Growth

The Road Taken

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Fri, 09/01/2017 - 18:26
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Hank
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ED-1143 and ED-1135
Long Teaser

Key accomplishments in workforce planning and development, workplace safety, total health, joint marketing and growth and attendance (and a peek into the future). 

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Non-LMP
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Tyra Ferlatte
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Labor Management Partnership Milestones

1997: Labor Management Partnership established.

1999: Employment and Income Security Agreement gives coalition union-represented employees the opportunity to train for comparable positions in the event of layoffs.

2000: The first National Agreement is negotiated between Kaiser Permanente and the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions; it establishes the Performance Sharing Program.

2001: KP and the coalition advocate for improved nurse-to-patient staffing ratios—the first such joint action in health care.

2005: The second National Agreement establishes unit-based teams.

2005-2009: Joint work to implement KP HealthConnect, setting the precedent for collaboration on future system rollouts, including ICD-10 and Claims Connect.

2008: A contract reopener includes a shared strategy to grow health plan and union membership. 

2010: Third National Agreement establishes performance goals and metrics for UBTs.

2012: Fourth National Agreement includes the Total Health Incentive Plan.

2014–2016: LMP is lauded by the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service and others; KP and coalition leaders provide partnership advice to health systems across the United States and overseas. 

2015: Fifth National Agreement provides for joint assessment of future workforce needs, increases investment in workforce training, and arrives at a long-term solution that protects retiree medical benefits while reducing liabilities associated with those benefits.

2017: Union coalition grows to 116,000 union members; KP grows to 11.8 million health plan members.

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The Road Taken
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20 years of national program results
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Workforce Planning and Development

Key accomplishments

  • Program enrollments in Kaiser Permanente’s two education trusts grew from about 3,000 in 2007 to nearly 62,000 in 2016. 
  • Tuition reimbursement course applications nearly tripled, from less than 20,000 in 2008 to more than 57,000 in 2016, largely benefiting members of unions in the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions.
  • Critical skills training launched in June 2017 with a Digital Fluency pilot program for more than 2,000 employees.

Going forward

  • A top priority will be addressing the impact of economic, social and technological changes on care delivery and future KP staffing models. (Learn more at kpworkforce.org.)

Workplace Safety

Key accomplishments

  • Since program inception in 2001, KP’s injury rate has been reduced by 69 percent.
  • Injuries associated with patient handling and/or mobilization have decreased by 32 percent since 2011.
  • The program-wide workplace safety strategy was strengthened in 2016, based on the National Safety Council’s model.

Going forward

  • The strengthened safety strategy will be implemented, with the goal of closing the gap between KP’s injury rate and the Bureau of Labor Statistics adjusted injury rate for health care.

Total Health

Key accomplishments

  • More than 76,000 employees have taken the Total Health Assessment (THA) since 2014.
  • Ninety percent of eligible employees completed their recommended health screenings in 2014 and 2015, earning a $40 million payout under the Total Health Incentive Plan.
  • More than 3,000 UBT health and safety champions helped teams across the organization conduct 1,756 wellness projects in 2016—a 45 percent increase from 2015.

Going forward

  • New awareness campaigns, including one focusing on prediabetes education, will inform and empower employees to take charge of their own health and wellness.

Joint Marketing and Growth

Key accomplishments

  • Helped secure more than $108 million in revenue for Kaiser Permanente in 2016.
  • Supported the 20-year growth in the number of employees represented by a union in the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions, from 57,000 to 116,000, and in Kaiser Foundation Health Plan membership, from 7.4 million members to 11.8 million. 
  • Since 2012, mobilized 51 union ambassadors who attended more than 300 community events and engaged more than 70,000 KP members and potential members—many of them unionized—increasing community knowledge and understanding of KP.

Going forward

  • Through the expansion of health plan membership, support job security and the continued growth of the coalition.

Attendance 

Key accomplishments

  • Enhanced time-off benefits to provide incentives for appropriate use of sick leave.
  • Developed the Time-Off Request Tracking System to provide greater flexibility and responsiveness in managing planned time off.
  • Achieved 21 percent fewer lost workdays in high-performing UBTs. 

Going forward 

  • Attendance data, systems and results will continue to be assessed and improved.

 

 

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KP and Union Growth

When people join Kaiser Permanente, good things happen. Kaiser Permanente and our unions gain strength and stability. Good jobs become more available and secure. More people in our communities benefit from KP’s affordable, quality care. That’s why the Labor Management Partnership helps spread the word on KP’s better model of care.

AIDET by the Letters

Submitted by Shawn Masten on Tue, 10/04/2016 - 16:41
Topics
Taxonomy upgrade extras
Request Number
hank31_AIDET_by_the_letters
Long Teaser

This sidebar story from the Spring 2012 Hank describes the meaning behind the AIDET acronym and how it can be used to improve customer service.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
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Eric Zambrano, left, RN, UNAC/UHCP with Demetria Verna, ward clerk/transcriber, SEIU UHW
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Patients Are Priority #1

Here are some more service resources to help you help your patients.

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AIDET By the letters
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Spelling out patient service
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It's a simple set of five letters, but it can pay big dividends when you're interacting with patients.

Let's spell it out and communicate our best.

Acknowledge—The first letter of the AIDET acronym reminds each staff member or care provider along the patient’s path to acknowledge his or her presence. Making eye contact with a patient or giving the member a smile is all that’s needed.

Introduce—When you identify yourself by name, you change the patient’s visit from an anonymous interaction into a personalized experience.

Duration—A little information goes a long way. Letting patients know how long a visit is expected to take lets them know their time is valued. If a doctor is running late or the lab is behind, letting patients know about the delay and keeping them updated shows respect.

Explanation—Whose body is it? No one likes it when a caregiver starts doing something without telling a patient what they’re doing and why.

Thank you—The last step wraps up the visit by thanking the patient for coming in or for providing the information needed to provide them with excellent care.

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From the Desk of Henrietta: Ambassadors at Large

Submitted by tyra.l.ferlatte on Mon, 09/19/2016 - 15:44
Request Number
hank40_henrietta
Long Teaser

Henrietta, Hank's resident columnists, explains both the selfish and not-so-selfish reasons for being an ambassador for KP, at work and away from work. From the Summer 2014 issue.

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Tyra Ferlatte
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Non-LMP
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Today, maybe, you have a headache. Or your back hurts. Or you’ve come down with a case of the grumps and merely want to show up, do what you have to do, and roll on home at the appointed hour.

But you don’t.

Why? I suspect because in your heart of hearts, you know that every day, each of us is an ambassador for Kaiser Permanente—at work and away from work, too. And it’s important we represent the organization well.

On one level, this is self-serving: It helps ensure KP has a vibrant future and we continue to have the best jobs in health care.

On another level, it’s pretty cosmic. Given how big and well-known Kaiser Permanente has become, it’s easy to forget that our approach to health care upends U.S. norms. But as we succeed in delivering our brand of health care in this market, others take notice—and begin to adopt our methods. We have the power to revolutionize health care delivery for the benefit of everyone.

So it’s important that KP stay around, and we can do that only if we “grow membership”—by keeping the members we have and attracting new ones.

This issue of Hank explores how the Labor Management Partnership is helping to reach out and bring more members into the KP fold. It lays out how, at every level and layer of the organization, partnership motivates and enables people to step outside their traditional roles to act in ways that benefit us all.

Regardless of our particular job, we each have a part to play, every day, grumps or no grumps, in the work of helping Kaiser Permanente grow bigger and stronger. That means you. And that means me.

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Around the Regions (Fall 2014)

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Mon, 09/19/2016 - 15:40
Topics
Hank
Request Number
sty_Around the Regions_Fall2014
Long Teaser

Newsy notes from all of KP's regions. From the Fall 2014 issue of Hank.

Communicator (reporters)
Laureen Lazarovici
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
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Members of the Labor and Delivery UBT at South Bay Medical Center in Southern California, a high-performing team
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Physician co-lead(s)

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Around the Regions (Fall 2014)
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Colorado

Spurred on by a Performance Sharing Program goal, UBTs in the region are focusing on affordability and efficiency by taking on improvement projects with identified cost savings or revenue capture. Teams are finding ways to work together. For example, the Stapleton Cytology and Molecular lab teams increased productivity by cross-training and solving problems together. As of August 2014, the teams are processing five times more HPV screenings a month than in 2012. The region also is celebrating strong membership growth.

Georgia

Clinicians know a lot about medicine and less about the health insurance benefits their patients have. Members of the unit-based team at the Douglasville Medical Office knew that frustrated patients. They set out in July 2013 to improve the staff’s understanding of member benefits through an ambitious 12-week training session. Before starting the weekly classes, staff members scored an average of 68.5 percent on a test about member benefits. By the end of October, their average score was 95 percent. The team credits its newfound business literacy for boosting service scores, which helped Kaiser Permanente retain a major city account and win a new one. 

Hawaii

More than 1,000 new health plan members joined Kaiser Permanente this summer, thanks to the collaboration between Kaiser Permanente and the Coalition of KP Unions to grow KP membership. The effort started in May with a strong presence at a conference of the Hawaii Government Employees Association—one of six unions covered by the state Employees’ Retirement System, KP Hawaii’s largest customer. Conference delegates visited the KP booth, took Body Mass Index (BMI) readings and participated in a KP-sponsored walk. KP followed up with mailers to prospective members, presentations to union retirees, invitations to tour KP facilities and more. Lynn Ching, labor liaison for the Labor Management Partnership in Hawaii, and Troy Tomita, a KP senior account manager, worked on the project together. “It’s a great headstart for open enrollment in October,” Ching says. 

Mid-Atlantic States

Members of the Ambulatory Surgery Center unit-based team in Gaithersburg, Md., not only are putting the patient at the center of every effort, but also bringing the patient’s family members and friends into the fold. The team created a perioperative liaison role, in which a staff person is assigned to a patient and acts as point person, updating a patient’s friends or family members throughout the patient’s journey through the surgery center. After creating the new role in February 2014, the surgery center’s service scores jumped from 75.8 percent in January 2014 to 88.8 percent in April 2014.

Northern California

Fremont Medical Center employees took all obstacles in stride when it came to adding physical activity to their workday as part of the KP-wide Instant Recess® week in early August. Nearly 200 Fremont workers Hula-Hooped, boxed, danced, hop-scotched and jump-roped as part of the facility’s Instant Recess obstacle course. Usually, Instant Recess is a 5- to 10-minute activity done to music, but it also can be any kind of fun activity that gets people moving. The San Francisco, Richmond and San Rafael medical centers were among the other Northern California locations that joined in the week of Instant Recess, which was organized by national and regional Workforce Wellness programs and the union coalition.

Northwest

Working through unit-based teams, the region has launched a new focus on affordability. The UBT Resource Team is leading the charge by providing such resources as a project template and performance improvement tools, including 6S and the Waste Walk, as it works with teams. In addition, teams can reach out to subject matter experts in finance, purchasing and other areas for assistance. The region’s UBT Data Team will calculate the return on investment of the efforts and enter that information into UBT Tracker. Some teams, such as the Rockwood Medical Office Patient Registration UBT, are working on reducing paper registration forms to cut down on waste and save money.

Southern California

Leaders at the South Bay Medical Center hosted a performance improvement fair for unit-based teams this summer, aimed at giving teams the tools they need to reach levels 4 and 5 on the Path to Performance. After grabbing some healthy snacks at the sign-in table, UBT co-lead pairs sat with an improvement advisor or UBT consultant and got customized advice on how to move their projects forward. For instance, the union co-lead from a medical-surgical unit reviewed data collection techniques at one table, while at another, food and nutrition team members filled out a fishbone diagram for their efforts to collect errant cafeteria trays. Co-leads got help entering their projects into UBT Tracker, then left with a packet of performance improvement tools.

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Around the Regions (Winter 2015)

Submitted by tyra.l.ferlatte on Mon, 09/19/2016 - 15:38
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sty_Around the Regions_Winter2015
Long Teaser

Newsy notes from all of KP's regions. From the Winter 2015 issue of Hank.

Communicator (reporters)
Laureen Lazarovici
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Photos & Artwork (reporters)
Carol Hammill, a new UPR in Southern California, pictured with her management colleague Ursula Doidic
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Physician co-lead(s)

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Around the Regions (Winter 2015)
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Colorado

When the region revamped how it assesses unit-based teams’ Path to Performance rankings in 2014, some teams dropped down on the five-point scale. But the National Agreement and the region’s Performance Sharing Plan motivate teams to reach high performance, and UBTs are rallying around the more objective and accurate evaluation method. The downgrades are proving to be temporary. One Level 5 team is the Cardiology department at the Franklin Medical Office, which improved access by streamlining the referral review process for patients.

Georgia

Musicians aren’t the only ones who go on tour. Loretta Sirmons, a Total Health labor lead, and Tracie Hawkins-Simpson, a contract specialist, who are both members of UFCW Local 1996, hit the road to encourage people to complete the Total Health Assessment. They were joined by their business representative, Louise Dempsey, and Russell Wise, the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions national coordinator for Georgia. “We blitzed the facilities,” Wise says. “For those who hadn’t taken the THA, we explained its importance.” They visited during the work day, dropped in on farmers markets and held cyber cafés. Wise credits the collaboration for increasing regional participation in the THA: In May, it stood at 37 percent. By September, it had increased to 63 percent.

Hawaii

The Hawaii region is partnering with 25 local labor trusts to enhance its members’ benefits and build loyalty to Kaiser Permanente. The new benefit, called Well Rx Hawaii, makes drugs for high blood pressure, high cholesterol and diabetes available free of charge for enrolled members. “Union leaders like it because it shows the value they bring to their members,” says Harris Nakamoto, KP’s director of labor and trust sales for Hawaii. “We like it because it emphasizes the strength of KP's integrated delivery system—and helps members with chronic conditions save money and stay healthier.” KP is funding the program through expected savings in future medical costs and is tracking enrolled members’ compliance with medication, follow-up care and any decrease in emergency room visits or hospital stays.

Mid-Atlantic States

The supply closets for the Physical Therapy department at the Woodlawn Medical Center in Maryland were “in disarray,” admits Dexter Alleyne, materials coordinator and member of OPEIU Local 2. “The overabundance of supplies was money not being used.” Using the 6S method, the inventory operations team took responsibility for the closets—organizing them and setting par levels while preparing to use OneLink for ordering supplies. The team created a spreadsheet for surplus supplies and sent an “up for grabs” email to colleagues at its own medical center and beyond, says Jennifer Hodges, inventory operations supervisor for the Baltimore area. Purging four closets over the summer is yielding savings. The team plans to spread the success throughout Woodlawn and to three nearby medical centers.

Northern California

Concerned by the slow pace of growth in the number of high-performing unit-based teams in the first part of 2014, both the Northern and Southern California regions piloted a SWAT team approach to accelerate the development of Level 4 and 5 teams. The results were impressive. In June, Northern California temporarily reassigned UBT consultants and union partnership representatives from high-performing service areas to assist the consultants and UPRs working in three struggling service areas. As a result, from June to September 2014, the region moved 42 UBTs in the targeted service areas to Levels 4 and 5, out of a total of 90 teams that moved up to high-performing status. During the same period in 2013, 15 UBTs had become Level 4 and 5 teams in those same areas.

Northwest

The Northwest is the only KP region to offer dental services to health plan members—and its dental program is celebrating its 40th anniversary. The idea for the program, which launched in 1974, came from Mitch Greenlick, then director of the Center for Health Research, KP’s medical research unit. Today, Greenlick is a state representative in Oregon—and more than 800 KP dental staff and dentists provide more than 234,000 people with dental care and coverage. The program is home to 19 unit-based teams, almost all of them high performing. Sunset Dental UBT reduced unfilled appointments by creating a wait list and calling patients when a spot opened up. Unfilled appointments improved by 22 percent in 2013, and team members have sustained the result. Get some quick facts and figures on the dental program.

Southern California

Taking a SWAT team approach to boost the number of high-performing unit-based teams, Southern California concentrated resources on several strategically selected facilities. By October, the percentage of UBTs at Levels 4 and 5 was 59 percent, up from 34 percent in January. A key component of the approach was hiring seven new union partnership representatives, including Elsie Balov, an SEIU-UHW member who is aiding teams at the South Bay Medical Center. “It is really important that labor is helping with this work,” Balov says. “We are pulled from the front line to help, so we know the obstacles and the challenges and can work with the UBT consultants on those.

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