Communication

Sustaining Change Checklist

Submitted by Julie on Wed, 01/22/2014 - 16:15
Tool Type
Format
Running Your Team
Keywords
tool_sustainingchange-checklist

This checklist identifies factors that play an important role in helping teams sustain the changes of their performance improvement projects. Use these questions to spark discussion.

Non-LMP
Non-LMP
Needs period at end of attribution sentence at bottom--other possible changes tk
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Sustaing Change Checklist

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5" x 11" 

Intended audience:
Unit-based team co-leads and sponsors, UBT consultants

Best used:
Use this list of questions to generate discussion in your team before starting a test of change; these thought-provoking questions are from the British National Health Service’s Institute for Innovation and Improvement. 

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Word Search: Finding Your Team's Balance

Submitted by Beverly White on Fri, 01/17/2014 - 13:43
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Format
hank38_wordsearch

Use this word search to unlock key words and phrases that describe a busy workplace—and what to do when you feel like you're juggling. From the Winter 2014 Hank.

Tyra Ferlatte
Tyra Ferlatte
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Word Search: Finding Your Team's Balance

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Frontline workers, managers and physicians

Best used:
Use this word search to unlock key words and phrases that describe a busy workplace—and what to do when you feel like you're juggling.

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Nowhere to Go but Up

Submitted by Andrea Buffa on Tue, 01/14/2014 - 14:17
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Request Number
sty_San Rafael_HIM team_AB
Long Teaser

Some departments glide effortlessly into becoming high-performing teams. Not so for the San Rafael Health Information Management team.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Notes (as needed)
I don't like the photos of this team that we have in the archive, so I emailed Bob to see if he has any others.
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San Rafael's Health Information Management unit-based team
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Freida Smith, Freida.A.Smith@kp.org, 707-571-2535

Richard Incaviglia, Richard.Incaviglia@kp.org

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Interest-Based Problem Solving

Reaching higher on the Path to Performance means working together and finding solutions, aka, solving problems.

Here are some ideas to get you on your way.

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Interest-based problem solving and sponsorship involvement help team turn itself around
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Some departments glide effortlessly into becoming high-performing teams. Not so for the San Rafael Health Information Management team.

Now at a Level 5 on the Path to Performance, the team had to overcome numerous hurdles to get to where it is today.

“They went through a lot of hell to get there,” says Richard Orlanes, a regional LMP consultant who worked with the team during some of its darkest days. “To see the transformation they made in about a year—it was almost like they fired the old people in the department and brought new people in.”

As recently as 2011, the team members, whose work is to maintain KP’s medical records, were negative and distrustful, their morale was low, and they didn’t participate during UBT meetings.

“You could hear a pin drop at the meetings—nobody said anything,” says Richard Incaviglia, an outpatient ambulatory coder, SEIU UHW member and the team’s labor co-lead. “At one time people even said they wanted to dissolve the UBT.”

Sponsor involvement is key

But instead, the co-leads—with assistance from Joan Mah, the local UBT consultant—reached out to the LMP regional office for help. They brought in Orlanes to observe the department and lead a series of interest-based problem-solving exercises. He also suggested including sponsors in the exercises; when the management sponsor accepted and also brought her boss to the meetings, it sent a message to the team that leadership really wanted to turn things around. To provide a sponsor perspective on the union side, the co-leads involved Kisha Fant, a union partnership representative, and Zachary Adams, a contract specialist.

“Bringing in the sponsor means everything. Her being there told us that this was a serious effort,” Incavigilia says.

The management sponsor, Freida Smith, the Marin/Sonoma HIM director, is now the team’s management co-lead. As she remembers it, she wasn’t so much invited to participate in the problem-solving sessions—she invited herself.

“I stuck my nose in,” Smith says. “I had to step in and assume some responsibility because the sponsor needs to be involved and is ultimately responsible.”

Discussing positions and interests

Smith believes that the turning point for the team came when they discussed their positions and interests with Orlanes as the facilitator.

“We had to decide as a team that there was nothing we could do about what happened in the past,” Smith says, “but we could step out on faith and move forward.”

After working with the LMP regional consultant for several months, the team members were finally ready to start working together on their common interests. They prioritized the issues of communication, trust and honesty, and transparency, and worked to transform the negativity in the department. One of their early tests of change was to introduce a daily 8 a.m. huddle. The team huddles over the phone because half the team members work remotely. After the huddle, Smith sends an email to the whole department summarizing what was discussed.

“Once we started communicating and voicing opinions, and we realized we didn’t need to worry about retaliation, everybody started participating,” Incaviglia says.

On to high performance

Now the team has a long list of successful performance improvement projects under its belt, including a project to reduce the number of medical records that have missing documentation and another to make sure charts are coded within four days or less.

Smith believes that being transparent was the key to success.

“No matter how small or large the issue, be transparent,” she says. “I share every single thing that impacts the team’s day-to-day existence, including the budget.”

These days Smith is not only the management co-lead of the San Rafael HIM team but also the sponsor of a team in Santa Rosa. Her advice for other sponsors of dysfunctional teams? “I think the key is to communicate with the UBT co-leads first and then, if things don’t improve, take it to the whole team.”

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Hank Libs: Feel Like a Juggler?

Submitted by Beverly White on Tue, 01/07/2014 - 11:19
Tool Type
Format
Running Your Team
hank38_hanklibs

Have some fun at your team meeting with this "Hank lib"--and reinforce how important it is to set priorities when you're feeling overwhelmed by to-dos. From the Winter 2014 Hank.

Tyra Ferlatte
Tyra Ferlatte
Have some fun with this Hank Lib, and consider things to keep in mind when juggling work. From the Winter 2014 Hank.
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Hank Libs: Feel Like a Juggler?

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Frontline workers and managers

Best used:
Don't despair—check your toolbox to help set priorities when your "To Do"s become too much.

 

 

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Better, Affordable Care

Request Number
video_better_affordable_care
Long Teaser

When a Patient Mobility team at the Richmond Medical Center in Northern California consistently got patients out of bed and walking, not only did patients heal faster, their average length of stay dropped by a full day. That avoided huge costs for the small community hospital.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Video Media (reporters)
Download File URL
VID-16_BetterAffordableCare/LMP_better_affordable_care.zip
Running Time
2:59
Status
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Flash
Date of publication

Sometimes better care is also the most cost-effective care. That’s what the Patient Mobility team at the Richmond Medical Center in Northern California found out. When team members consistently got patients out of bed and walking, not only did patients heal faster, their average length of stay dropped by a full day. That avoided huge costs for the small community hospital. Watch this story about the team.

 

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Bring Your Team Together

Submitted by Shawn Masten on Wed, 05/01/2013 - 17:15
Tool Type
Format
Running Your Team
poster_huddles_hank35

This poster lists 10 steps to great huddles.

Non-LMP
Tyra Ferlatte
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Bring Your Team Together

Format:
PDF

Size: 
8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Frontline managers and workers

Best used:
Post on bulletin boards, in break rooms and in other staff areas to inspire your team to have awesome huddles.

 

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Word Search: Free to Speak

Submitted by Andrea Buffa on Wed, 05/01/2013 - 17:04
Tool Type
Format
Topics
Taxonomy upgrade extras
wordsearch_free_to_speak

Use this word search to unlock key words and phrases that describe a workplace where everyone is free to speak up.

Non-LMP
Tyra Ferlatte
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Word Search: Free to Speak

Format:
PDF

Size: 
8.5" x 11"

Intended audience: 
Frontline workers, managers and physicians

Best used: 
Print out and share copies of this word search at the start of your next meeting. Team members will look for the words and phrases that express elements of a workplace where everyone feels safe to share their ideas and concerns.

 

 

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hank
lmpartnership.org
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Safe to Speak Up?

Submitted by cassandra.braun on Wed, 05/01/2013 - 16:39
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sty_HANK35_speakingup
Long Teaser

Open communication leads to better patient outcomes and a more engaged workforce, and there are surefire ways to build a culture where people feel free to raise concerns. From the Spring 2013 Hank.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Photos & Artwork (reporters)
Jesus Francisco Reyna, South San Francisco Radiology Tech/CT Lead and SEIU UHW member
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Safe to Speak Up?
Story body part 1

A few months ago, a patient walked from the outpatient clinic to the operating suites at San Francisco Medical Center. He had an infection in his knee that needed to be drained. Paul Preston, MD, was at work and evaluated the man. His condition wasn’t urgent, and he got a bed to wait in.

What happened next is a cautionary tale. The patient’s condition changed—quickly and unexpectedly.

Dr. Preston, who was in charge that day, had moved on and was artfully multitasking on several other matters.

A nurse popped around the corner and interrupted him.

“Dr. Preston, this guy is sick,” she said.

Rapidly changing situations are a part of life in hospitals and clinics. But how they are handled varies wildly, depending largely on whether there is a culture of psychological safety—one where employees can speak up freely and offer suggestions, raise concerns and point out mistakes without fear of negative personal consequences.

Despite volumes of findings linking psychologically unsafe work cultures with poor patient outcomes—up to and including death—the health care industry, including Kaiser Permanente, continues to struggle with creating the culture of open communication that is a key component of safety.

Fortunately, this nurse worked with a physician and in an environment where speaking up is welcomed.

“Boy, was she right,” Dr. Preston recalls. “The patient had become septic in the short time he was there. I was obviously preoccupied, but what she had to say was far more important.”

The need for culture change

Positive exchanges like the one that day don’t yet happen reliably enough.

“I think there is a culture of fear around speaking up,” says Doug Bonacum, KP’s vice president of quality, safety and resource management. “We have indication (of that) from People Pulse scores.” In the patient safety world, Bonacum says, it’s still too common to hear of events with adverse outcomes where someone knew something wasn’t right—but didn’t speak up.

Studies have shown that poor communication among surgical team members contributes to a significant increase in patient complications or death (up to four times as many adverse events). Poor communication is also to blame in more than 60 percent of medication errors nationwide.  

“If I had a magic wand and could change one thing about the health care culture and the way we work together in order to improve patient care, it would be around our ability to speak up and people's willingness to listen and act,” Bonacum says. “I think it’s mission critical for worker and patient safety.”

Unit-based teams, by addressing issues of status and power, instinctive fear of retaliation and more, are helping build a culture where people are able to speak up. Leaders play a critical role in that transformation by actively developing rapport with employees and/or explicitly admitting mistakes and “disavowing perfection.”

“The definition of leadership is creating the condition to allow your team to succeed,” says Dr. Preston, who is the physician safety educator for The Permanente Medical Group. He notes that in aviation, senior pilots are strongly encouraged to tell those working with them, “If you see anything wrong, please let me know as soon as possible.”

Building new habits

A modified version of that practice, a pre-surgery briefing, now takes place in most Kaiser Permanente operating rooms.

“We don’t really want to say in front of the patient, ‘Hey, if I screw up, let me know,’” Dr. Preston says. “So we go around and say our names and what we’re going to do, and it builds confidence.”

The briefing, he explains, “is a conversation to build the group’s knowledge of what they're supposed to be doing, what to expect and watch out for. It sets the expectation that everyone needs to speak up.”

Dr. Preston says holding a briefing is the single most important thing a surgical team can do for patient safety. And debriefing afterward is critical, too, he says: “It's a chance for teams to consolidate what they learn. . . and get more and more reliable.”  

Leaders—physicians, managers, union co-leads and stewards—should model the behavior of speaking up around errors. Creating a blame-free environment, Dr. Preston says, “involves the willingness of leaders to go first in displaying vulnerability. . . by talking about mistakes they made when they wish someone had spoken up.”

Structured conversations help

Putting in place mechanisms that encourage employees to speak up is another way to foster open communication around errors and performance improvement. Such systems also provide a forum where people learn how to express themselves clearly and non-emotionally—and help to reconnect them with the value and purpose of their work.

South San Francisco Radiology’s unit-based team, for example, has created a structured communication system where radiologic technologists are asked to speak up in the moment and “stop the line” when they encounter anything that deviates from the agreed-upon workflow or is a potential patient safety risk. Afterward, they fill out a brief report that captures the event. 

“We made it an obligation for people to speak up,” says radiologic technologist Donna Haynes, the department’s UBT union co-lead and a member of SEIU UHW. “We wanted to empower employees.”

Since implementing the program in April 2012, more than 250 Stop the Line forms have been submitted. As a result, the department has prevented a number of small events from reaching the patient—and has seen a 50 percent reduction of “significant events” from the previous year, incidents in which a patient is incorrectly irradiated, whether it be a wrong body part or a scan is repeated unnecessarily.

The Stop the Line forms are simple and easily accessed in work areas and radiation rooms. They’re not used for punitive purposes; they’re used to track workflow issues that then are addressed by the UBT.

“For us it was a big rush, really trying to empower people to take the time to do what’s right,” says Ann Allen, the medical center’s Radiology director. “Also having trust in the fact that ‘I can submit real data and it will actually implement change.’ ”

Continuous learning

Allen’s comment speaks to another huge benefit to creating an environment where people feel free to voice their ideas and concerns: It makes the difference between an organization that is continuously learning and improving performance and one that is stifling innovation and stagnating.

The link between higher-performing unit-based teams and the ability to speak up is clear.

The People Pulse survey has a set of 12 questions that get at a department’s culture and comprise the Work Unit Index. One typical question is, “In my department or work unit, I am encouraged to speak up about errors and mistakes.” In 2011, the survey found that departments where Work Unit Index scores were highest had better HCAHPs scores, more satisfied patients, fewer workplace injuries, lower absenteeism, and fewer hospital-acquired infections and pressure ulcers. Departments whose Work Unit Index scores were in the bottom quartile consistently had poorer performance in those same areas.

“High-performing teams are clear on the goal…and hold each other mutually accountable for outcomes,” Bonacum says. “That level of accountability to each other is what differentiates them and enables people to say something that lower-performing teams can’t and won’t.”

Once you get to a tipping point, Dr. Preston says, people will look out of place if they aren’t speaking up.

“There's no such thing as a perfect day,” Dr. Preston says. Even good surgeons make errors—routinely—and no system, he says, can eliminate human error entirely. “But the earlier the team can recognize what is called an ‘undesired state’ and trap it, the less severe it is. And this is a huge thing for labor and managers, because we’re all there (in the room). Everybody has eyes and ears. The person who’s engaged has a huge role.”

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When Something Goes Wrong

Submitted by Shawn Masten on Wed, 05/01/2013 - 16:36
Taxonomy upgrade extras
Request Number
sty_HANK35_wrong
Long Teaser

Two Northern California teams discover that to create an environment where people feel free to speak up, a good system is required as well as courageous leaders. From the Spring 2013 Hank.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Photos & Artwork (reporters)
Radiology Oncology UBT members include, from left to right, Radiation Therapist Rebekah Harper, Chief Physician Amy Gillis, Radiation Therapist Jeannie Wong, Director Marcy Kaufman and Radiation Therapist Amy Cate. Harper, Wong and Cate are SEIU UHW members.
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When Something Goes Wrong
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An open, supportive environment is one aspect of a workplace where workers can point out problems when they see them.

But to ensure the support doesn’t evaporate in the stress of a busy day, there needs to be more than the expectation that people will do the right thing. There needs to be a solid system in place that formalizes the commitment to speak up.

A Radiation Oncology team in Northern California knows this firsthand. From the time the South San Francisco Cancer Treatment Center opened in May 2009, its leaders worked to establish a culture that encouraged staff members to speak up when they saw something wrong and to provide input on process improvements. The center didn’t have a clear-cut mechanism for doing this, however; it was fostered through leaders’ encouragement and role modeling.

Then in 2010, a mistake was made—relatively small, but a HIPAA violation: A patient was accidentally given a printout with the personal information of another patient. The member returned the paper to the receptionist, and no lasting harm was done. But it highlighted the fact that staff members needed a way to record process failures, empowering them to address issues large and small, says Marcy A. Kaufman, the center’s Radiation Oncology administrator.

A protocol that calls for submitting a Responsible Report form was already in place for those times when an error reaches the patient. “But we wanted to create something where everyone can give input at all parts of the process,” Kaufman says.

Stop the Line

So the unit-based team created what its members call Stop the Line. If a radiation therapist or anyone else in the department encounters anything that deviates from the workflow or compromises care, he or she first acts to ensure patient safety, if such action is needed—and then fills out the Stop the Line form to document the incident. The focus is not on individual error but on what can be done to improve the system to prevent similar mistakes in the future.

“It’s a chance to look at the system to see if it is doing its job—are the checks and balances working? Or do we need to bring to the UBT and come up with a different workflow?” Kaufman says.

At monthly staff meetings, the team pulls out a binder with the Stop the Line reports and discusses the incidents and any follow-up actions taken. That discussion is important not only as a way to close the loop but also because it demonstrates to staff members that their voices were heard. The forms don’t drop into a black hole never to be heard of again.

“You have to constantly be talking about this to keep the momentum going,” Kaufman says.

The process applies to all staff, including physicians.

“In the field of medicine where, in general, it is quite hierarchical, it’s even more imperative we have a system like this to encourage every member of the department to speak up, regardless of title, to make sure we’re giving the best patient care,” says Amy Gillis, MD, the center’s chief of Radiation Oncology.

Dr. Gillis recalled the wrong-patient information episode. The initial assumption was that one of the medical assistants, who normally handle such paperwork, had made the mistake. This time, however, the culprit was a physician.

Staff members hesitated, Dr. Gillis says, wondering, “ ‘Should I really write up a physician?’ ” As she notes, however, “We all need to have a greater awareness.”

“It really does take everyone’s buy-in to make it happen and be successful,” she says. In this case, what it took to convince staff was input from the physicians themselves, with the doctors saying, “Yes, please write that up.”

Successful practice spreads

Stop the Line has been so popular that the cancer center’s four sister centers in Northern California have adopted the practice.

South San Francisco Radiology also adopted the Stop the Line form and process, adapting it to meet its specific needs. The department does hundreds of thousands of scans a year, from mammograms to basic X-rays to CT scans. With such high volume, radiologic technologists often feel pressure to keep patients moving through in a steady flow.

“We needed to give technicians permission to do the right thing,” says radiologic technologist Donna Hayes, the department’s UBT union co-lead and an SEIU UHW member. “We wanted them to know it’s OK to stop the process for this. I think it helped that it also came from management.”

As at the cancer center, the process is not used in a punitive way. Instead, it’s used as a way to highlight and address glitches in the workflow—not only within the department, but also in other departments.

“We’ve been able to take the data back to the orthopedics chief or take ED-related issues back to ED,” says Ann Allen, the Radiology director. “We funnel back to those departments that are partners so they can help us make changes.”

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Poster: Charting Our Progress

Submitted by Shawn Masten on Fri, 04/26/2013 - 15:26
Tool Type
Format
Content Section
Taxonomy upgrade extras
bb_may_june_chartingprogress

Use this poster, from the May/June 2013 Bulletin Board Packet, to track what your team is working on, and display it prominently so others can learn from your success.

Non-LMP
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Poster: Charting Our Progress

Format:
PDF (color and black and white)

Size:
8.5” x 11”

Intended audience:
UBT members, co-leads and consultants

Best used:
Chart your team's work in progress, and prominently display its success with this interactive poster. Post on bulletin boards, in break rooms and other staff areas.

 

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Workforce Development
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