Icebreaker: Love for Color
Use this meeting icebreaker as a fun way to get people talking about things they love.
Use this meeting icebreaker as a fun way to get people talking about things they love.
This poster shares the slogan "Free to Speak" and has a checklist for comparison of a whiner vs. problem solver. Share it during your team meetings and help build a culture of speaking up.
Simple (but not easy!) ways managers can encourage their employees to feel safe about speaking up.
The 2015 National Agreement includes a requirement that teams have a communications plan. From the Summer 2015 Hank.
Workplace injuries vanish almost entirely after these pharmacy workers find their voice—and begin peer rounding.
Angela Chandler and Nee Tang, Pharm.D., didn’t like what they were seeing.
The team co-leads for the West Los Angeles Ambulatory Care Pharmacy crouched beside Camille Wong, scrutinizing her posture as the pharmacist and UNAC/UHCP member sat typing at her computer.
After a quick huddle, the pair worked together to adjust Wong’s chair until she was sitting in the ideal position to protect her from pain—and a potential injury.
“I didn’t know I could adjust my chair this way. It feels good,” Wong said appreciatively, her feet resting flat on the floor and her legs bent at the appropriate 90-degree angle.
Such peer safety rounds are one of the hallmarks of a dramatic shift in culture for the team, a shift that has built engagement and created a workplace where frontline workers feel confident speaking up. The department went 3½ years without injuries and earned a national workplace safety award earlier this year.
“We’re all in it together, and we’re all here for each other,” says Chakana Mayo, a pharmacy technician and UFCW Local 770 member who is the team’s workplace safety champion.
But the situation was not always so bright.
In 2011 and 2012, the department experienced a spate of workplace injuries. Employees, who spend most of their time on phones and computers, were sometimes reluctant to report pain—including one who suffered a repetitive motion injury so severe that it required two surgeries and time off from work.
“It was really a wake-up call,” says Tang, a pharmacy supervisor and the team’s management co-lead. “We needed to make sure that everyone feels comfortable enough to speak up when they have a problem.”
Designate your work area a Free to Speak zone so that staff members feel free to share ideas and concerns.
Sponsoring five unit-based teams could be a full-time job on its own—but it’s just one of several hats Lynette Harper wears. This slideshow captures a day in her life at work.
Sponsoring five unit-based teams could be a full-time job on its own—but it’s just one of several hats Lynette Harper wears. This slideshow captures a day in her life at work.
This poster showcases some of the accolades Kaiser Permanente has received as a leader in diversity, quality care, community service, technology and innovation—and as a great place to work.
Injuries from needle sticks fell dramatically after a group of nurses ensured their peers had the right supplies and peer training. Now there's a nurse voice on the committee that buys needles for KP.