Free to Speak

Hank Summer 2015

Format: PDF

Size: 16 pages; print on 8.5" 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 all of the stories online by using the links below.

This Plan Was Made for You and Me

tyra.l.ferlatte Fri, 07/17/2015 - 15:16

Why Rounding Conversations Matter

Submitted by Sherry.D.Crosby on Fri, 07/09/2021 - 14:19
Request Number
ED-1863
Long Teaser

How managers and employees can enrich their rounding conversations to build team engagement, achieve better patient outcomes, reduce workplace injuries and improve attendance.

Communicator (reporters)
Sherry Crosby
Editor (if known, reporters)
Non-LMP
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Take Action: Get More Out of Rounding

When done consistently and frequently, rounding can help managers and frontline workers cultivate joy in work and ensure all voices are heard. Check out these resources to enrich your rounding conversations:

  • Rounding for success: Use these tip sheets to encourage meaningful conversation between managers and employees.
  • Stoplight Report: Download this visual aid to show team members the status of issues raised in rounding conversations.
  • Get expert advice: Learn the benefits of rounding from a Southern California nurse manager who uses rounding as an ongoing practice.
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Connecting with a personal touch
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“Dexter” Janet Borrowman is an operational excellence coach for performance improvement in the Southern California Region. She recently spoke with LMP Communications manager Sherry Crosby about the importance of rounding conversations for managers and frontline workers. Building a workplace culture where everyone’s voice matters is key to our Labor Management Partnership.

What is rounding?

Rounding is an evidence-based practice that relies on purposeful conversation and observation to drive workplace engagement and insights. Direct report rounding involves conversations between a team member and that person’s supervisor, manager or leader.

How does rounding benefit managers and frontline workers?

When done well, rounding helps managers build trust with staff, gain insights into workplace challenges and recognize employees, which fosters joy in work. Frontline workers benefit by having a chance to connect individually with their managers, share ideas, express concerns and find deeper purpose in their everyday work.

What evidence shows rounding is an effective practice?

Rounding is one of the most effective ways for managers to spend their time. And the more they consistently round, the greater the impact. According to People Pulse, departments where rounding is routinely practiced achieve more meaningful levels of engagement, better patient care outcomes, fewer workplace injuries and improved attendance.

How can frontline workers get the most out of rounding conversations?

Sometimes employees don’t see the benefit of direct report rounding; they just see it as helping the boss complete their checklist. It’s totally missing the point! Rounding is your chance to discuss what you need to be successful and the support you need. This is all about you!

How can managers get the most out of rounding conversations?

Rounding is one of the best tools that managers have for proactively surfacing and addressing issues which can create safer, more efficient and productive teams and environments. Use rounding to connect with your team members. People need to feel that their life and work has meaning, and that they are personally supported and cared for as a complete person. People need a personal touch, especially during difficult times, and rounding can help with that.

How can managers use rounding to build trusting relationships?

Your direct reports need to feel that what they’re saying is important and that you’re following up with action. Circle back to that person who brought up the issue with you. Go to the huddle and follow up with the whole team. We build trust by following up after a rounding conversation. We break trust by not following up.

What advice do you have for those who want to enhance their rounding practice?

If we are doing rounding the right way, if we’re doing it consistently, if we’re doing it authentically, then we will discover what matters most to our people and we’ll be able to better support them and the work they do.

 

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Rounding for Success

Submitted by Sherry.D.Crosby on Thu, 07/08/2021 - 12:49
Region
Tool Type
Format
ED-1865

Use these resource guides to encourage conversation and build a workplace culture where everyone's voice matters. 

Sherry Crosby
Guy Ashley
Tool landing page copy (reporters)

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Managers and employees 

Best used: Use these tip sheets to encourage conversation and foster a workplace where everyone's voice matters.  

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Partnership Sets Tone for Fighting COVID-19

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Thu, 04/02/2020 - 15:25
Topics
Request Number
ED-1582
Long Teaser

Because frontline workers, managers and physicians have years of experience working together in partnership, they are coming together to fight the COVID-19 crisis. 

Communicator (reporters)
Sherry Crosby
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
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Take Action: Protect Yourself and Your Team

Keep yourself, your co-workers, and patients safe from harm by following these steps:

  • Wash your hands with soap and water regularly for at least 20 seconds. Alcohol-based hand sanitizers are also effective.
  • Stay at home if you’re sick. Protect the health of our members and patients by staying at home if you’re not feeling well.
  • Clean and disinfect frequently touched objects and surfaces.
  • Get plenty of rest, drink plenty of fluids, eat healthy foods, and manage your stress. For mental health and wellness resources, contact the Employee Assistance Program at kp.org/eap [KP Intranet].
  • Manage resources wisely to ensure there are enough supplies, equipment, capacity, and staff available to care for our members and patients.
  • Seek out trusted sources of information. For the latest on Kaiser Permanente’s response to COVID-19, visit kp.org/coronavirus/employees [KP Intranet].
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Open communication is more important than ever
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As physician assistant Larry Rick, PA-C, made his rounds of the South Bay Medical Center one recent morning, staff stood at the hospital’s main entrance and screened members, patients, and employees for signs of cold- and flu-like symptoms. Like Kaiser Permanente facilities enterprise-wide, the Southern California hospital adopted the new procedure to protect patients and staff from COVID-19, the respiratory illness caused by the novel coronavirus.

A well-established approach is also helping: Frontline workers here say years of working collaboratively with managers as part of the Labor Management Partnership has better prepared them to fight the pandemic. The Partnership has saved money, improved care, and led to better service – and now will literally be saving more lives because frontline workers, managers, and physicians are working together.

An opportunity to speak up

“Partnership is a fantastic tool,” says Rick, a member of UNAC/UHCP, who has 34 years of experience fighting infectious diseases including H1N1, HIV, and sexually transmitted diseases to prevent the spread of HIV. “Every Kaiser Permanente senior leader has been responsive to our requests and has heard us. We’re working together and everybody is leaning in” to treat more patients now, while preparing for an expected surge. In response to unit-based team members’ concerns, for example, tape was placed in 6-foot intervals on pharmacy floors to help members and patients maintain social distancing while standing in line.

“We’re able to speak up as labor and help figure out the solution,” says Alejandra Navarro, a registered nurse in Maternal Child Health and a member of UNAC/UHCP.

Working in partnership together has also built trust between management and labor. That’s been key to maintaining open lines of communication now and helping counter misconceptions spread by social media, say frontline workers.

Education and support

“They’re educating us and giving us a lot of support,” said Lizz Burnett, a licensed vocational nurse in Geriatrics and a member of SEIU-UHW. “If I can help educate someone and they can tell their family, then maybe we can stop this.”

Tynikko Snyder, a registered nurse in Family Medicine at the Gardena Medical Offices, has 2 children with asthma and her mother suffers from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. She is worried about the impact of her work on her family. “I am afraid, but I know that I need to step up to the plate and do what needs to be done,” says Snyder, who is a member of UNAC/UHCP. Rick says that can-do spirit is needed to combat the spread of the disease: “If we all do our jobs, we will save lives.”

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Health and Safety Champions — September 2019 Focus

Submitted by Sherry.D.Crosby on Thu, 08/22/2019 - 15:17
Region
Tool Type
Format
ED-1437

Talking about mental health can be hard because of the stigma associated with it. Make it easier to speak up and be heard by creating a safe space to ask questions and discuss team challenges.

Sherry Crosby
Sherry Crosby
Tool landing page copy (reporters)

Format:
PDF

Size:
One page, 8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
UBT health and safety champions

Best used:
Make it easier to speak up and be heard by creating a safe space to ask questions and discuss team challenges. 

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Speaking Up for New Moms

Keywords
Request Number
VID 170-Speaking Up for New Moms
Long Teaser

One labor and delivery team consistently provides excellent care and service by keeping the lines of communication open. 

Communicator (reporters)
Sherry Crosby
Editor (if known, reporters)
Non-LMP
Video Media (reporters)
Download File URL
https://content.jwplatform.com/videos/RFVod8jJ-iq13QL4R.mp4
Running Time
2:16
Status
Released
Tracking (editors)
Date of publication

This labor and delivery team cultivates a #FreeToSpeak culture, which has helped members provide consistently excellent care and service to new moms. 

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Stoplight Report: Your Voice Matters

Submitted by Paul Cohen on Thu, 06/28/2018 - 13:22
Tool Type
Format
Keywords
ED-1314

This simple, visual tool lets teams see the status of issues raised in rounding conversations. Avaliable in two sizes; available in standard size and as a 24"x36" poster for large-format printers

Sherry Crosby
Non-LMP
Tool landing page copy (reporters)

Format:
PDF

Size:

  • One page, 8.5"x11"
  • Large-size format, 24"x36"

Intended audience:
Frontline managers and unit-based team co-leads

Best used:
Use this visual aid to show team members the status of issues raised in rounding conversations; available in standard size and as a 24"x36" poster for large-format printers.

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Rounding for Results: Creating a Free-to-Speak Culture

Submitted by Paul Cohen on Thu, 06/28/2018 - 12:18
Request Number
ED-1304
Long Teaser

How managers can use their mobile device, or a simple bulletin board poster, to identify, track and escalate issues surfaced during rounding conversations. 

Communicator (reporters)
Sherry Crosby
Editor (if known, reporters)
Non-LMP
Photos & Artwork (reporters)
Only use image in listings (editors)
not listing only
Highlighted stories and tools (reporters)
Take Action: How to Round the Right Way

When managers round with their teams, employees are more engaged and feel free to speak up and be heard in the workplace. Check out these tips from two managers who use rounding as an ongoing practice:

Melody Clarke, RN, director of Surgical Specialties, Georgia

  • Be realistic. “You don’t have to round on every person, every month. Focus on the critical element — you should be able to round on your direct reports regularly. I have eight managers and I meet with them in groups of 4 every 60 days to ask them the rounding questions.”
  • Be positive. “Rounding gives me a mechanism to recognize high performers. Every time I round on my managers, I ask, ‘Is there anybody who I should recognize?’ I send that person a card —‘You’re doing a good job!’ That recognition goes a long way with employees.”

Alaine Lounsbury, RN, nursing clinical assistant director, Downey Medical Center, Southern California

  • Be authentic. “At first, rounding might seem prescriptive. But the more you do it, the more natural it becomes.”
  • Close the loop. “I follow up on feedback and take action on concerns that are raised. Then I share results via the Stoplight Report. We put the poster in a highly visible area. It tells employees, ‘This is what you asked for, this is what we’ve accomplished, and this is what we’re still working on.’”
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Simple tool makes it easy to track issues surfaced in conversations
Story body part 1

Alaine Lounsbury, RN, is proud of her nursing team at Downey Medical Center in Southern California. 4 West team members have worked together for decades, forming bonds that have led to high patient satisfaction rates and region-wide recognition.

Lounsbury, nursing assistant clinical director, attributes the team's success to rounding — the practice of engaging frontline workers in face-to-face conversations on the floor and listening to their concerns. Managers who round say it helps build a culture of engagement and dialogue, a key goal of the Labor Management Partnership between Kaiser Permanente and the Partnership unions. 

“It’s about making a connection,” explains Lounsbury, who rounds quarterly on 90-plus staff members using Kaiser Permanente’s Rounding Plus online tool [KP Intranet]. “You want to hear the good with the bad.”

Removing roadblocks

With the tool, managers can use their mobile device to identify, track and escalate issues surfaced during rounding conversations. Program-wide, nearly 10,000 leaders and managers use the program.

At Downey, nurses used rounding conversations to speak up about a workflow issue. Because 4 West is the only unit with nurses qualified to give chemotherapy to adults, it meant staff members sometimes had to leave their department to administer drugs to patients. Their frequent absences meant more work for others.

“I heard them in rounding say, ‘You need to figure this out,’” recalls Lounsbury. She and her team developed new protocols to enable others outside the unit to give the medication. “That was a big satisfier.”

Getting visual

To help her systematically follow up and act on her team’s questions and concerns, Lounsbury uses a colorful poster, called the Stoplight Report, that assigns green, yellow and red colors to track the status of issues.

The poster was conceived by Downey Quality Coordinator Suxian Hu, RN, based on the color-coded reports managers receive through the Rounding Plus program. Last year, all of Downey’s inpatient nursing units began using it.

In 4 West, the poster hangs prominently in the conference room, where everyone can see it.

“Staff members know something is being done,” says Donielle Tresvant, RN, a staff nurse and member of UNAC/UHCP, one of the unions in the Alliance of Health Care Unions. “They know they’re being heard.”

Nurses say the information shared on the poster also fosters team communication and collaboration. “It keeps us updated about things at work and it helps us improve our care by being focused,” says Brianna Schneider, RN, a member of UNAC/UHCP. “It makes for a cohesive atmosphere.”

 

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Giving Team Members a Voice Kellie Applen Wed, 01/24/2018 - 12:38
Topic
Download File URL
http://content.jwplatform.com/videos/ehO3Ddnv-iq13QL4R.mp4
Request Number
VID-168_giving_team_members_voice
Running Time
2:54
Long Teaser

A Food and Nutrition team creates an environment where employees feel free to voice their opinions and ideas—and can expect action to be taken on their input.

Communicator (reporters)
Sherry Crosby
Editor (if known, reporters)
Non-LMP
Notes (as needed)
VID-132_Speak_Up_Change_a_Life/VID-132_Speak_Up_Change_A_Life2.jpg
Status
Released
Date of publication

A Food and Nutrition team creates an environment where employees feel free to voice their opinions and ideas—and can expect action to be taken on their input.

Produced by Sherry Crosby
Videography by Paul Erskine
Edited by Sherry Crosby and Kellie Applen

 

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