How to Zoom From Level 1 to Level 4
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.
The Colorado Couriers department is set to save $375,000 in a year after an objection prompts a close look at its use of outside contractors. From the Spring 2014 Hank.
The Colorado Couriers team is busy with 41 Kaiser Permanente facilities, more than 400 non-KP locations, and about 180,000 pickups and deliveries a year.
When it comes to outside contractors, the SEIU Local 105 contract requires that Human Resources provide the union with specific information about outsourcing, including who is doing the work, the affected job classification, the number of hours involved and what facilities were impacted.
That information wasn’t being provided, so Dominic Jones, a courier driver and Local 105 steward, objected.
“I saw that we were contracting out regular courier service, and it didn’t make any sense,” Jones says. “I knew that it was costing the company more money.”
As a result, the unit-based team took a close look at the department’s processes.
Team members collaborated with couriers in Northern California, who had done similar work, and discovered they could hire another employee, improve routes, reduce use of outside contractors—and still save money.
First steps were to work with internal customers to assess their needs, then reconfigure and bring routes in-house that had been contracted out.
They hired an additional employee to reduce overtime and outside courier costs on the weekends, and purchased new technology for central dispatching that enabled better tracking of pickups and deliveries.
Drivers got smartphones to receive information in real time, which made it possible to monitor drivers’ locations using GPS and find the closest driver for an unscheduled pickup.
In addition to new technology, the team worked with the region’s labs to ensure pickup times met the lab workflow.
“I am very supportive of the work our unit-based team has accomplished,” says Jones, who feels his concerns were addressed by the changes. “We are still outsourcing stat work that we can’t get to, but we are in the process of hiring on-call drivers, which will ease that burden.”
The team exceeded its stretch goal and saved an average of $25,577 a month, a cost reduction of 48.2 percent. By the end of 2013, the team’s effort had resulted in a cost savings of $145,165, and projected a savings of more than $375,000 for the following year.
“We had many painful conversations about how to make this work,” says manager Terry Wagner. “But the team’s input was invaluable. Each individual has been a contributor at some point.”
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.
Wondering if your improvements have any dollar signs attached to them? Learn some tips for jump-starting your team's thinking about the financial benefits of performance improvement.
Format:
PDF
Size:
8.5" x 11"
Intended audience:
Unit-based team members, co-leads, sponsors and consultants in all departments that care for patients
Best used:
Share these tips with you team to help plan patient safety improvement projects or review effective patient safety practices.
Looking for a patient safety project but don't know where to start? These seven tips will help get you started.
Oncology unit-based team pays attention when it uses which tubing--and saves $25,000 a year.
Format:
PDF
Size:
8.5” x 11”
Intended audience:
Frontline employees, managers and physicians
Best used:
This poster features information to assist in welcoming new Kaiser Permanente members, and should be posted on bulletin boards, in break rooms and other staff areas.
You may also be interested in:
This poster, which appears in the March/April 2014 Bulletin Board Packet, features information that will help the new members feel welcomed.
This poster, which appears in the March/April 2014 bulletin board packet, features a Northwest team that has improved lab turnaround times.
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.
Even though hay fever is their specialty, the members of this South San Francisco allergy team helped ensure their patients were up to date on their cancer screenings using simple laminated cards and a script.
A poster of the Value Compass, which puts the member and patient at the center of everything we do and is used as a guide for decision making and problem solving.