Partnership: Just What the Doctor Ordered
This physician was skeptical about unit-based teams at first. But after seeing solid results in helping patients manage hypertension and diabetes, he's a believer and advocate.
This physician was skeptical about unit-based teams at first. But after seeing solid results in helping patients manage hypertension and diabetes, he's a believer and advocate.
What can your team do to improve cooperation between physicians and other members of the care team?
An overview of the different UBT members' roles.
A unit-based team includes all managers, physicians, dentists and partnership union members in the work unit. All employees in the unit participate and support the team in meeting its goals and objectives.
For the team to move up and become high performing, its important for all team members to:
Visit the Team Member Engagement toolkit to learn more.
Each UBT has a management and labor co-lead. In departments with physicians, it’s ideal to have a physician co-lead as well. Co-leads organize the team’s meetings and huddles and make sure the team’s performance improvement work stays on track.
The role of UBT co-leads is to:
Visit the Leadership toolkit to learn more.
Sponsors are the go-to people for UBT co-leads, providing resources, guidance and oversight for teams.
The role of UBT sponsors is to:
Visit the Sponsorship toolkit to learn more.
Format: Printed flyer or PDF
Size: 8.5” x 11”
Intended audience: Physicians in Chief and physician team leads
Best used: In meetings and trainings. Can be posted on bulletin boards or in offices
Description: Why should physician leaders support unit-based teams? Simply because the teams remain our best hope for a workplace that supports better delivery of care and service. Find out more in this short letter-size piece that features frequently-asked questions about UBTs.
A leaflet that describes the Chief's responsibilities in implementing UBTs.
This video shows what it's like to work in Partnership at Kaiser Permanente from a physician's point of view.
With the advent of the Labor Management Partnership, the physician “is not in charge," but rather just “another perspective at the table,” says Brent Arnold, MD. Watch this short video to see one physician's perspective of the LMP.
Physicians pitch in to help short-staffed nurses clear the electronic inbox in KP HealthConnect.
Open communication leads to better patient outcomes and a more engaged workforce, and there are surefire ways to build a culture where people feel free to raise concerns. From the Spring 2013 Hank.
David Jones, MD, explains how unit-based teams can help doctors improve the care they give patients and transform care delivery.
Tom Harburg, MD, talks about his experience as a sponsor and the value of having the physician involved in the unit-based team.
Tom Harburg, MD, is the physician in charge at Division Medical Office in the Northwest. He co-sponsors two primary care teams in the medical office along with the medical office manager and their labor partners. “Doctors can’t be cowboys anymore,” says Dr. Harburg, referring to physician Atul Gawande’s New Yorker article “Cowboys and Pit Crews.” Harburg agrees with Gawande that doctors need to work in a team environment and that, as Gawande wrote, “places that function most like a system are most successful…(where) diverse people actually work together to direct their specialized capabilities toward a common goal for patients.” Dr. Harburg talked with LMP communications consultant Jennifer Gladwell about being a sponsor and the value of having the physician involved in the team.
A. As the medical director of the clinic, I work with the medical office manager and labor partners to help sponsor the teams. We help facilitate leadership. I think the strength of the unit-based teams lies with the grassroots approach. The ideas come from the front line. My role is to help build awareness and alignment to the goals of the organization and ensure that our approach is member-centric.
A. The measurement is the biggest barrier. We have to be able to measure our performance to see if what we’re doing has any effect on our patients.
The true benefit of the huddles is communication. There’s a social aspect to in-person huddles that allows you to address issues that pop up. It also facilitates learning and disseminating information—like the first day of a new protocol, you can remind folks at the huddles. I also think it’s a morale builder. Huddles foster good camaraderie. We only have two huddles per week at the clinic, but we have been doing huddles for three years. We’ve changed the time of the huddles based on the clinic hours, and now we’re going back to mornings.
Help your team with these resources.
Tom Harburg, MD, Tom.Harburg@kp.org, 503-772-6314
This tool provides information to physicians who are joining a new or existing unit-based team: why they're part of the team, what their role is and what their responsibilities are.