Departments

Postcard: Service: Northwest ED Team

Submitted by Beverly White on Mon, 12/29/2014 - 13:47
Region
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bb2015_Postcard_ Service_Sunnyside_Medical_Center_Northwest

This postcard, which appears in the January/February 2015 Bulletin Board Packet, features an Emergency Department team from the Northwest that developed a "fast track" service for patients and improved service scores.

Non-LMP
Tyra Ferlatte
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Postcard: Service - Sunnyside Medical Center

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5” x 11”

Intended audience:
Frontline employees, managers and physicians

Best used:
Share these tips about "fast tracking" service for Emergency Department patients with your team on bulletin boards, in break rooms and other staff areas.

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Seamless Teamwork Gives Central Valley Babies a Healthy Start

Submitted by tyra.l.ferlatte on Mon, 11/17/2014 - 16:25
Topics
Request Number
story_ncal_breastfeeding_manteca.doc
Long Teaser

The work of the Health Education UBT at the Manteca Medical Center helps improve the breastfeeding rates for Northern California's Central Valley service area.

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Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
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Partnership between facilities helps ensure moms get consistent support in breastfeeding their newborns
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Inspired by the goals of the worldwide “Baby-Friendly Hospital” initiative, the Health Education UBT at the Manteca Medical Center in Northern California set out in early 2012 to increase the percentage of new mothers who exclusively breastfeed. At the time, the number stood at 70 percent.

Steps emphasized by the initiative, sponsored by UNICEF and the World Health Organization (WHO), include training health care staff to inform every pregnant woman of the benefits of breastfeeding and to help mothers begin breastfeeding within one hour of giving birth.

Closing care gaps

The challenge was that while Manteca health educators provided prenatal services to expectant mothers, the moms went to Modesto to deliver their babies. The Manteca employees didn’t always learn whether their patients ended up breastfeeding. In order to make sure their patients were getting full support for breastfeeding as they made the transition from prenatal care to labor and delivery and beyond, the members of the Manteca UBT reached out to their hospital colleagues.

“As a Health Education department, we provide breastfeeding education during their prenatal care, but we were not reaching 100 percent of…moms after they switched to hospital services,” says Maria Prieto de Milian, a health educator, lactation consultant and active SEIU-UHW representative on the Manteca UBT. “There was not a consistent breastfeeding message.

“Our moms were in need of a continuum of care for breastfeeding.”

Researching best practices

The Manteca team, which meets monthly, is linked to a larger Health Education UBT at Modesto. The larger team meets quarterly and includes Modesto employees as well as the employees from the smaller teams at Manteca, Tracy and Stockton.

After researching best practices in breastfeeding support and exploring what other Kaiser Permanente locations were doing, the Manteca team introduced two small tests of change:

  • Working with the larger Modesto UBT and with full support from the Women’s Health department, the Manteca team set in motion a collaborative approach to breastfeeding support involving health educators, lactation consultants, physicians, pediatricians, medical assistants and nurses. This includes hospital employees encouraging observance of the “golden hour” immediately after birth, when a newborn is placed skin to skin on the mother’s chest to promote bonding and breastfeeding.
  • The team worked with other employees to make sure mothers-to-be were asked about breastfeeding at the regular 28-week prenatal visit, and that their questions or concerns were directed to lactation educators for follow-up.

The results were dramatic. By the end of 2012, 92 percent of Manteca prenatal care patients who delivered at the Modesto hospital were exclusively breastfeeding.

The umbrella UBT decided to spread Manteca’s idea.

“We turned it into a service-area initiative. It started as a pilot just for Manteca, and then the group decided it was so beneficial we’d roll it out to the whole Central Valley,” says Jose Salcedo, the management co-lead for the larger UBT. “The results were really conducive to parents and moms having a great experience. It’s a whole pathway from the early stages of pregnancy to the delivery and then to the pediatricians.”

“The breastfeeding initiative is now regular workflow throughout the Central Valley,” Salcedo said.

Good results sustained

At the time the Manteca UBT started its effort to improve breastfeeding rates, the Modesto hospital was working to achieve the Baby Friendly designation from the UNICEF-WHO program. After making significant progress toward that goal, it switched its focus to implementing the Northern California region’s Breastfeeding Toolkit, a new program that encompasses the same goals.

It's now been almost two years since the small tests of change, and Prieto de Milian says the Manteca UBT no longer is tracking the rate for its moms, viewing the project as a continued success.

New ideas are continually being added to strengthen the process. These include the advice call center providing 24/7 breastfeeding support while also scheduling follow-ups to the calls with lactation educators. In addition, lactation consultants are available to assist pediatricians by phone or by email on KP HealthConnect® during patient appointments.

With everyone’s minds and hearts on one goal, Salcedo and Prieto de Milian say, teamwork was seamless.

“What I like about the UBT is it’s a joint effort,” Salcedo says. “We have really good lactation educators who think outside the box, search for best practices and apply them. They went ahead and ran with it and made the recommendations. Management supported them all the way.”

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Hank Fall 2014

Format: PDF

Size: 16 pages; print on 8½” x 11” paper (for full-size, print on 11" x 14" and trim to 9.5" x 11.5")

Intended audience:  Frontline workers, managers and physicians

Best used: Download the PDF or read the issue online by using the links below.

Poster: Going Green

Submitted by Beverly White on Thu, 08/28/2014 - 13:12
Tool Type
Format
bb2014_Going_Green

This poster, which appears in the September/October 2014 Bulletin Board Packet, promotes a video about a Kaiser Permanente environmental services team that is putting to work the green training they received in a Workforce Planning and Development Training program.

Non-LMP
Tyra Ferlatte
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Poster: Going Green

Format:
PDF (color and black and white)

Size:
8.5” x 11”

Intended audience:
Frontline employees, managers and physicians

Best used:
Inform your UBT members about this EVS team that found it's easy to go green—and lower operating costs, improve patient and workplace safety, and increase employee satisfaction.

See the video here.

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Teams Collaborate to Ease Growing Workload

Submitted by Jennifer Gladwell on Thu, 08/21/2014 - 17:45
Region
Request Number
sty_lab_colorado_jg_tf
Long Teaser

With membership at an all-time high and new CDC guidelines leading to more screenings, two lab teams had to find a way to meet the increased demand.

Communicator (reporters)
Jennifer Gladwell
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
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Two lab teams found a way to meet increased demand
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The Molecular and Cytology Lab unit-based teams in Stapleton, Colorado, were facing a challenging trifecta. Increased membership, changes in guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and slow work processes made it tough to quickly process two widely used tests.

Membership in the Colorado region has grown by more than 60,000 members since 2013 in part because of the Affordable Care Act. Total membership in the region is now at its highest ever, with more than 600,000 members. The influx of new members is a strain on the system, and teams are digging in deeply to meet those members’ needs, from the first point of contact in the medical office to the last encounter as they pick up their prescriptions on the way out.

The lab teams are feeling the pressure, too—especially since they also process samples for the Georgia region, which is expected to grow, and they still do some work for facilities in the former Ohio region, which was sold to another health plan last year.

“We knew there would be an increase in the number of tests we would be doing. We also knew that our process was very labor intensive,” says Roxanne Whitesides, the Molecular and Specialty Testing manager. “Already this year, we’ve increased our workload 10 percent because of an increase in membership.”

Preventive care approach

The screens in question are for the human papillomavirus (HPV) and the Papanicolaou (Pap) test. Both detect disease at an early stage when treatment is highly effective, and so are central to Kaiser Permanente’s preventive care approach. As of June this year, the Molecular and Cytology teams—each of which has a role in processing the screens—already had processed 23,300 Pap screens and 16,800 HPV screens.

Meanwhile, CDC guidelines on HPV were revised in recent years and now recommend that women age 30 to 64 have an HPV screening and that girls as young as 11 receive the vaccine. The agency says HPV is the most common sexually transmitted infection in the United States. Some strains can cause cancer, and the CDC says about 21,000 of the HPV-related cancers each year could be prevented by the vaccine.

Because of the changed recommendations, even before the enrollment jump, the labs were seeing an increase in the number of HPV screens they processed. In 2012, the labs processed 650 HPV screens a month. By this spring, the monthly average had more than quadrupled: the average for March, April and May 2014 was 2,800 per month. In May alone, 3,354 samples were processed.

Labor-intensive processes

The final hurdle the teams faced was that their processes were labor intensive, requiring significant hands-on time from the technician. There was frequent back and forth between the Cytology and Molecular departments, which caused delays and interruptions. The complex work processes added to the pressure of the growing workload and caused frustration and tension.

The teams began an intensive study of what other labs were doing, including researching the latest technology. They visited other sites and vendors and decided to go with a cutting-edge Roche instrument. The pathologists—who work closely with the labs—supported getting the new equipment, and the lease was fast-tracked for installation. The instrument was in place within two months.

At that point, the teams set to work to figure out how their processes would change with the new equipment.

Cross-training provides insights

“We trained each other on the new equipment and on the processes within the two departments,” said Luann Martin, a cytology technologist, UFCW Local 7 member and co-lead of the Cytology unit-based team. “I could appreciate things going on in both departments.”

The collaboration between the Molecular and Cytology departments enabled them to improve their work processes and interactions—and ensured that as one problem was fixed, another wasn’t created.

“It’s important to keep talking. People have different expectations and comfort levels,” says Beth Fisher, a medical technologist, UFCW Local 7 member and co-lead of the Molecular UBT. “Be patient with one another,” says Melissa Baca, a cytologist lab assistant, SEIU Local 105 member and union co-lead of the Cytology UBT.

Most important, Fisher says, the new equipment is enabling the teams to meet the growing demand.

“The big payoff is that we're able to process all those HPV samples in less than half the time it used to take, so we've been able to absorb the workload increase with no new staff,” she says. “And we're able to identify the HPV strains that are most linked with cervical cancer as part of the initial screening. That saves money, because we don't have to send out all the positives for additional testing.”

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Safety on a Silver Platter

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Tue, 08/19/2014 - 16:31
Keywords
Request Number
sty_WPS_WestLA
Long Teaser

Task standardization and a crystal-clear message from top leadership is reducing injuries at one Southern California medical center.

Communicator (reporters)
Laureen Lazarovici
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Non-LMP
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Standardizing tasks—such as passing sharp instruments in the operating room--is creating a safer workplace at West Los Angeles Medical Center.
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Tracy Fietz, Tracy.L.Fietz@kp.org, 323-857-2218

Nor Jemjemian, Norair.Z.Jemjemian@kp.org, 323-857-2201

Lisa Duff, Lisa.X.Duff@kp.org, 323-857-4433

 

Physician co-lead(s)

 

 

Additional resources

 

 

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More on Workplace Safety

Creating a safer workplace is essential to good care for your patients. It also provides the right environment for clinical, clerical and support staff, and for members.

There are plenty of rescources to help. Here are a few ideas to help you create a safer workplace.

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By standardizing common tasks, and having regular updates, you can help to reduce workplace injuries
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Want a safer workplace served up on a silver platter?

Then stop by the operating room at Kaiser Permanente’s West Los Angeles Medical Center in Southern California. Surgeons and the other health care workers there pass sharp instruments to one another on silver trays—rather than passing them hand to hand—which reduced injuries related to handling sharp instruments during procedures by 34 percent between September 2013 and May 2014.

“We can see the results,” says Lisa Duff, a surgical tech and workplace safety champion at the facility. This success is part of a new emphasis at the facility on task standardization—analyzing each step of an activity, identifying the potentially hazardous steps, coming up with a safer way of doing things and then ensuring everyone follows the new process the same way, every time.

How to reduce risk

“Injuries occur when there is not consistency,” says Tracy Fietz, chief administrative officer for Southern California Permanente Medical Group at West L.A.  “If you break [a task] apart on a fishbone diagram, you can identify where the risks are. It is about removing variation.”  

Standardizing practices also has helped several departments reduce—and in some cases eliminate—sharps-related injuries for up to 17 consecutive months. It’s also helped reduce injuries to EVS workers by 75 percent when they clean floors.

Another practice that is improving safety at West L.A. Medical Center is regular monthly meetings between senior leaders,  including Fietz, and the labor and management safety leaders of targeted departments. Departments that have special line-of-sight safety goals (see below) in the region’s Performance Sharing Program get special attention. The gatherings are a space to analyze processes, see what’s working—and what isn’t—and collect information to share with others.

How partnership helps

“I work with managers and the workplace safety champions, because it’s a partnership,” says Nor Jemjemian, the chief administrative officer for Kaiser Permanente Hospital/Health Plan at West L.A., who also leads those meetings. “I want the employees doing the tasks to be part of the solutions.”

Union-represented employees, for their part, appreciate the crystal-clear message top leadership is sending.

“You need management to back you up when you speak up,” says Duff, a member of SEIU-UHW. “Employees know that our managers will back them up 200 percent.”

Open communication, trust and partnership processes are the foundation of a safer workplace, says Jemjemian.

“When I was an employee, there were [hazardous] tasks I did that my manager didn’t know about,” he says. Today, in contrast, “UBTs create a venue and a forum to discuss the everyday work.”  

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Communication Drives Success

Submitted by Jennifer Gladwell on Tue, 08/19/2014 - 16:23
Region
Request Number
nw_process center_transportation_ir_jg_tf
Long Teaser

Courier drivers in the Northwest improve communication and morale after going through an Issue Resolution--and move forward on revamping routes for greater efficiency.

Communicator (reporters)
Jennifer Gladwell
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Notes (as needed)
No photos in assets, will need to get something. jg 7/15
Photos & Artwork (reporters)
A driver helps get vans loaded for the daily runs.
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By the Numbers

These figures provide quick insight into some of the challenges the Transportation department faces.

  • 50 employees
  • Serves 32 medical offices, 28 dental offices, 14 administrative offices, 10 hospitals
  • 75 percent of employees start at different locations
  • 24-hour operation
  • 29 courier schedules; seven large van freight schedules Monday through Friday; four weekend routes
  • Drive 1.5 million miles a year
  • More than 380,000 time-sensitive stops
  • Save approximately $1,500 per month on shipping expenses by preventing the need for outside shipping services
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Courier drivers in the Northwest improve routes after fixing communication and morale issues
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The Transportation department in the Northwest is coming out of a tumultuous time. A lack of trust between managers and employees created a barrier that affected morale—and made it difficult to focus on improving routes and processes.

The department uses a robust but complex process for optimizing its routes. For maximum efficiency, it has to integrate a variety of work streams and figure out where there are redundancies that can be eliminated. Because of the complexity of the process, however, it had been more than 15 years since the criteria and requirements for the transportation system from the customer’s point of view had been reviewed.

Eventually, the UBT worked out a thorough route-modernization plan based on data-driven service requirements and metrics that established parameters on how to revise and design its routes.

But before it got there, it had to fix its communication, which broke down so badly the team entered into an issue resolution. In the Northwest, the LMP Education and Training department is responsible for facilitating issue resolutions.

Blame-free solutions

“There was a lot of tension in the department, and people were nervous about losing their jobs as a result of our work around revamping routes. Poor communication was a problem,” says Greg Hardy, sponsor and manager of the department.

The issue resolution process uses interest-based problem solving, and that helped the team focus on a common goal: Serving its customers was the top priority and improving communication was a necessity. From there, other agreements came more easily, and the department was able to maintain staffing levels and improve processes as a result of its efforts.

Improved communication improves service

As a result of the improved communication, the team was able to improve service levels and achieve the efficiency and cost savings it had strived for.

“We have a group of dedicated workers who want things done the right way,” says logistics supervisor Chris Dirksen, the team’s management co-lead.

When it came to improving communication, the team members’ first step was to get a baseline measurement of what they were trying to improve. They created a survey that would measure not only communication but also morale and UBT effectiveness. Once they had that information, they created a SMART goal: to improve employee perception of communication, morale and UBT effectiveness by 15 percent within three months, raising the overall survey score from 2.55 to 2.93 by February 2014.

As the team began to investigate the issues, it discovered email was not a good form of communication. Fewer than 20 percent of the team members knew how to log on and use Lotus Notes. The team brainstormed ways get employees to use Lotus Notes email and frontline staffers began to instruct and coach one another.

Three months later, the team sent the survey out again and found it had met its goal. Perception of communication improved 48 percent, morale improved by 56 percent and UBT effectiveness improved by 21 percent. The team scored 3.4 on its survey, exceeding its stretch goal of 2.93, and anecdotal reports are that the communication success is continuing now that the team has successfully completely the issue resolution.

New ways to communicate

Team members use several means now for communicating with one another, including email. A communication board has been set up in the department’s headquarters, near dispatch, that includes information about the projects the team is working on, notes from UBT meetings and a copy of the department’s weekly e-newsletter, “Heads Up.”

In addition, the team has gone from a representative UBT to a general membership UBT and now has regularly scheduled meetings throughout the region, so that all employees are able to participate. “This has been our biggest success to share information,” says UBT union co-lead Nickolas Platt, a courier driver and member of SEIU Local 49.

“It’s cool to watch from meeting to meeting how more people show up each time,” Hardy says. “The engagement of the team has increased as we began to see improvement, and people could see change.”

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Going Green

Request Number
video_VID-41_GoingGreen
Long Teaser

At Kaiser Permanente's Los Angeles Medical Center, 350 environmental services workers are putting the green training they received through ant educational trust to work. The result: Lower operating costs, improved patient and workplace safety and happier employees.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Notes (as needed)
Ben Hudnall Memorial Trust can now be found online at: bhmt.org (instead of benhudnallmem...etc).
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Download File URL
VID-41_GoingGreen/VID-41_GoingGreen.zip
Running Time
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Date of publication

Kaiser Permanente and two Workforce Planning and Development trusts are training frontline workers in green practices. At Los Angeles Medical Center, 350 Environmental Services workers represented by SEIU-UHW are putting that training to work. The result: lower operating costs, improved workplace safety and happier employees. 

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Getting Healthy Together

Region
Topic
Request Number
VID-33_Get Healthy Together
Long Teaser

Members of the Phlebotomy unit-based team at the Rockwood Medical Offices in Oregon share how they are motivating each other to get healthy—and the impact it has had on their customer service scores.

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Download File URL
VID-33_GetHealthyTogether/VID-33_GetHealthyTogether_480b.zip
Running Time
2:54
Status
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Members of the Phlebotomy unit-based team at the Rockwood Medical Offices in Oregon share how they are motivating each other to get healthy—and the impact it has had on their customer service scores.

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Poster: Taking the Lead on Early Detection

Submitted by Beverly White on Mon, 05/05/2014 - 21:36
Tool Type
Format
bb2014_Taking_the_lead_on_early_detection

This poster, which appears in the May/June 2014 Bulletin Board Packet, features a radiation oncology team that harnessed the power of the Proactive Office Encounter to ensure its patients gets needed screenings.

Beverly White
Tyra Ferlatte
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Poster: Taking the Lead on Early Detection

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5” x 11”

Intended audience:
Frontline employees, managers and physicians

Best used:
These tips can help ensure your patients receive every preventive health screening they need. 

Read the Snapshot

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