Best Place to Work

Understanding Change

Submitted by kevino on Sat, 07/10/2010 - 09:01
Tool Type
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Running Your Team
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Understanding Change

Sponsors and leaders have a responsibility to understand the change process and support their colleagues and employees in a caring and respectful manner as they move through the transition. By nature, change is disruptive, even if the change is self-imposed and considered to be positive.

Non-LMP
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Format:
PDF

Size:
One page, 8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Nurses and other Kaiser Permanente caregivers

Best used:
To educate team members about the process of change and how to help patients through that transition.

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Debriefing Tips

Submitted by kevino on Sat, 07/10/2010 - 08:42
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Format
Running Your Team
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Topics
tips_debriefing

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.

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Debriefing Tips

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.

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Communicating With CARE

Submitted by kevino on Sat, 07/10/2010 - 08:37
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Running Your Team
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tips_communicating with CARE

Four important steps that will help ensure good communication with colleagues and KP members alike—and a helpful mnemonic to remember them with.

Tyra Ferlatte
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Communicating With CARE

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Frontline managers, physicians and workers

Best used:
Discuss these concepts for better communications witih colleagues and patients in huddles and at meetings; show you CARE!

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The Case for Unit-Based Teams

Submitted by Paul Cohen on Thu, 07/01/2010 - 15:58
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sty_The Case for UBTs_extract.doc
Long Teaser

Article excerpt from Summer 2010 issue of The Permanente Journal showing the benefits of physician involvement in unit-based teams.

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Includes link to full article in Permanente Journal:
Paul C., do you have art work for what goes with this caption?:
Joseph Imarah, MD, an anesthesiologist at Riverside Medical Center, engages his UBT

http://www.thepermanentejournal.org/current-issue/commentary/114-the-case-for-unit-based-teams-a-model-for-frontline-engagement-and-performance-improvement.html

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The case for unit-based teams
Deck
A model for frontline engagement and performance improvement
Story body part 1

An Internal Medicine team in Ohio improved its workflow and increased from 62 percent to 74 percent the number of diabetes patients with cholesterol levels under control—surpassing the region’s goal—even while coping with a staff shortage.

A medical/surgical unit at Fontana Medical Center, in Southern California, went 23 consecutive months without an incidence of hospital-acquired pressure ulcers—after previously experiencing seven to 10 cases a year.

Colorado’s regional laboratory improved the accuracy of its transfer and tracking records from 90 percent to 98 percent, significantly reducing rework and speeding turnaround times for patients’ lab results.

These outcomes, and hundreds of others across Kaiser Permanente, were the result of performance-improvement projects undertaken by unit-based teams (UBTs)—Kaiser Permanente’s strategy for frontline engagement and collaboration.

Physician involvement in UBTs to date has varied, and generally remains limited. However, based on evidence from across Kaiser Permanente, we believe unit-based teams can help physicians achieve their clinical goals and improve their efficiency and deserve their broader involvement.

How UBTs work

Teams identify performance gaps and opportunities within their purview—issues they can address in the course of the day-to-day work, such as workflow or process improvement. By focusing on clear, agreed-upon goals, UBTs encourage greater accountability and allow team members to work up to their scope of practice or job description. Achieving agreed-upon goals, in turn, promotes continuous learning, productive interaction, and the capacity to lead further meaningful change.

As a strategy for process and quality improvement, UBTs draw on the study of “clinical microsystems” by Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center and the Institute for Healthcare Improvement. “If we want to optimize a system, it's going to be around teams and teamwork, and it's going to cut across hierarchies and professional norms,” says Donald Berwick, MD, president and CEO of IHI and President’s Obama’s nominee to head the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. “Unit-based teams and much better relationships between those who organize systems and those who work in the systems are going to be essential.”

Four kinds of benefits

The focused nature of UBT activities translates to four broad benefits to physicians and patients:

  • Clinical benefits: Saving lives and improving health
  • Operational benefits: Using resources wisely and improving efficiency
  • Member/Patient benefits: Giving a great patient-care experience
  • Physician/team benefits: Improving team performance and worklife

The example below, of a positive clinical outcome in one unit, shows how UBTs use practical, frontline perspective to solve problems.

Simple solutions get results

The Internal Medicine department at Hill Road Medical Offices in Ventura (SCAL) faced a practical challenge: Patients with an initial elevated blood pressure reading need to be retested after waiting at least two minutes—but they often left the office before the staff could do a second test. In fact, the staff was doing needed second checks only 26 percent of the time as of March 2008. 

The team’s simple solution: A bright yellow sign reading, “Caution: Second blood pressure reading is required on this patient,” which employees hang on the exam room door so the physician or staff would be sure to do the test.“The teams come up with good ideas about workflow because these are the folks in the trenches and they see the headaches,” says Prakash Patel, MD. “They share ideas and work out processes that help.”

In just one month, the department’s score on giving second blood pressure tests was 100 percent. Their score on the regional clinical goal of hypertension control went from 76 percent in August 2008 to 79.8 in May 2009, just below the regional goal of 80.1 percent.

"I strongly encourage all chiefs of service to champion the unit-based team in their department by either active participation or as a physician advisor, particularly regarding quality, service and access initiatives," says Virginia L Ambrosini, MD, assistant executive medical director, Permanente Human Resources.

UBTs are taking hold at the right moment for Kaiser Permanente. At a time when health care providers are under pressure to contain costs, maintain quality, and improve service, UBTs have the problem-solving tools to address those issues.

Read the full article, including principles of employee engagement and tips for selecting a performance improvement project.

 

 

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Attendance Incentives

Submitted by kevino on Wed, 06/30/2010 - 05:30
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Keywords
Topics
Taxonomy upgrade extras
Attendance incentives

This list is adapted from material prepared by the National Attendance Program Strategic Planning Incentives task team.

Jennifer Gladwell
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Attendance Incentives

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5” x 11”

Intended audience:
Frontline employees

Best used: 
Share these tips for gaining better attendance with team members in huddles and meetings.

 

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Seven Principles for Work Groups

Submitted by Kristi on Sun, 06/20/2010 - 19:33
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Taxonomy upgrade extras
Seven Principles for Work Groups

A list of seven key principles for effective work groups. Managers and union stewards can refer to it for their joint responsibilities.

Tyra Ferlatte
Tool landing page copy (reporters)

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5 x 11

Intended Audience:
UBT co-leads, managers and union stewards

Best used:
A list of seven key principles for effective work groups. Managers and union stewards can refer to it for their joint responsibilities.

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The Kaiser Permanente Labor Management Partnership: The First Five Years

Submitted by Kristi on Sun, 06/20/2010 - 19:07
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Topics
Content Section
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The Kaiser Permanente Labor Management Partnership: The First Five Years

This case study analyzes the evolution of the Labor Management Partnership at Kaiser Permanente from its inception in 1997 to June 2002 and identifies a set of critical issues and challenges the parties will face in moving forward.

Non-LMP
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KP LMP: The First Five Years

Format:
PDF

Size:
66 pages

Intended audience:
Managers; UBT consultants, co-leads and sponsors

Best used:
This case study analyzes the evolution of the Labor Management Partnership at Kaiser Permanente from its inception in 1997 to June 2002 and identifies a set of critical issues and challenges the parties will face in moving forward.

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MIT Study of LMP 2002-2004

Submitted by Kristi on Sun, 06/20/2010 - 19:07
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Content Section
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MIT Study of LMP 2002-2004

This report analyzes LMP's evolution from 2002 to 2004 and identifies critical issues and challenges moving forward.

Non-LMP
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MIT Study of LMP 2002-2004

Format:
PDF

Size:
53 pages

Intended audience:
Managers; UBT consultants, co-leads and sponsors

Best used:
This report analyzes the KP Labor Management Partnership's evolution from 2002 to 2004 and identifies critical issues and challenges moving forward.

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Helen Bevan on Social Movements: Theory and Practice

Submitted by kevino on Sat, 06/19/2010 - 12:18
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Social Movements: Theory and Practice -- Helen Bevan

Helen Bevan's presentation from the 2009 Union Delegates Conference, April 17-19 in San Jose, California.

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Social movements: theory and practice -- Helen Bevan

Format:
PDF

Size:
70 pages; 8.5 x 11”

Intended audience:
Health workers and professionals interested in improving care

Original use:
From a workshop by Helen Bevan of the British National Health Service Institute for Innovation and Improvement. The workshop showed participants how to:

  • Understand the evidence and make the case for a new way of thinking about health and service improvement
  • Apply 5 key principles for achieving radical change in order to:
    • generate change and improvement by connecting with hearts and minds
    • unleash energy to mobilize large-scale change in a health care setting
    • build a sense of shared commitment to sustain improvement

 

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Applying Social Movements to Health Care Improvement and Reform

Submitted by kevino on Sat, 06/19/2010 - 12:13
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Taxonomy upgrade extras
Applying Social Movements to Health Care Improvement and Reform

Helen Bevan's presentation on how the health care industry can use lessons from social movements to inspire change. 

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Applying Social Movements to Health Care Improvement and Reform

Format:
PDF

Size:
47 pages; 8.5” x 11”

Intended audience:
Health professionals and workers interested in improving care

Best used:
Take these concepts from a plenary presentation by Helen Bevan of the British National Health Service at the 2009 Union Delegates Conference and inspire your team with lessons on innovation and change from social movements.

 

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