Departments

Around the Regions (Winter 2016) Laureen Lazarovici Mon, 12/21/2015 - 16:05
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Around the Regions (Winter 2016)
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Newsy bits from the landscape of Kaiser Permanente
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sty_Hank46_Around the Regions_Winter2016
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Newsy bits from every Kaiser Permanente region.

Story body part 1

Colorado

The Colorado region is improving patient care and saving millions by providing high-risk patients extra attention after discharge, leading to a reduction in readmission rates. In the Post Acute Care Transitions (PACT) program, nurse practitioners visit patients in their homes after discharge from a hospital or skilled nursing facility, giving them a chance to alter the patient’s care plan if needed. The PACT team has visited approximately 4,200 high-risk patients since the program began in January 2013. At that time, 22 percent of high-risk patients were readmitted within 30 days, at a cost of $11.7 million. The PACT team has reduced readmission rates by 50 percent, saving Kaiser Permanente approximately $6 million since the program began.

Georgia

To make sure no good deed goes uncopied, the Georgia region launched a Spread and Sustain system to move best practices throughout the region—and showed off the results to KP’s board of directors at a UBT fair early last summer. Georgia took a spread blueprint from the Southern California region and fine-tuned it to meet its needs. Now its unit-based teams, sponsors and regional leaders identify projects with good spread potential, determine other locations where the new process could work, share the practice and check back to see how they’re being sustained. Several projects have been successfully spread region-wide—addressing such issues as hypertension, HPV vaccinations and lab specimen collection.

Hawaii

Hawaii is a beautiful place to live, but Kaiser Permanente members who live on the less-populated islands sometimes find it challenging to get the care they need. To address that, KP offers a special benefit called Travel Concierge Service. If health plan members need medical care that isn’t available on their island, KP assists them in traveling to the Moanalua Medical Center in Oahu or to a specialty care medical office. KP makes the travel arrangements and picks up the tab for travel, including airfare, shuttle service and discounted hotel rates. For minors who need specialty care, KP also pays for companion travel. “Our members love this service,” says Lori Nanone, a sales and account manager in the region.

Mid-Atlantic States

For several years, co-leads in the Mid-Atlantic States have compiled monthly reports of their UBT activities, goals and progress using Microsoft Word and Excel. Now, the region is rolling out a dashboard that automatically compiles the same information from UBT Tracker into an easy-to-reference SharePoint site, Kaiser Permanente’s new online social collaboration tool. The new dashboard will encourage more frequent updates to UBT Tracker and eliminate the need for co-leads to create separate documents, says Jennifer Walker, lead UBT consultant and improvement advisor. “Now the information we get is more timely and easier to assess,” Walker says. “Before, the information was up to a month old.”

Northern California

The Santa Rosa Medical Center Diversity Design committee is equipping employees with tools to help them provide better service to Spanish-speaking patients. The group, composed of labor and management, has been piloting a handout featuring a list of common Spanish phrases, such as ¿Necesita un intérprete? (“Do you need an interpreter?”), as well as instructions on using the phone interpreter system. The idea came from a Spanish-speaking patient on the facility’s Latino patient advisory committee, who recalled the time she was lost in the facility and no one could direct her in Spanish. The Spanish language flier is the latest in the committee’s work to help ensure all patients receive the same optimal service and care.

Northwest

Unit-based teams in the Continuing Care Services department are focusing on improving the experience for some of Kaiser Permanente’s most vulnerable members: those in skilled nursing facilities or receiving home health, hospice or palliative care. Teams are focusing on ensuring better transitions for patients as they go from inpatient to ambulatory care. By identifying issues before they become problems, labor and management hope to coordinate care more effectively, reduce emergency department visits and cut down on outside medical costs.

Southern California

Harmony comes easily when you use the tools of partnership. Just ask the Biohazards, a band of union members and a manager that uses partnership principles to guide performances. “We call ourselves an LMP project,” says Mary Anne Umekubo, a clinical laboratory scientist and Regional Laboratory assistant director who sings and plays percussion and guitar. She is among six band members who represent a variety of departments, shifts and unions, including SEIU-UHW and UFCW Local 770. Performing for friends and colleagues, band members use consensus decision making to choose songs, interest-based problem solving to fix mistakes and the Rapid Improvement Model to tweak performances. “We’re from different departments,” says drummer Eric Cuarez, a regional courier driver and SEIU-UHW member. “We come together to play music.”

Communicator (reporters)
Laureen Lazarovici
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Southern California's Biohazards band, extending partnership tools into music-making.
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Unit-Based Teams Are Getting Results: 2015

Submitted by Paul Cohen on Mon, 12/14/2015 - 17:33
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ppt_UBTs_Getting Results_ 2015.ppt

Check out this 12-page PowerPoint deck with examples from every region showing how unit-based teams have helped improve improve quality, service, affordability and the workplace. Suitable for presentation.

Non-LMP
Tyra Ferlatte
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Unit-Based Teams Are Getting Results: 2015

Format:
PowerPoint

Size:
12 pages, 8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Unit-based team members, co-leads, sponsors and consultants; union and KP leaders

Best used: 
Share in presentations or team meetings to see successful practices from UBTs in every region of Kaiser Permanente.

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The Best-Laid Plans

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Tue, 10/06/2015 - 17:37
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sty_Hank45_Best Plans
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When this team’s good work had a bad side effect, help from an improvement advisor got it back on track.

Communicator (reporters)
Jennifer Gladwell
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
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A successful kp.org sign-up campaign resulted in a deluge of messages, and providers found themselves struggling to keep up. That’s when co-leads Rikki Shene, LPN, a member of SEIU Local 49, and manager Eliseo Olvera took action, with help from their UPR.
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The Best Laid Plans
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Getting back on track, after good work yields a bad side effect
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The Family Practice unit-based team at the Sunset Medical Office in the Northwest was thrilled that its work to get members to sign up on kp.org was a success. But team members quickly grew dismayed when the onslaught of new signups had an adverse effect on patients’ experience.

The challenge began in 2014, when the team launched several projects to increase the number of Kaiser Permanente members signed up on kp.org, knowing that people who use kp.org usually give KP higher satisfaction scores. The office is located in Hillsboro, Oregon, near one of Intel’s campuses. Intel offers Kaiser Permanente as a health plan option, so the effort to get more people online made perfect sense.

But, on the flip side, the increased number of messages coming in through kp.org wound up increasing turnaround times for return emails and phone calls.

More than two-thirds on kp.org

The department now receives between 450 to 650 email messages per week. Seventy-one percent of its patients—29,000 members—are signed up on kp.org. The team sought to improve its turnaround time on messages by reducing the number of times staff members and physicians touched each message. Instead of multiple people working a message, each one is now triaged one time by either an LPN or RN. At the same time, the team decreased its time spent on messages per week from 13.6 hours to 10.9 hours.

Ed Vrooman, an improvement advisor and union partnership representative, coached team members on how to test and implement their improvements.

“We learned how to use process mapping, so we could identify where the holes were in how we were approaching the work,” says Eliseo Olvera, the assistant department administrator and the UBT’s management co-lead. “Ed knew where we could get the data we needed and help us understand it, so we could do the work.”

Vrooman also introduced the team to the 6S tool—sort, simplify, set in order, sweep, shine, standardize—to improve its work processes. The team broke into different workgroups and each group identified tests of change. Some of the ideas were abandoned, some were refined and adopted, and some still are being adapted.

Staying on track

“I tended to focus too much on the information and the numbers,” says Rikki Shene, a licensed practical nurse and SEIU Local 49 member who is the team’s union co-lead. “Ed helped keep us organized and simplified the data so that we could keep moving forward and accomplish something in our 45-minute UBT meetings.”

Vrooman’s role in the team has been critical for the team. He attends the co-lead planning sessions and UBT meetings. He stays in the background until needed—and then he speaks up.

“He’s part of our community,” says Olvera. “His expertise with data has been critical. It’s a gift.”

Take action to get meaningful metrics

Here are the next steps for teams that are ready to leverage numbers to turbocharge performance: 

  • Make a clear plan about collecting data. Focusing only on the numbers you need will help reduce needless work.
  • Create a storytelling run chart.
  • Familiarize yourself with the names of the core metrics that KP relies on.

 

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September/October 2015 Bulletin Board Packet

Submitted by Kellie Applen on Wed, 09/02/2015 - 10:26
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Format: Printed posters and pocket-sized cards on glossy card stock 

Size: Three 8.5” x 11” posters and three 4" x 6" cards

Intended audience: Frontline staff, managers and physicians

Best used: On bulletin boards in break rooms and other staff areas, and at UBT meetings for team discussion and brainstorming

Description: This packet contain useful materials for UBTs, such as:

Portraits in Partnership: A manager's point of view

Region
Request Number
VID_115_POV_manager
Long Teaser

This video shows what it's like to work in Partnership at Kaiser Permanente from a manager's point of view.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Video Media (reporters)
Download File URL
VID-115_Manager_POV/VID-115_ManagerPOV.zip
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2:15
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Environmental Services Manager Leonard Hayes has built a workplace where each of his 150 employees has a voice. Watch this short video to hear his perspective on how the Labor Management Partnership at Kaiser Permanente helps him solve problems and improve safety with his team.

 

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Portraits in Partnership: A union worker's point of view Kellie Applen Tue, 07/28/2015 - 13:28
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VID-114_union_worker_POV/VID-114_UnionWorkerPOV.zip
Request Number
VID_114_POV_union_worker
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2:30
Long Teaser

This video shows what it's like to work in partnership at Kaiser Permanente from a union worker's point of view.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Status
Released
Date of publication

When Lab Assistant Cher Gonzalez talks, her manager and facility leaders listen. That's just one of the many benefits, she says, of working in the Labor Management Partnership at Kaiser Permanente. Watch this short piece to see a union worker's perspective of the LMP.

 

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Postcard: Quality: Mid-Atlantic States Primary Care

Submitted by Beverly White on Fri, 05/15/2015 - 16:54
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bb2015_Postcard_ Quality_Burke_Medical_Offices_Mid-Atlantic States

This postcard, which appears in the May/June 2015 Bulletin Board Packet, features a UBT from the Mid-Atlantic States that was able to increase the percentage of patients whose blood pressure was under control.

Non-LMP
Tyra Ferlatte
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Postcard: Quality: Mid-Atlantic States Primary Care

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5” x 11”

Intended audience:
Frontline employees, managers and physicians

Best used:
Share this on bulletin boards, in break rooms and other staff areas to gain ideas for increasing the percentage of patients whose blood pressure is under control. 

Read the story and share the PPT on this team's work.

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Northern California
bulletin board packet
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PPT: Primary Care UBT Gives Patient Gift of Time

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 05/15/2015 - 11:43
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ppt_UBT_primary_care_gives patients_gift_of_time

This PowerPoint slide from the May/June 2015 Bulletin Board Packet features a Colorado Primary Care team and a Northwest Regional Infusion Center that has given the gift of time by implementing a faster way of administering medication used to treat rheumatoid arthritis.

Non-LMP
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PPT: Service - Primary Care UBT Gives Gift of Time

Format:
PPT

Size:
1 Slide

Intended audience:
LMP employees, UBT consultants, improvement advisers

Best used:
This PowerPoint slide features a Colorado Primary Care team and a Northwest Regional Infusion Center that has given the gift of time by implementing a faster way of administrating medication used to treat rheumatoid arthritis. Use in presentations to show some of the methods used and the measurable results being achieved by unit-based teams across Kaiser Permanente. 

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Invent Our Future Kellie Applen Wed, 03/25/2015 - 09:54
Download File URL
VID-106_Invent_Our_Future/VID-106_Invent_Our_Future_2.zip
Request Number
vid-106_invent_our_future
Running Time
4:28
Long Teaser

In health care today, everybody has to be thinking and innovating. "Invent Our Future" shows how workers, managers and physicians are implementing new ideas, helping to secure their own futures and keeping Kaiser Permanente at the top of its game.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Status
Released
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Date of publication

In health care today, everybody has to be thinking and innovating. "Invent Our Future" shows how workers, managers and physicians are implementing new ideas, helping to secure their own futures and keeping Kaiser Permanente at the top of its game. Also see the companion discussion guide.

 

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Giving Patients a Voice

Request Number
VID-105_giving_patients_a_voice
Long Teaser

In this short video, the Neo-Natal Intensive Care Unit at Kaiser Permanente's Downey Medical Center shows how its incorporating the patient voice into it's performance improvement efforts.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Video Media (reporters)
Download File URL
VID-105_giving_patients_a_voice/VID-105_giving_patients_a_voice_4.zip
Running Time
3:28
Status
Released
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Date of publication

In this short video, see how the Neo-Natal Intensive Care Unit at Kaiser Permanente's Downey Medical Center is turning parents' ideas for improvements into reality.

 

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