Disease prevention

Health and Safety Champions — July 2019 Focus

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Tue, 06/18/2019 - 10:53
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ED-1435

A startling 1 out of 3 adults have prediabetes, and 9 out of 10 don’t know it. Moving more, eating healthy and losing weight can reduce your risk for prediabetes.

Tracy Silveria
Tyra Ferlatte
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Help your team make positive choices that can prevent diabetes. 

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For the Love of Kids

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Tue, 12/22/2015 - 16:35
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An oncology nurse sprouts a farm-to-table program for elementary school students in a low-income neighborhood.

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Jennifer Gladwell
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Tyra Ferlatte
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Maria Peyer, an oncology nurse and member of OFNHP/ONA helps Isaias Contreras-Chavez and Justin Dodds learn healthy habits for life.
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Make a Difference Today

The 2015 National Agreement between Kaiser Permanente and the Coalition of KP Unions calls for union engagement in Community Benefit programs; stay tuned for more opportunities. In the meantime, you can:

 

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For the Love of Kids
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A farm-to-table program in a low-income neighborhood
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On a warm fall afternoon, nearly 35 children are bouncing off the walls as they get ready to leave the classroom and head out to their elementary school’s garden. They’re all members of an after-school garden club and cooking class called Edible Olympic. It’s the brainchild of Maria Peyer, an oncology nurse and team co-lead at the Longview Kelso Medical Office in Kaiser Permanente’s Northwest region and her husband, elementary school teacher Michael Bixby.

The kids can barely contain their excitement as Bixby tries to calm them down so they can listen to the afternoon’s agenda.

“The sooner you settle down and be quiet, the quicker I can finish what I need to say and you can get outside,” he implores the class.

Quickly, the hubbub settles. Bixby goes over what needs to be done: plant blueberry bushes, dig a hole for a tree, and remove bamboo sticks. He also reviews the Garden Guidelines, which include listening with respect, walking (no running) in the garden, and asking for permission before picking anything. Then he asks, “Whose garden is it?” and gets a resounding and loud, “Ours!” as everyone heads outside to get to work.

The students attend Olympic Elementary School in Longview, Washington. They don’t have many advantages: More than 20 percent of the city’s population is below the federal poverty line, and 90 percent of the school’s students participate in the free or reduced-price lunch program. Many experience food insecurity regularly, not knowing if they’ll have enough—or any—food to eat.

Income-related health disparities

There are well-documented health disparities related to low income, and these kids are at risk. Edible Olympic is helping address that vulnerability, teaching the kids about healthy food and how to prepare it, laying the foundation for good eating habits that last a lifetime. It’s an example of how partnership principles expand naturally and necessarily into the community; the new 2015 National Agreement includes commitments to jointly work on improving the health of the communities we serve.

The Longview project grew out of a Kaiser Permanente adult cooking class recommended for oncology patients, one that focuses on a plant-based diet. Peyer says that after moving to Longview, she and her husband were struck by the limited resources available to the children in the community.

“We wanted to affect change as directly as possible,” says Peyer, an OFNHP/ONA member. “So we dove headfirst into Edible Olympic. We didn’t want to spend time in meetings, we just wanted to get in the dirt and the kitchen—and that’s what we did.”

She sought support from Thriving Schools, one of Kaiser Permanente’s Community Benefit programs. She forged partnerships with the school’s Parent-Teacher Organization and the Lower Columbia School Gardens, a nonprofit that helps schools create garden programs. Local stores donated money. High school students from Longview and Portland also are participating.

“The kids, their parents and the greater community have embraced the efforts and confirmed that our hunches were right,” Peyer says.  “Good, healthy, real food, prepared simply, with love and in community, can be life transforming.”

Members of the Oncology unit-based team are supporting the project, too, donating money and time; four KP employees help staff the cooking class.

“Volunteering in the community gives us at KP a chance to share our skills and our approach to supporting good health,” says Elizabeth Engberg, the Northwest’s Thriving Schools program manager. “It also helps us learn about our members—where they live, work, learn and play, because that’s a huge part of what affects their health. Schools are the best place to do this.”

Overwhelming participation

The program has had overwhelming and unexpected participation.

“The idea was that this project would launch with eight to 10 kids. We had 60 kids come to the information session,” Peyer says, which prompted an instant expansion from one to two sessions. The kids work in the garden on Thursday afternoons, and on Fridays, they walk across the field to the middle school, where they are able to use the home economics classroom for cooking class. The sessions run for five weeks and end with a celebration where the kids cook a complete meal and share with their friends and family.

The first session got under way last spring. A grassy patch of the school’s property was selected as the site for the garden, and the children got seeds started indoors. As weather allowed, the ground was prepared. While they waited for their seedlings to be ready to plant, the kids were introduced to kitchen safety and how to prepare the food they were just beginning to grow.

In the cooking class, kids have a healthy snack, then work in small groups to prepare the dish of the week. When the cooking is done, they gather together  and enjoy their meal. The kids leave with a bag of groceries so they can cook the meal at home.

“In some cases, this may be the healthiest meal the family may eat during the week,” Peyer says.

On that fall day out in the garden, the kids in the second session organized quickly after studying the garden map Bixby brought along for reference. They divided themselves into groups and got to work with shovels, buckets and plants to complete the day’s activities.

One of the choices they faced was whether to extend the blueberries to the fence or stop a few feet in to allow for a foot path. Several kids piped up with ideas. The decision got made after 11-year-old Christian Aguibar offered his opinion.

“We can grow more things if we don’t have a walkway,” Christian said, “so let’s not have one.”

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Steal Shamelessly

Submitted by tyra.l.ferlatte on Tue, 03/24/2015 - 15:46
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hank 43 steal shamelessly
Long Teaser

Want to save time and money? Be willing to borrow successful practices from others. From the Spring 2015 Hank.

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Non-LMP
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Tyra Ferlatte
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Sometimes, the best way forward is to look around and find the solution that someone has already developed—and adopt it
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Although Rahul Nayak, MD, calls himself “fundamentally lazy,” it might be more accurate to call him lazy like a fox. Instead of starting from scratch to create Georgia’s centralized Outpatient Safety Net Program, his team started with a recipe provided by Southern California.

“Someone has already done something that works. Why not start there?” says Dr. Nayak, who was physician program director of patient safety for Georgia when the program launched.

Dr. Nayak’s outlook serves as the guiding force behind spread—the art of adopting a practice, workflow or project from another team, medical center or even an entire region. The benefits? As the Georgia team learned, new initiatives often get off the ground faster if they’re modeled on an already proven concept. The Southern California safety net system had already won a 2012 David M. Lawrence Patient Safety Award for its work.

“The foundation was laid,” says safety net team member Eula Maddox, LPN, a member of UFCW Local 1996. Maddox makes up to 60 calls a day, phoning members who have had abnormal lab results and scheduling follow-up appointments. “These calls reduce stress for patients and costs for Kaiser Permanente,” she says. But, she notes, the team had to adapt the program for it to work well for Georgia members, including changing the hours that calls were made.

For its work, the team won the 2014 David M. Lawrence Patient Safety Award in the transfer category—an award for a region that successfully implements a project from an earlier award winner. The award recognizes the importance of spreading best practices, which ensures that members receive the same high level of care regardless of which medical center they visit. That’s a primary principle of One KP, which sets the goal of providing every health plan member with “the best experience, everywhere, every time.”

“Our members and customers believe—rightfully so—that we know how to operate as one organization,” says Bernard J. Tyson, KP’s chairman and CEO, “and that whatever we learn about the best ways to care for people in one geographic area…is available to all of our 9.6 million members.”

Best practices occur at all levels and in all departments. In Colorado, for example, the Regional Lab unit-based team tackled the issue of standardizing labels. Even a simple mistake—putting a label on crooked—can adversely affect patient care. The team is creating visual aids and tip sheets that will spread to 28 locations by this fall.

“This is a problem people have had to deal with for years and are passionate about fixing,” says Beth Fisher, a medical technologist, member of UFCW Local 7 and sponsor for the regional lab team.

Spreading practices takes effort from both sides. At Virginia’s Burke Medical Center, a project launched by the Primary Care team four years ago has sustained its success in helping patients with hypertension get their blood pressure under control—and the team has helped other facilities in Northern Virginia adopt the practice.

“If it works for us, it will work for other people,” says the Burke team’s lead nurse, Angela N. Williams-Edwards, RN, a UFCW Local 400 member. “Other teams saw it was easy and ran with it.”

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Kaiser and Coalition Unions Reach Agreement on Ebola

Submitted by cassandra.braun on Wed, 01/28/2015 - 21:42
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sty_ebola_agreement
Long Teaser

Kaiser Permanente and the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions reached a formal agreement in December that ensures the safety and compensation of KP employees involved in caring for patients with the Ebola virus.

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Peter Sidhu, RN, left, demonstrates Ebola safety steps with Arjun Srinivasan, MD, an associate director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, at KP-sponsored forum in November 2014.
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Ebola Training for Front-Line Employees

Story account from the joint KP and union coalition simulcast training event in November, the largest Ebola educational session for front-workers on the West Coast to date.

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Kaiser Permanente and the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions have reached a formal agreement that ensures the safety and compensation of KP employees involved in caring for patients with the Ebola virus.

The agreement, reached December 15, 2014, clarifies questions coalition unions had about the engagement and protection of their members who may encounter or care for a patient with Ebola. It codifies standards outlined by the Centers for Disease Control around protective protocols and equipment. It also outlines training and support provided to employees, including for employees who may be unable to work during an isolation period for a possible Ebola exposure.

Safeguarding workers and patients

“As health care workers, we’re used to putting our patients first,” said Ken Deitz, president of United Nurses Associations of California (UNAC). “Because Ebola is an infectious disease, to maintain patient safety we also had to ensure our own safety.”

The parties came to agreement quickly and with little disagreement, with conversations focused on clarifying the practices KP facilities already are doing as outlined by Centers for Disease Control guidelines.

Union and KP leaders say it reflects their desire to work together—and to continue to focus on educating, protecting and preparing employees who may come in contact with Ebola patients.

By working together, we have ensured that employees are prepared to care for patients with Ebola while keeping themselves and their colleagues protected from infection,” said Kathy Gerwig, vice president of Employee Safety, Health and Wellness for KP.

Education, training and protection

Specific provisions of the agreement include:

  • All employees with the potential to interact with, treat, or do cleaning or waste handling for suspected Ebola patients will receive paid time for education and training in such areas as Ebola signs and symptoms; care and treatment; proper donning and doffing of personal protective equipment; proper cleaning of treatment rooms or areas; and proper disposal of the patient’s body fluids and wastes.
  • Employees in key treatment or intake areas will receive sufficient personal protective equipment supplies.
  • Ebola treatment teams would be staffed by volunteers. If there are not enough volunteers, local KP and union leaders would identify team members.
  • If a coalition union-represented employee cannot work, or receives care as a result of work-related exposure to Ebola, the employee will receive paid time off, and all medical costs will be covered through workers’ compensation.

Read the agreement.

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Frontline Employees Get Intensive Ebola Preparation

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Mon, 11/10/2014 - 15:56
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sty_ebola training
Long Teaser

Hundreds of frontline health care workers get detailed training and education about how to deal with patients who might have Ebola.

Communicator (reporters)
Laureen Lazarovici
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
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Laureen will create a Request for Paul E. to create a special photo treatment in Photoshop
Q to Tyra: can I put links to things NOT already on our website in the "highlighted tools" box?
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Registered nurse Peter Sidhu, a member of UNAC/UHCP, demonstrates how to safely put on and take off protective gear.
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KP, union coalition collaborate on training event
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Standing on a stage in front of hundreds of his fellow health care workers at the largest Ebola educational session on the West Coast to date, registered nurse Peter Sidhu demonstrated how to use personal protective gear in the way that keeps both patients and workers safe.

Sidhu inspected his equipment first—two pairs of gloves, a gown, mask and face shield. Then Arjun Srinivasan, MD, the associate director for health care-associated infection prevention programs at the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, gave him detailed, step-by-step instructions in putting them on.  

Resources

The Nov. 7 educational session in Los Angeles was hosted by Kaiser Permanente, the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions and other organizations that are coming together to help frontline caregivers learn about the newest CDC protocols and guidelines for handling Ebola patients. Hundreds attended in person, while thousands more nationwide watched a live telecast of the event.

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Allergy Team Helps Screen for Cancer

Submitted by cassandra.braun on Wed, 02/05/2014 - 15:46
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Long Teaser

Even though hay fever is their specialty, the members of this South San Francisco allergy team helped ensure their patients were up to date on their cancer screenings using simple laminated cards and a script.

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Non-LMP
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Tyra Ferlatte
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we don't have photos of this team, so I'm attaching a generic one. --CB
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Alva Marie Aguilera, Alva.Marie.Aguilera@kp.org

 

 

 

650-742-7180

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Help Improve Screening Rates

There are times you have to get creative to better serve your patients.

Browse through these ideas and see if one or more can work for your team.

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South San Francisco department takes extra steps to ensure patients are as healthy as can be
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South San Francisco allergy team’s specialty may be allergens and hay fever, but that didn’t prevent it from helping to improve patients’ screening rates for cancer, too.

It didn’t happen all at once—some staff members were skeptical at first. Scheduling a screening appointment for a wheezing patient didn’t seem right.

“At first people would say things like, ‘You know, I really don’t feel comfortable saying to a patient, “Oh, you’re due for mammography” when they’re sneezing and congested and here for allergies,’” says Alva Marie Aguilera, the department’s supervisor and management co-lead for the unit-based team.

Screenings as strategy

But part of delivering on Kaiser Permanente’s Total Health promise is to identify health risks and signs of disease as early as possible. Regular screenings for such diseases as high blood pressure, diabetes, and colorectal, cervical and breast cancers are an important part of our strategy.

That means caregivers and employees in seemingly unrelated departments—not just those in, say, internal medicine—have a role to play, and KP HealthConnect® provides them with a powerful tool.

Any time a patient is seen, a “proactive office encounter” message pops up in the member’s electronic record if he or she is due for a health screening or if important health data needs to be updated. It doesn’t matter what the reason is for the current visit or which department the patient is being seen in. 

The members of South San Francisco allergy department took the important work of taking the next step to heart: Following up on the prompt and offering to schedule the patient for the screening or asking the necessary questions to fill in missing information.

Scripts and reminders

To help make sure those things happened consistently, the team tried some small tests of change:

  • It created a general script to help broach the questions with patients and posted laminated cards on computers to serve as reminders.
  • Aguilera reports the weekly screening numbers so staff members know how they are doing and where they missed opportunities to follow through on the HealthConnect® prompts.

The small changes had a big impact. Before the team started the project in February 2012, it followed through on the prompts 80 percent of the time. In the first two months of the project, that jumped to 90 percent. By early 2013, the prompts were being followed up on 95 percent of the time and held steady at that rate for the rest of the year.

It wasn’t just staff members who were uncertain of the practice in the early days.

“At first it was kind of surprising to patients,” says medical assistant Lidia Vanegas-Casino, a member of SEIU UHW and the UBT’s union co-lead. “So we had to explain to them: ‘It’s a way to help you, and to keep up with the things you need done. It’s a proactive approach to keeping you healthy.’”

Positive example

It was one of KP’s own commercials that convinced team members of their important role in keeping patients healthy. Aguilera showed the ad that features KP member Mary Gonzalez, who had gone in—fittingly—for an allergy appointment when the receptionist noticed she was due for a mammogram and booked an appointment for her. The screening picked up a mass, and Gonzalez subsequently learned she had breast cancer. The early detection helped ensure a positive result.

It wasn’t a primary care or OB-GYN department that got her that screening. It was allergy.

“It really hit home for people,” Aguilera says. “If it wasn’t for the allergy receptionist who took that time, we don’t know what would have happened. That was a big encouragement.”

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A Vaccinating Challenge

Submitted by tyra.l.ferlatte on Mon, 01/06/2014 - 11:34
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hank38_georgia_HEDIS
Long Teaser

Meaningful goals and first-rate teamwork help a pediatrics team in Georgia succeed in getting adolescent girls in for a series of three shots over six months. From the Winter 2014 issue of Hank.

Communicator (reporters)
Laureen Lazarovici
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Tyra Ferlatte
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Christina Yadao, MD, examines patient Brooke Davis at the Panola Medical Offices.
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Erica Reynolds, Erica.X.Reynolds@kp.org, 770-322-2713

Sheryl Boyd, 770-322-2713

Physician co-lead(s)

David Jones, MD, David.W.Jones@kp.org, 770-322-2710

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Goals and teamwork help a pediatrics team get adolescent girls in for a series of HPV shots
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On one level, the pediatric clinic at Georgia’s Panola Medical Center Offices is like any other pediatric clinic. Babies squawking and squealing are part of the soundtrack—and under that, there’s the murmur of parents and nurses cooing to get the little ones to stop crying.

But the Panola clinic’s unit-based team stands out. Its members work at one of the several pediatric clinics in KP’s Georgia region that have significantly improved preventive care and screenings for their young patients, who range in age from newborn up through their teens.

The pediatric teams have achieved these goals in the midst of competing demands by staying laser-focused on a handful of quality measures in the Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set, or HEDIS.

“Our projects are usually HEDIS-related,” says Panola’s labor co-lead, Sheryl Boyd, a licensed practical nurse and member of UFCW Local 1996. “HEDIS is so measurable.”

The work is a good example of how, instead of driving an agenda from the top down, achieving a goal can be inspired by engaging frontline teams in understanding how they contribute to KP’s brand promise of total health.

“The teams are not ‘being told what to do,’ but rather they see the big picture and see what they can do to affect it,” says David Jones, MD, Georgia’s physician co-lead for UBTs. Dr. Jones says he and his labor and management LMP counterparts stay abreast of Georgia’s regional goals and priorities, then work with UBT consultants to communicate those to frontline teams.

“We incorporate UBTs as a lever to execute our clinical goals,” says Dr. Jones, creating a vital loop of communication and support.

Collaboration pays off

One of the Panola UBT’s successes has been to increase the number of girls getting the human papillomavirus vaccine (HPV) by their 13th birthday. The vaccine can help prevent a virus that increases the risk of cervical cancer.

The project kicked off in October 2011. At the time, the team wasn’t tracking how many of the girls in the target population had received the vaccination, which is delivered in a series of three shots over six months. The team’s initial goal was to get 5 percent of the girls eligible for the shot vaccinated. In the first six months, the team succeeded in getting 10 percent of the target population started on the series—and by October 2013, nearly 20 percent had gotten the complete series, a significant achievement. While it has yet to reach the national HEDIS average for the vaccination, the team is steadily closing the gap.

Team members achieved these results by working with the clinic’s information technology staff to get a list of patients—11- and 12-year old girls—who needed the vaccine. They contacted parents and made appointments. In the exam room, nurses discussed HPV and the importance of the vaccine with patients and their parents.

And they worked with their IT colleagues again, modifying the computer system so they could book appointments six months in advance. That allowed them to act on a crucial step—scheduling visits for the two follow-up booster shots right then and there.

The parent education was extremely important, says Erica Reynolds, the charge nurse and management co-lead.

“Some parents think we want people to come back in for appointments because we want the co-payments,” she says—but in fact, if the shots aren’t completed in the proper time period and the immunization series needs to be started all over, it requires even more visits. To avoid that, she says, “Scheduling a nurse visit for the second and third vaccines has become a part of our workflow.”

Hard-wiring success

That kind of hard-wiring of successful practices is the holy grail of performance improvement.

As labor co-lead Boyd puts it, “Our projects are not ‘projects.’ They are ongoing.”

In addition, Dr. Jones says, the integration of partnership and performance is taking place at all levels in the region.

For example, he says, physician leaders “integrate the Labor Management Partnership and performance improvement into existing meetings so it is not viewed as outside those discussions.”

As a result, when Georgia earned a five-star Medicare rating in fall 2013 for the first time—bringing all of KP’s regions into that rarified club of health care excellence—Rob Schreiner, MD, the region’s executive medical director, specifically credited UBTs and the culture of continuous improvement for the achievement.

Driven by those two engines, says Schreiner, “We’ll improve quality, service and affordability at a tempo that exceeds that of our competitors.”

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Powerpoint: Cute Kids Inspire Clean Hands

Submitted by Kellie Applen on Wed, 11/02/2011 - 11:27
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Content Section
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ppt_cute_kids_clean_hands

This Powerpoint slide highlights a team that boosted its scores on hand-washing observation surveys.

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Powerpoint: Cute kids inspire clean hands

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PPT

Size:
1 slide

Intended audience:
LMP staff, UBT consultants and performance improvement advisers

Best used:
This Powerpoint slide highlights a team that boosted its scores on hand-washing observation surveys. 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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