Customer service

How-To Guide: 10-Minute Tools for Service Excellence

The KP Value Compass commits us to delivering the best quality and service at the most affordable price, in the best place to work. And here’s the thing about service—everybody knows how to tell bad from good and good from great.

 

It’s not easy, in the crunch of a busy workday, to give every member and patient great service every time they call or visit. But these three simple tools can help. Each can be learned quickly and can be discussed, used and perfected by your team:

 

Young Patients Need to Refill Their Asthma Meds
  • Identifying asthmatic patients, who haven’t processed refills
  • Contacting in groups of five each week until every patient has been reached
  • Communicating the benefits of inhaled corticosteroids

What can your team do to proactively reach out to patients to help them manage their chronic conditions? 

 

scarrpm Tue, 12/13/2016 - 13:37
Improving Delivery Times for Inpatient Meds
  • Posting laminated cards at med stations of commonly used drugs and where these are regulary stored
  • Delivering drugs 15 minutes prior to adminstration to allow time to be prepared
  • Color-coding bins of new meds to distinguish from a patient’s discontinued meds

What can your team do to plan ahead and prepare in advance to anticipate patient needs?

 

scarrpm Fri, 11/18/2016 - 09:09

The EZ Option of Cash Co-Pays

  • Training staff on how to handle cash, and tracking payments
  • Getting a lock box to safely store cash payments, and reviewing data at monthly meetings
  • Letting other teams know that cash payments are possible

What can your team do to look at the care experience though the eyes of the patient? What else could your team do to make going to the doctor easier for the member? 

 

AIDET by the Letters

Submitted by Shawn Masten on Tue, 10/04/2016 - 16:41
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This sidebar story from the Spring 2012 Hank describes the meaning behind the AIDET acronym and how it can be used to improve customer service.

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Tyra Ferlatte
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Eric Zambrano, left, RN, UNAC/UHCP with Demetria Verna, ward clerk/transcriber, SEIU UHW
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Patients Are Priority #1

Here are some more service resources to help you help your patients.

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AIDET By the letters
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Spelling out patient service
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It's a simple set of five letters, but it can pay big dividends when you're interacting with patients.

Let's spell it out and communicate our best.

Acknowledge—The first letter of the AIDET acronym reminds each staff member or care provider along the patient’s path to acknowledge his or her presence. Making eye contact with a patient or giving the member a smile is all that’s needed.

Introduce—When you identify yourself by name, you change the patient’s visit from an anonymous interaction into a personalized experience.

Duration—A little information goes a long way. Letting patients know how long a visit is expected to take lets them know their time is valued. If a doctor is running late or the lab is behind, letting patients know about the delay and keeping them updated shows respect.

Explanation—Whose body is it? No one likes it when a caregiver starts doing something without telling a patient what they’re doing and why.

Thank you—The last step wraps up the visit by thanking the patient for coming in or for providing the information needed to provide them with excellent care.

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Fontana NICU Opens the Door to Service, 24-7

Submitted by anjetta.thackeray on Tue, 10/04/2016 - 16:20
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Fontana's Neonatal Intensive Care unit improved service by moving to around-the-clock visiting hours.

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Tyra Ferlatte
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Management co-lead Annette Adams
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It Takes a Village

The team believes access is one of the reasons why the facility has above average scores on patient satisfaction surveys.

In June 2011, of the Fontana patients who were asked:

  • 88.89 percent said they were “kept well-informed” of their infant's condition.
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For nearly a year now, the Neonatal Intensive Care unit at the Fontana Medical Center has welcomed parents 24 hours a day, thanks to a unit-based team that put the patients’ needs first.

Since April 5, 2011, parents have been able to stay on the unit with the newest member of the family regardless of the hour and even during shift changes and rounding.

“The belief in family-centered care is put into action here,” says management co-lead Annette Adams, RN. “Nothing should come between parents and babies.”

Team members put themselves in the shoes of the parents whose children are treated on the unit: The distress of having a newborn baby staying anywhere other than right by your side, of having to leave your baby in the hands of strangers, and being told when you could come and see your own child.

Making it better for parents

Keeping the service point on the Value Compass in mind, the team looked inward to tackle the problem of concerned parents lacking 24-hour access to the unit.

The UBT began by researching what it takes to have successful open visitation in the NICU and what the benefits are for members and patients. The team found that many NICUs were not truly open to parents 24 hours a day, as parents were asked to leave during change-of-shift reports and physician rounds.

The UBT concentrated on how to make sure parents could remain, despite the concerns.

Shift reports are done at the bedside. But the NICU is one big room where anyone can hear anything. Team members researched how to solve this problem by asking how other Los Angeles-area NICUs, such as Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, handle shift reports without compromising privacy.

Involved in shift hand-offs

Not only do parents now get to see their babies whenever they desire, they are also asked to participate when the physicians round and during the change of shift hand-off, which gives them the opportunity to meet the nurse assuming care of their baby.

“The belief that family-centered care is an essential part of each family’s experience was the driving philosophy behind the progressive move in visiting policy,” says Sheila Casteel, RN, the NICU team’s labor co-lead and UNAC/UHCP member.  

The representative team members enlisted help from the rest of the unit by introducing the concept through the monthly staff newsletter and giving presentations at staff meetings.

Unit staff members were asked for their ideas about how to overcome barriers—real and perceived. Some of the practices adopted included:

  • moving the staff hand-off huddle outside the unit to the conference room
  • making the relief and admitting nurse available to answer parent questions during hand-offs

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