Departments

Putting Emergency Room Patients on the Fast Track

  • Setting up a fast track area with four patient rooms at the front of the department
  • Agreeing to use standardized criteria for triage
  • Keeping patients in treatment rooms only while being treated; waiting occurs in the fast track waiting area

What can your team do to identify areas that need improvement? What else could your team do to shorten the time patients have to wait for service?

 

 

Team Makes Parent-Pleasing Improvements
  • Creating more space for storing breast milk
  • Forming a parent support group
  • Installing video cameras so families could see their babies from home 

What can your team do to include the voice of the patient in your improvement work? 

 

Laureen Lazarovici Fri, 07/08/2016 - 17:56

Improving Access by Lowering 'No Show' Rate

Submitted by Sherry.D.Crosby on Tue, 05/17/2016 - 16:43
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sty_kpco_autism_value_compass
Long Teaser

Watch the story of Colorado's Autism and Development Pediatrics UBT, which improved access by reducing the rate of missed appointments.

Communicator (reporters)
Jennifer Gladwell
Editor (if known, reporters)
Sherry Crosby
Photos & Artwork (reporters)
Members of the award-winning Autism and Development Pediatrics UBT in Colorado
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Improving Access by Lowering 'No Show' Rate
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Teamwork leads to a better intake questionniare
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Every quarter, Colorado leadership recognizes a unit-based team that excels at putting our members first while building camaraderie.

The Autism and Development Pediatrics UBT, which started in April 2015, is a classic example of how collaboration can make the care experience even better. Members of this cross-functional team tackled the dreaded ‘no-show’ rate for their area of focus. They zeroed in on making process improvements to significantly lower the rate while also increasing access and member satisfaction.

To see this team in action, watch the video on Inside KP at http://www.insidekpco.net/value-compass-award-improving-access-lowering-no-show-rate. Please note, this link works on KP computers only.

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Why Speaking Up Matters

Request Number
VID-135_Why_Speaking_Up_Matters
Long Teaser

 This award-winning intensive care unit has built a #FreeToSpeak culture with interdisciplinary rounds on patients. Now the team has high morale, low turnover—and its patients suffer fewer hospital-acquired infections.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
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Non-LMP
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VID-135_Why_Speaking_Up_Matters/VID-135_Why_Speaking_Up_Matters2.jpg
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VID-135_Why_Speaking_Up_Matters/VID-135_Why_Speaking_Up_Matters1.zip
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3:15
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"Me Tarzan, you Jane," as the model for doctor-nurse relationships? No thanks! This award-winning intensive care unit has built a #FreeToSpeak culture with interdisciplinary rounds on patients. As a result, the team has high morale, low turnover—and its patients suffer fewer hospital-acquired infections. 
 
 
Produced by Kellie Applen.
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Teamwork Eases Pain of Change

Submitted by tyra.l.ferlatte on Wed, 03/30/2016 - 17:30
Topics
Long Teaser

Getting joint replacements patients in and out of the hospital swiftly is good for the patients and good for Kaiser Permanente--but is a major departure from past practice. See how this unit-based team stepped up to address staff concerns and keep morale high.

Communicator (reporters)
Sherry Crosby
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Notes (as needed)
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Physical therapist Gary Davey, a member UNAC/UHCP, helps patient Kathie Sellers get up and walk soon after her hip replacement surgery.
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See Team Members in Action

Shorter hospital stays for joint-replacement patients helps to:

  • improve clinical outcomes, and
  • reduce costly hospital stays.

It also gets patients where they want to be—home.

Watch how this UBT got together to make it work.

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Faced with a major change in protocol, this med-surg UBT united to help its patients—and its own staff
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The new goal was dramatic: Reduce hospital stays to 23 hours for total joint patients.

Renee Portillo, RN, was worried.

“It was a shocker. Our staff was used to patients going home in two to three days,” says Portillo, former assistant clinical director and management co-lead of the 7 South medical-surgical team at Fontana Medical Center in Southern California.

The accelerated time frame meant that the unit’s nurses, who care for total joint patients following surgery, would have less time to prepare them for discharge. They’d also need to help choreograph care across multiple departments—Orthopedics, the operating room, Physical Therapy, Home Health—from pre-admission to discharge.

Who best to help the team through this change? The team itself.  

“We used our UBT to help change the culture,” Portillo says.

Wave of the future

“We helped our nurses be successful by having them anticipate patients’ needs and prepare them for discharge,” says Enrique Rivero, RN, a surgical nurse and UNAC/UHCP member who is the team’s union co-lead.  

Fontana is among a growing number of hospitals across the United States to offer a combination of shorter hospital stays and more outpatient care for hip and knee replacement patients. The trend is driven by less-invasive surgical techniques, improved pain management and rehabilitation practices, and patients’ desire to return home as soon as possible.

“There were a lot of challenges. A lot of it had to do with bringing people together,” says Mary Hurley, MD, chief of Orthopedics, who championed the new approach. “They all had to buy in and be willing to support this in order to have a successful program.”   

The new approach, which Fontana introduced in January 2014 after months of researching best practices, gets patients walking within hours of surgery and enables them to recover within the comfort of their own homes. The initiative takes advantage of Kaiser Permanente’s integrated model of care and is designed to improve clinical outcomes and reduce costly hospital stays.

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Speak Up, Change a Life

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VID-132_speakup_change_a_life
Long Teaser

Here is a real example of the impact that an empowered worker had on our patients—starting with 8-year-old Lucy Scott.

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Non-LMP
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Non-LMP
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VID-132_Speak_Up_Change_a_Life/VID-132Speak_Up_Change_A_Life%20%283%29.zip
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Here is a real example of the impact that an empowered worker had on our patients—starting with 8-year-old Lucy Scott.

 

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When the Game Changes, Change Your Game

Request Number
VID-133_when_the_game_Changes
Long Teaser

A unit-based team at Kaiser Permanente's Capitol Hill Medical Center in Washington, D.C. helps its department adjust to a big jump in membership--and improves patient care at the same time.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
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Non-LMP
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VID-133_When_the_Game_Changes/VID-133_When_the_Game_Changes_720e.zip
Running Time
3:15
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Released
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This short video shows how a unit-based team at Kaiser Permanente's Capitol Hill Medical Center in Washington, D.C. is adjusting to a big jump in membership—and improving patient care at the same time.

 

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Helping Teams Understand Their Value

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Thu, 01/28/2016 - 13:24
Request Number
sty_annemariemarin_peer advice
Long Teaser

A union partnership representative offers advice on how to help members of unit-based teams realize their power to make decisions and improvements.

Communicator (reporters)
Sherry Crosby
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Photos & Artwork (reporters)
Marin (seated) surrounded by members of the Oncology UBT: UNAC/UHCP members Rosa Camacho, RN (far left) and Gilbert Villadores, RN (far right) and Melody Navarro, RN, department administrator.
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Helping Teams Understand Their Value
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Peer advice from a union partnership representative
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As a union partnership representative (UPR) from UFCW Local 770, Annamarie Marin helps support 72 unit-based teams at the West Los Angeles Medical Center. Last year, she helped the Oncology team overcome low morale to move from Level 2 to Level 4—and it’s now on the cusp of achieving Level 5. Marin recently was interviewed about her role as a UPR by LMP Communications Manager Sherry Crosby.

Q. What experiences helped prepare you for your position?

A. I have been part of UBTs since 2005. I started as a co-lead and then became an executive sponsor. This experience helped me tremendously, because I can relate to the teams on a personal level. I have been in the exact same place, dealing with similar challenges.

Q. What is your approach to working with teams?

A. Some teams need team-building exercises, while others need to learn to trust one another and share information on projects. Starter teams don’t know how to create agendas or structure meetings, so I help facilitate their meetings. The most important thing is making sure I’m available and that teams have what they need to succeed.

Q. What early challenges did the Oncology team face?

A. They were struggling with membership involvement and morale was low. Nobody wanted to participate in meetings.

Q. How did you help the team succeed?

A. I helped staff members understand that the UBT is not there to add work to their plate. Eventually, we got a group to participate in team meetings.

We went through different trainings and started on small projects. First, they focused on staff morale. Staff members practiced expressing appreciation for each other until it became part of the team's culture. Then they moved to an affordability project. That was a pivotal point in that team’s development, because the idea came from a labor partner.

It shows team members are involved in decision making and contributing to the department’s success.

Q. What was key to the team’s success?

A. I helped the team members understand their work through a different lens—what the function of a UBT is, and their role in it. They realized they have a great department and an engaged manager. It was really about helping them understand their value to each other.

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A Matter-of-Fact Approach to Gender Issues

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Tue, 12/22/2015 - 15:46
Topics
Request Number
sty_Hank46_gender_issues
Long Teaser

By adding one short question to an intake questionnaire, this team takes a bold step toward inclusion for transgender, gender-questioning and gender-nonconforming teens.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
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Anthony Frizzell, mental health assistant and member of OPEIU Local 2 says, "It is imperative that we relate to the patient in the way the patient wishes."
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Take Action to Focus on Inclusion

If your team wants to improve the quality of the care you give by ensuring you honor the diversity of your patients:

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A Matter-Of-Fact Approach to Gender Issues
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Toward better care for teens
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When teen members first visit the Burke Behavioral Health Center in Virginia, they are all asked the same intake questions, ranging from “What do you do for recreation?” to “Does your family have a history of violence?” Their answers help determine the best course of care.

Now, because of a unit-based team project to standardize care for transgender and gender-questioning members, teens ages 14 and older also are asked where they fall on the gender spectrum.

“We included this in the standard behavioral health assessment to normalize it instead of pathologize it,” says Sulaiha Mastan, Ph.D., a licensed clinical psychologist and UFCW Local 400 member. Mastan, who works exclusively with children and adolescents and has about 20 transgender teens in her care, says the information is important for treatment purposes.

For instance, a parent may say a child is depressed and is refusing to go to school. If that child is gender-questioning, gender-nonconforming or transgender, the underlying reason may have to do with changing clothes in the locker room or using the school restroom.

“If I have a teen who says, ‘I have a female body, but I am a male,’ then I am aware,” Mastan says.

High suicide rate

The stakes are high: A 2011 study found that 41 percent of transgender or gender-nonconforming people have attempted suicide sometime in their lives, nearly nine times the national average.

In another change, the unit’s front desk employees now check the electronic medical record to learn each member’s preferred name and pronoun, respecting that a member may, for example, appear male but identify as female.

“At the front desk, we are the first impression,” says Anthony Frizzell, a mental health assistant and member of OPEIU Local 2. “It is imperative that we relate to the patient in the way the patient wishes.”

The UBT also standardized the steps it takes when members are interested in hormone treatments; started a support group on transgender issues for parents; and is developing a brochure that will guide transgender adolescents through receiving care at Kaiser Permanente.

The policies it created follow national and KP guidelines, says Sand Chang, Ph.D., a psychologist and gender specialist in the Multi-Specialty Transitions department in Oakland.

“Although it is not routinely done, this is really falling in line with best practice—to give young people an option,” Chang says.

The project earned the team the R.J. Erickson Diversity and Inclusion Achievement Award at Kaiser Permanente’s 38th National Diversity and Inclusion Conference in October.

The team’s initiatives send the message that wherever a person is on the gender spectrum, it is part of being human, says Ted Eytan, MD, medical director of KP’s Center for Total Health in Washington, D.C.

“What the team is doing is making it very normal,” Dr. Eytan says. “It is something about you that we need to know, rather than something that needs to be extinguished.”

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