Efficient processes

UBT Fair Planning Guide

Submitted by anjetta.thackeray on Wed, 08/24/2011 - 23:30
Tool Type
Format
Keywords
Topics
tool_UBT_Fair_PlanningGuide

This planning guide provides detailed steps and assignments to supplement the checklist and timeline.

Non-LMP
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
UBT Fair Planning Guide

Format:
PDF

Size:
4 pages, 8.5” x 11” 

Intended audience:
UBT consultants, public affairs staff, regional and facility-level LMP staff, and others involved in planning a UBT fair 

Best used:
Download and review this detailed guide as the first step in planning a UBT fair at your region or facility. Topics include assembling your committee, setting the date and location that will attract the most people to your event, mobilizing teams and presenters, and ensuring your fair goes off without a hitch. Includes space to write in due dates and names of staff assigned to each task.

For more tools, please visit the How-To Guide: UBT Fair in a Box.

 

 

Released
Obsolete (webmaster)
not migrated

UBT Fair Timeline and Checklist

Submitted by anjetta.thackeray on Fri, 08/19/2011 - 16:53
Tool Type
Format
Topics
Tool_UBT_Fair_Timeline

This checklist with timeline provides planning at a glance for regions, service areas and facilities.

Non-LMP
Still needs design tweaks
Tool landing page copy (reporters)

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5” x 11” (landscape)

Intended audience:
UBT consultants, public affairs staff, regional and facility-level LMP staff, and others involved in planning a UBT fair

Best used:
Rely on this six-month timeline to keep the planning committee for a UBT fair on track, with each category of tasks arrayed on overlapping bars. Print out and use this timeline when you begin planning your UBT fair and throughout your preparations to keep you on track for a successful event. Save it on your computer for access to the links to all the items in the “UBT fair in a box” toolkit on the LMP website. Use with the companion planning guide, which details individual tasks.

For more tools, please visit the How-To Guide: UBT Fair in a Box.

 

Released
Obsolete (webmaster)
not migrated

Poster: Cutting Costs, Clutter in the OR

Submitted by Kellie Applen on Thu, 06/02/2011 - 10:48
Region
Tool Type
Format
Topics
Content Section
Taxonomy upgrade extras
bb_cutting_costs_clutter_OR

This poster highlights an Operating Room unit-based team that saved nearly $10,000 a month by reorganizing its supply room.

Non-LMP
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Poster: Cutting costs, clutter in the OR

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Frontline employees, managers and physicians

Best used:
Post on bulletin boards, in break rooms and other staff areasto highlight the work of a unit-based team that saved nearly $10,000 a month by reorganizing its supply room.

Released
Tracking (editors)
Obsolete (webmaster)
not migrated

Like Night and Day

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Wed, 04/20/2011 - 15:52
Topics
Taxonomy upgrade extras
Request Number
sty_Night and Day
Long Teaser

In the cover story from the Spring 2011 Hank, unit-based teams in three different departments find ways to fix the long-standing disconnect between the day and night shifts, and in the process, boost performance by working together.

Communicator (reporters)
Laureen Lazarovici
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Notes (as needed)
4/25: caption for second photo:
Riverside EVS attendant Virginia Gonzalez, a United Steelworkers Local 7600 member.
Photos & Artwork (reporters)
Riverside EVS attendant Robert Casillas, a member of United Steelworkers Local 7600
Only use image in listings (editors)
not listing only
Highlighted stories and tools (reporters)
Tips to Help 24/7 UBTS

Use this checklist to help pull your team together.

Status
Released
Tracking (editors)
Story content (editors)
Deck
At KP, health care is 24/7, and unit-based teams are finding ways to fix a longstanding weak link--the disconnect between shifts
Story body part 1

In health care, there is no such thing as “normal business hours.” Babies insist on being born at 3 a.m. A car crash or bursting appendix can land a patient in the Emergency Room at noon or midnight or 5 a.m. To prevent infections, the cleanliness of hospital rooms is just as important at 4 a.m. as at 4 p.m.

So what’s a unit-based team to do? Full participation in a team’s performance improvement work from all members on all shifts can send service and quality scores soaring—while shifts left out in the cold can drag down a whole department. It’s hard enough ensuring all members of a single shift are on board.

But getting everyone onboard around the clock is a daunting challenge. Shifts that pass in the night may be oblivious to the other’s particular challenges and culture. They might not fully understand how their own work affects the other shift’s workflow. Rivalries and finger-pointing can ensue.

NIGHT OWLS IN THE LAB

As the double doors swing open, cold night air blasts into the receiving bay at the Regional Reference Laboratory in North Hollywood, California. Employees are ready, bundled up in knit scarves and hoodies. It’s 11:30 p.m. on a mid-February night, and couriers are delivering gray cooler bags filled with vials and tubes of specimens from all over Southern California. Clinics from Kern County in the north to San Diego, nearly 180 miles south, have closed for the evening. Now all of those blood tests and urine samples have to be processed and analyzed so providers can detect disease or spot the warning signs of a developing chronic condition.

At the specimen processing department, the graveyard shift is the busiest. “We’re like the mailroom,” says Leland Chan, supervisor and management co-lead. More than 10,000 specimens go to the automated chemistry department during the graveyard shift, compared with about 4,300 in the morning and nearly 9,000 at night.

Michael Aragones, the labor co-lead, likens the three shifts to gears all rotating together and powering each other forward. But not so long ago, the gears were getting jammed up.

Building resentments

Something was going on: Staff members on each shift thought the workload wasn’t being distributed equally—and they were getting the short end of the stick. Employees with different duties on the same shift felt the same way about their peers.

“There was a lot of ‘back talk’ between the shifts,” says Aragones, a lab assistant II and member of SEIU UHW. “People would say, ‘How come they are doing this or that?’ and ‘How come I have so much work?’ ”

The unit-based team was the vehicle for improving the workflow. Team members from all shifts got involved collecting, collating and analyzing data about the specimen count, hour by hour.


Riverside EVS attendant Virginia Gonzalez, a United Steelworkers Local 7600 member.

The results revealed why employees were feeling overworked: Between 2008 and 2010, the number of specimens going to bacteriology, for instance, increased from fewer than 4,000 to more than 5,000. Moreover, the time of night that most specimens arrived had changed. The lab used to see a big spike around 9:30 p.m.; now the rush came about 11 p.m. So the team adjusted the start and end time of the graveyard shift to match the flow of work coming in.

“At first, there was a lot of resistance,” Chan says, with employees worried about child care arrangements and traffic. The data, however, “gave us a better understanding of the workflow,” which let staff members see why they were being asked to make changes. “It was the UBT that helped solve that.”

 “It wasn’t managers saying, ‘Well, you just have to,’ ” Aragones says. “We have to look at workflow for the whole department, not just one shift. It’s like a spider web. You pull one strand, and it affects the whole thing.”

Now that the work is flowing better, the UBT is working on new initiatives.

“The UBT makes my life easier,” says Chan. “It allows me to work more closely with the crew because we are on equal terms. Sometimes, as a manager, you don’t have all the answers. They do the work, they are the experts.”

COOKING UP CAMARADERIE

It is 7:15 p.m. in the kitchen of the Downey Medical Center. “Huddddlllle!” shouts Francisco Vargas, a gentle giant of a man. The sound of his booming voice echoes off the tile floors and stainless steel work surfaces. One of about 20 SEIU UHW members working the night shift in the Food and Nutrition department, Vargas gathers the troops before they begin to wash dinner trays and deliver late meals to patients.

Assistant Department Administrator Patricia Villareal and her union partner Amelia Cervantes review new data on the team’s improvement projects, such as cooking less soup on weekends so less is wasted, and give a reminder about clocking in accurately.

The huddle ends with a team cheer—“Work hard, stay positive!”—and with that, food service kitchen worker Nancy Rudeas, an SEIU UHW member, and a colleague scurry off to prepare two late dinner trays. They double-check to see that a patient’s special request for green tea is being filled (it is).

“I love doing this,” Rudeas says, heading up on the elevator.

A few late tray deliveries have become a fact of life for the department, a consequence of abandoning set meal times in favor of a “room service” model: Patients simply make a phone call when they are ready for a meal, just like a hotel guest might.

This patient-centered innovation meant the workflow changed. Foreseeable peaks and valleys in cooking and cleaning became a less predictable, variable demand. Tasks that once had been the domain of one shift or the other “leaked” into the next shift. Tensions rose among employees as the distribution of work was thrown into flux.

“Because we have a UBT, we could sit down together and ask, ‘How can we get this resolved?’ ” says Villareal.

Together, the team experimented with adjusting start times for different jobs in the department until it settled on a mix that’s working. “The morning picks up for the night shift, and the night shift picks up for the morning,” she says.

From OK to great

The department set out to improve its customer service scores in September 2008. Though a respectable 86.7 percent of patients surveyed agreed with the statement “the people serving my meals were polite and professional,” that was nonetheless among the lowest scores in the Southern California region.

Together, the UBT members came up with a script that encourages food service workers to introduce themselves by name, ask if they can open any containers, and—most crucially—ask if there is anything else they can get for the patients. By consistently using the script, by October 2010, the score shot up to 99 percent.

Night-shift workers like Rudeas have contributed to that success. The shifts share information in huddles and bulletin boards.

“What goes on during the day, we know at night,” she says. “And what goes on at night, they know during the day.”

A SWEEPING SUCCESS

The Environmental Services department at Riverside Medical Center is continuing its winning streak: In 2010, it went 260 days without a workplace injury. The UBT received a huge banner congratulating it on the achievement, and the co-leads thought it would be nice if each team member signed it before hanging it up.

The banner remained out for a few days to make sure all staffers had a chance to sign—including the workers who come in at 11 p.m. for the graveyard shift. Only then was the banner hung up on the unit wall.

“This made a huge difference,” says Angel Pacheco, who will become the new management co-lead in May and who himself works the night shift. “This actually shows that everyone is involved and can take pride and ownership.” After all, performance metrics are measured by department, not shift, and night shift workers contributed to creating a safer workplace as much as their day shift counterparts.

The EVS team posts a flipchart sheet after every monthly UBT meeting with three to four important items of information to pass on to the rest of the staff. Each shift reviews the sheet at a daily huddle held at the beginning of each shift. The quick review of UBT business, including key performance metrics, follows the team’s stretching exercises that have helped reduce workplace injuries and won it recognition throughout KP.

The sheet hangs on the door of the supply closet, where each staff member comes when starting work to get carts, trash bags and keys to the offices they have to clean. This strategic placement ensures workers from all shifts have access to the daily UBT updates.

Face time matters

Face-to-face communication augments written communication and helps build the camaraderie that helps teams improve performance. For instance, Pacheco makes a point of visiting the night workers in the outlying medical office buildings—he drives an hour to Temecula to see one employee.

“It’s worth it,” he says. “I just take the time to reflect on things.”

Paula Cunningham, an EVS attendant and member of Steelworkers Local 7600, is one of four union members on the 6 p.m. to 2 a.m. shift responsible for passing information from the UBT’s representative group meeting to her shift colleagues.

“They trust us to deliver the information to them,” says Cunningham, whose work schedule is adjusted so she can attend representative group meetings in the early afternoon. “We talk frequently and rely heavily on huddles.” Other night shift workers also rotate into the group’s meetings.

Because he’s an on-call employee, Robert Casillas works all the shifts, so he has insights into what makes each shift unique.

The morning shift is more hectic, he says. The evening work is much calmer. More people are cleaning sections solo, but they pass one another in the hallways and share information with each other then.

“We have our communications plan, which we share with the other staff,” Casillas says. “We don’t want anyone to think we’re hiding stuff. And when the information comes from us, it’s less like a demand from management. It’s more about figuring out ideas to help us do our work.”

Sometimes, seeing the hospital at the end of the day as they do, it is night shift employees who spur the entire department into action.

The night workers noticed the hospital was running low on privacy curtains. When the ones soiled during the day were taken down, there were not enough from the laundry to replace them. Cunningham brought the information to the representative group, and the co-leads secured more curtains.

“What affects the night shift,” she says, “usually affects all of us.”

 

Obsolete (webmaster)
Migrated
not migrated
Poster: Going Green With Blue Wrap Recycling Kellie Applen Tue, 11/02/2010 - 11:21
poster
PDF
Southern California
not migrated
Tool Type
Format
Topics
Content Section

Format:
PDF (color and black and white)

Size:
8.5” x 11”

Intended audience:
Frontline workers and managers

Best used:
Use this to encourage your surgery team colleagues to help make Kaiser Permanente more affordable and at the same time, preserve the environment. Post it on bulletin boards, in break rooms and other staff areas. 

 

bb_irvine_goingreen

This poster features a surgery team that is helping to make KP more affordable and at the same time, preserving the environment.

Non-LMP
Released

Preparing You for Surgery

Submitted by cassandra.braun on Wed, 09/22/2010 - 18:16
Tool Type
Format
Topics
Taxonomy upgrade extras
tips_presurgerychecklist

A South San Francisco pre-admissions team developed this one-page, easy-to-use checklist to help prepare their patients for surgery.

Non-LMP
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Team develops surgery prep checklist.

Format:
PDF and Word DOC

Size:
1 page, 8½” x 11”

Intended Audience:
Teams working on improving the pre-surgery process for patients.

Best used:
Use this document as a model to consider how your facility might revamp the presurgery process and create your own one-page checklist for patients. 
This checklist was developed by a multidepartmental team in South San Francisco that wanted to streamline the presurgery process for patients. As a result of using it, 80 percent of patients are now being confirmed as pre-admitted 24 hours before surgery and the completeness and accuracy of admissions rate has hit 99.4 percent.

Read more about the process in the Fall 2010 Hank.

 

Released
Tracking (editors)
Obsolete (webmaster)
tips (checklist, etc.)
PDF
Northern California
hank
lmpartnership.org
not migrated
Sand Canyon Goes Green With Blue Wrap Recycling Shawn Masten Mon, 09/13/2010 - 12:18
Region
Southern California
Vehicle/venue
lmpartnership.org
Migrated
not migrated
Taxonomy upgrade extras
Headline (for informational purposes only)
Irvine goes geen with blue wrap reycling project
Deck
Project saves money and helps the environment--and assists local disabled adults, too
Request Number
sty_sandcanyon_blue wrap recycling
Long Teaser

New blue wrap recycling project at Sand Canyon Surgicenter saves money and the environment and helps the disabled.

Story body part 1

Looking for ways to make the Sand Canyon Surgicenter in Irvine more efficient, Albert Olmeda wound up learning a lot about blue wrap—like the fact that it makes up nearly 20 percent of the waste generated by hospital surgical services. 

The lead Central Services technician and SEIU UHW member also learned that this heavily used hospital product, an industrial strength plastic used to maintain the sterility of medical and surgical instruments until opened, is not biodegradable and persists in the environment. 

But recycled blue wrap can be sold as raw material for use in the production of other plastic products. Today, the surgicenter’s unit-based team has gone green with a blue wrap recycling project that is not only saving money and protecting the environment, but also aiding the community. 

“The biggest problem with the blue wrap is when we throw it in the landfill, it’s there forever,” says Olmeda. “That’s a big concern especially considering how much blue wrap we use.” 

How recycling works

About 600 pounds of blue wrap is collected every week from the center’s six operating rooms. It is picked up free of charge and sorted by Goodwill of Orange County, which sells it to a Houston recycling services company. The company reprocesses the plastic into beads that are used in various products, including railroad ties, pallets and artificial siding for decks, docks and houses. 

The surgicenter has been recycling its blue wrap and plastic bottles since September 2009, reducing the facility’s solid waste disposal fee by 10 percent annually. The savings amount to a modest $5,880—but there’s a greater payoff. Proceeds from the sale of blue wrap and other recyclable products enable Goodwill to provide education and training programs for developmentally and physically disabled adults, including a state-of-the-art fitness center. 

Peter Bares, business development manager for Goodwill of Orange County, says the relationship with Kaiser Permanente has gone beyond expectations. “It is kind of the perfect storm because of the nature of what we do and why we do it and the materials that the hospital generates,” he says. 

Getting buy-in

As the frontline staff person responsible for the surgery center’s blue wrap disposal, Olmeda—and his fellow UBT members—championed the recycling cause, educating the staff at weekly in-services and UBT huddles.  The team got the rest of the department on board by integrating the blue wrap recycling process without creating additional tasks. 

“We figured if we changed workflows, staff wouldn’t want to do it.” says UBT co-lead Nicole Etchegoyen, a surgery scheduler and SEIU UHW steward. “But if we asked them, ‘How would this work best for you?’ then everyone would get involved, and they did.” 

The team members designated a single container for blue wrap in each operating room. They also placed a larger bin for collecting multiple bags of discarded blue wrap near the soiled utility room, where the trash is taken on its way out of the surgery center. 

“It’s not a big deal,” EVS worker and SEIU UHW member George Sollars said, hoisting bags. “We just carry it over here on our way out this door. It’s one of the easiest jobs. And it’s for a really good cause.” 

No trash, just recycling 

The hardest part was making make sure that other trash didn’t make it into the blue wrap recycling containers accidentally. Labeling the containers with signs reading ‘Recycling Blue Wrap Only’ helped, as did regular reminders by UBT members. 

Now, everyone in the operating rooms—from doctors, nurses and surgical techs to nursing assistants and EVS workers—makes sure that the blue wrap containers aren’t contaminated with other trash, Etchegoyen says. 

Olmeda does periodic spot checks. “Everybody who plays a role in the operating room has to look out to make sure no trash is going inside the containers,” he says. “It’s a team-building thing.” 

“If it wasn’t for the UBT, this wouldn’t be happening,” said Ramin Zolfagar, MD, department head and UBT member. “We are helping the environment by ‘going blue,’ so to speak, and the end result is gym equipment for the disabled—which makes it all the more worthwhile.” 

After learning about the project at a recent Orange County UBT fair, other departments are thinking about emulating it. 

Visit the Goodwill of Orange County website to find out more about their work.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Notes (as needed)
link to related slideshow and psda when available. (Highlighted resources box)
For more information about this team's work contact Nicole.M.Etchegoyen@kp.org
Paul go ahead and publish when finished.
Blue wrap recycling in the operating room at the Sand Canyon Surgicenter
Only use image in listings (editors)
not listing only
Status
Released

What to Do When a Team Is Stuck

Submitted by Kristi on Mon, 05/31/2010 - 21:33
Tool Type
Format
chart_unstick team meetings

This chart provides a variety of suggestions to jumpstart a team when they get stuck in "process" mode, are picking unrealistic goals or can't find a solution to a problem.

Non-LMP
Tool landing page copy (reporters)

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Frontline managers, physicians and unit-based co-leads

Best used:
In meetings or as a handout to help teams move past process and get creative to solve problems. 

Released
Tracking (editors)
Obsolete (webmaster)
tips (checklist, etc.)
PDF
lmpartnership.org
not migrated