia zoom from Level 1 to Level 4 in just 10 months? Get some strategic tips on moving up the Path to Performance quickly and building a strong team.
Sometimes the best way to spread effective practices is to spread experienced people. That’s what happened when the Alpharetta Ob-Gyn UBT in Georgia zoomed from Level 1 to Level 4 in just 10 months after two nurses from two different high-performing UBTs transferred there at the same time.
Jane Baxter and Ingrid Baillie had been UBT co-leads at two different clinics when they each got a new job with the Alpharetta Ob-Gyn department. They both drew on their experiences to guide their new team when they became co-leads at Alpharetta. “We knew the steps in the process and what to expect,” says Baxter, the department’s charge nurse.
Fledgling teams should begin with small performance improvement projects, they say. “We started with the low-hanging fruit,” says Baillie, RN, a member of UFCW Local 1996. “You don’t need to reach for the stars right out of the box.”
And, says Baillie, there’s no need to look any further than Kaiser Permanente’s organization-wide and regional priorities to find plenty of ideas for performance improvement projects—and a wealth of data that is being collected regularly.
“KP makes no secret about what is important to it,” says Baillie. “From that alone, you have all the data you need.”
For instance, the Alpharetta team’s first efforts were to improve clinic start time and get a second blood pressure test for patients with high initial readings. “These are important to KP, and they helped us gel as a team,” says Baillie.
“Small wins help develop confidence,” says Baxter. Now the team is taking on more complex cross-departmental initiatives, such as trying to make available online the big packet of paperwork patients need to complete before a first Ob-Gyn visit.
Getting physicians involved also has been part of this UBT’s success. You won’t find doctors who think UBTs are just for clinic staff on this team, says Baxter.
“Our providers are very invested,” she says. “They take minutes at meetings. We are all on an equal playing field.”
Jane Baxter, Susan.J.Baxter@kp.org, 770-663-3163
Ingrid Baillie, Ingrid.M.Baillie@kp.org, 770-663-3163
Susan Harwood, Susan.Harwood@kp.org
In this era of health care reform, Medical Group Administrator Deborah Royalty stresses the critical role of unit-based teams and their sponsors in Kaiser Permanente's success.
Unit-based teams’ union co-leads can help their teams transform the care experience for KP members, patients—and caregivers. These tips can build the skills to do just that.
Format:
PPT
Size:
1 Slide
Intended audience:
LMP staff, UBT consultants, improvement advisers
Best used:
This PowerPoint slide highlights a call center team that improved employee morale with fun, healthy diversions. Use in presentations to show some of the methods used and the measurable results being achieved by unit-based teams across Kaiser Permanente.
This PowerPoint slide highlights a call center team that improved employee morale with fun, healthy diversions.
Format:
PowerPoint
Size:
42-slide deck
Intended audience:
Those interested in learning what a top health care innovator has learned from her work in Great Britain's National Health Services (NHS) system.
Best used:
The slide deck was presented by Helen Bevan, chief of service transformation at the NHS Institute for Innovation and Improvement, the largest government-sponsored health care system in the world. Use to educate staff members, managers and physicians on how to motivate change.
This PowerPoint presentation was delivered by Helen Bevan, chief of service transformation at the Institute for Innovation and Improvement, part of Great Britain's National Health Services, at the March 2012 Union Delegates Conference.
Format:
Word document
Size:
8.5" x 11"
Intended audience:
UBT co-leads
Best used:
Help new members feel like part of the team by following this checklist.
This tool provides UBT co-leads with a list of actions that need to take place to effectively on-board a new team member.
Format:
PDF
Size:
8.5" x 11"
Intended audience:
Frontline managers, employees and physicians
Best used:
Check in with your team after a shared event that needs a debrief—and explore takeaways to improve everyone's experience.
These tips explain when having a team-based review of an event is appropriate, and five steps to take to be sure that review is successful and helps lead to better outcomes.
Helen Bevan's presentation on how the health care industry can use lessons from social movements to inspire change.
The purpose of the Unit-Based Team (UBT) Toolkit is to supply job aids, tools and templates for unit-based team co-leads to use in leading their teams as they engage in performance improvement and learning. The toolkit is organized into nine sections. This is the overview section.