Growth

Staying Nimble With Innovation From the Frontlines

  • Deploying smartphones in primary care clinics so care givers can take photos of skin rashes for dermatologists to diagnose
  • Opening mini-clinics in retail stores staffed by nurse practitioners to provide routine care for both KP health plan members and non-members, many of whom did not have health insurance prior to the Affordable Care Act
  • Rejecting a new texting technology at a labor and delivery department when employees, managers and physicians concluded cellular reception in their building couldn’t support it—and not becoming discouraged.

What

The Best-Laid Plans

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Tue, 10/06/2015 - 17:37
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When this team’s good work had a bad side effect, help from an improvement advisor got it back on track.

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Jennifer Gladwell
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Tyra Ferlatte
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A successful kp.org sign-up campaign resulted in a deluge of messages, and providers found themselves struggling to keep up. That’s when co-leads Rikki Shene, LPN, a member of SEIU Local 49, and manager Eliseo Olvera took action, with help from their UPR.
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The Best Laid Plans
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Getting back on track, after good work yields a bad side effect
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The Family Practice unit-based team at the Sunset Medical Office in the Northwest was thrilled that its work to get members to sign up on kp.org was a success. But team members quickly grew dismayed when the onslaught of new signups had an adverse effect on patients’ experience.

The challenge began in 2014, when the team launched several projects to increase the number of Kaiser Permanente members signed up on kp.org, knowing that people who use kp.org usually give KP higher satisfaction scores. The office is located in Hillsboro, Oregon, near one of Intel’s campuses. Intel offers Kaiser Permanente as a health plan option, so the effort to get more people online made perfect sense.

But, on the flip side, the increased number of messages coming in through kp.org wound up increasing turnaround times for return emails and phone calls.

More than two-thirds on kp.org

The department now receives between 450 to 650 email messages per week. Seventy-one percent of its patients—29,000 members—are signed up on kp.org. The team sought to improve its turnaround time on messages by reducing the number of times staff members and physicians touched each message. Instead of multiple people working a message, each one is now triaged one time by either an LPN or RN. At the same time, the team decreased its time spent on messages per week from 13.6 hours to 10.9 hours.

Ed Vrooman, an improvement advisor and union partnership representative, coached team members on how to test and implement their improvements.

“We learned how to use process mapping, so we could identify where the holes were in how we were approaching the work,” says Eliseo Olvera, the assistant department administrator and the UBT’s management co-lead. “Ed knew where we could get the data we needed and help us understand it, so we could do the work.”

Vrooman also introduced the team to the 6S tool—sort, simplify, set in order, sweep, shine, standardize—to improve its work processes. The team broke into different workgroups and each group identified tests of change. Some of the ideas were abandoned, some were refined and adopted, and some still are being adapted.

Staying on track

“I tended to focus too much on the information and the numbers,” says Rikki Shene, a licensed practical nurse and SEIU Local 49 member who is the team’s union co-lead. “Ed helped keep us organized and simplified the data so that we could keep moving forward and accomplish something in our 45-minute UBT meetings.”

Vrooman’s role in the team has been critical for the team. He attends the co-lead planning sessions and UBT meetings. He stays in the background until needed—and then he speaks up.

“He’s part of our community,” says Olvera. “His expertise with data has been critical. It’s a gift.”

Take action to get meaningful metrics

Here are the next steps for teams that are ready to leverage numbers to turbocharge performance: 

  • Make a clear plan about collecting data. Focusing only on the numbers you need will help reduce needless work.
  • Create a storytelling run chart.
  • Familiarize yourself with the names of the core metrics that KP relies on.

 

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How Partnership Helped KP Reach the 10 Million Member Milestone Paul Cohen Fri, 07/17/2015 - 18:07
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Union leaders, unit-based teams and frontline workers help attract and retain KP members
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sty-helping grow kp.doc
Long Teaser

Kaiser Permanente has a unique competitive advantage when it comes to attracting and retaining members—its union partners, working with KP sales and marketing teams, to tell our story.

Story body part 1

“I was almost devastated,” says Karen Cardosa, a grocery clerk in Albany, Oregon, “when UFCW told us they were no longer offering Kaiser Permanente as an insurance option.”

Cardosa and her family had been KP members for years through the union’s Local 555 Employers Health Trust. That changed when a variety of issues resulted in KP losing the account, which covered many Local 555 members. The union continued to represent nearly 2,000 Kaiser Permanente pharmacy and radiology employees, who—as KP staff members—continued to have KP health care.

But today, Kaiser Permanente is again an option for up to 15,000 UFCW members and dependents in the Northwest region who are covered by the health trust.

New way to compete

An affordable price, high quality, a new hospital, expanded clinics and a new billing system helped win back this account. But something else was also at play.

Thanks to the Labor Management Partnership, the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions and Kaiser Permanente take a joint approach to winning and keeping health plan members that is almost unheard of elsewhere in this country.

Bringing together union members and KP sales and marketing teams, the campaign helped win, expand, win back or retain 33 accounts covering 125,000 KP members in 2014, with a focus on public-sector accounts.

A broad reach

The effort spans almost every level of the organization and the unions.

Leaders of the local and international unions that belong to the union coalition play an active role in advocating for KP as the preferred health care provider when negotiating contracts or benefit programs with employers.

In addition, some 45 frontline union ambassadors spoke to 25,000 KP members and potential members at outside union and community events in 2014. “I have enjoyed working side by side with the sales and marketing representatives to promote Kaiser Permanente,” says Sera Jordan, a medical assistant, union ambassador and SEIU Local 49 member in the Northwest. “It has enabled me to share my firsthand knowledge of Kaiser Permanente and the care we provide.”

UBTs are a selling point

And unit-based teams, by giving frontline workers a voice in improving quality, service and affordability, are a big selling point for union purchasers of care. UBTs launched more than 8,000 performance improvement projects last year at every point on the KP Value Compass, including thousands of affordability projects that saved, on average, more than $40,000 per project.

“Working with our union partners, we’ve been able to come to the table with customer solutions that meet everybody’s needs—including the unions that aren’t part of KP, who have tremendous influence in purchase decisions,” says Kate Kessler, a Member Sales and Service Administration director. “We are unique in having a strong labor partnership in our own business, and we can speak that language.”

Find out why record membership matters to our current and future members on InsideKP.

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Telling our story: KP union ambassadors speak at health fairs, community events and outside union meetings to give firsthand accounts of KP's better model of care.
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How to Help KP Grow

Submitted by Paul Cohen on Tue, 03/03/2015 - 13:41
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Long Teaser

It's not just a job for sales team members anymore: See what all Kaiser Permanente workers can do to help others become KP members.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
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Tyra Ferlatte
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Link to: http://share.kaiserpermanente.org/become-a-kaiser-permanente-member/
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Frontline workers play a key role in winning and keeping KP members.
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What Frontline Workers Are Doing to Grow KP Membership

Learn more about KP and the union coalition's strategy for growing membership—and its results:

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How to Help KP Grow
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Everyone wins when health plan membership increases
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Good things happen when more members join Kaiser Permanente.

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.

And all KP employees can help make those things happen.

For example, the Labor Management Partnership and KP’s sales and marketing organization work together in unique ways to build KP health plan membership. Thanks to their efforts, in 2014:

  • 125,000 KP members joined or stayed with the health plan. 
  • 100,000 KP members or potential members got letters from their local unions encouraging them to select KP during open enrollment.
  • KP union ambassadors reached 20,000 potential KP members at worksite, community and union events in five regions.

Workers tell their story

In addition, thousands of KP workers, managers and physicians in unit-based teams win and keep KP members by delivering great care and service every day.

Louise Casa, a nurse practitioner, UFCW Local 400 member and union ambassador in the Mid-Atlantic States, says all workers have stories to tell about what makes KP a better place to give and get care.

“I share the story of being part of a partnership that values union workers and their ideas,” she says. “I talk about our unit-based team work on goals for care improvement, problem solving and workflow improvement in our departments. People in the community been very interested in the UBT process.”

What you can do

Everyone has a role to play in helping Kaiser Permanente grow and retain its membership. It starts with the work we do every day to serve members and patients:

  • Deliver the best member experience. If you know someone is a new member, take an extra minute to explain how things work.
  • Encourage members to sign up for kp.org. Surveys show that members who sign on are more likely to stay with Kaiser Permanente.
  • Look for ways to improve work processes or cut waste, to help keep KP affordable for the people we serve.

Quick links to additional resources

  • Get additional tips to help promote KP at: Be KP [KP intranet].
  • Answer questions people may have about KP: Become a KP Member [KP intranet].
  • And get insights and updates on KP’s business success: Marketplace Focus [KP intranet].

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Hank Libs: Help KP Grow

Submitted by Beverly White on Tue, 07/15/2014 - 14:34
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hank40_hanklibs

Break up a team meeting with a little fun with this Hank Lib, which features a few sentences about helping KP grow. From the Summer 2014 Hank.

Tyra Ferlatte
Tyra Ferlatte
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Hank Libs: Help KP Grow

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5" x 11" 

Intended audience:
Frontline workers, managers and physicians

Best used:
Use this Hank Lib, which features a few sentences about helping KP grow, to break up a team meeting with some fun.

 

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Hank Summer 2014

Format: PDF

Size: 16 pages; print on 8½” 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 the issue online

Stories

Joint Campaign Makes New Members Feel Welcome

Submitted by Paul Cohen on Fri, 07/11/2014 - 16:40
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sty_MAS Growth_IKP.pc
Long Teaser

A joint effort in the Mid-Atlantic States region has helped successfully onboard thousands of new KP members.

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To be promoted as Related Story in the 7/16/14 Hank Flash
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Mid-Atlantic region and union partner to win and keep members in outreach campaign
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Close to 5,800 KP members in the Mid-Atlantic States get their Kaiser Permanente coverage through SEIU 32BJ, a regional union representing building service workers. Many of them speak English as their second language. To help this group get the most for their health care dollars, KP and 32BJ kicked off a campaign in April and May to educate and engage new 32BJ union members.

Maria Naranjo, deputy director, SEIU 32BJ Capital Area District, led the campaign with the help of Brenda Muñoz, labor liaison and analyst, KP Office of Labor Management Partnership. The field team included two 32BJ staff members and seven 32BJ members (four were bilingual). Of the seven 32BJ members, six already were KP members who could share their own experiences with KP.

“We want 32BJ members to be champions of health and KP in their workplace—and to do this, they need to understand their plan coverage and how KP works,” says Muñoz.

Team hits the field

The team visited close to 300 worksites and collected more than 1,100 names and phone numbers of members they spoke with. In addition, 32BJ sent 5,000 text messages and KP’s Regional Access Services staff placed more than 2,600 outreach calls to help members choose a physician, make appointments, identify health needs and learn about an upcoming heath fair. The goal was to provide as many touch points as possible by contacting members via mail, phone and in-person visits.

At the end of the campaign, Kaiser Permanente and 32BJ hosted a health fair at the D.C. Convention Center. It was the first time 32BJ partnered with a health plan to host a health fair. More than 100 32BJ members and family members attended and were offered free health screenings for blood pressure, BMI, glucose and total cholesterol.

Attendees also had a chance to meet with a KP physician, enroll in My Health Manager, select a primary care physician, make future appointments, ask questions and learn more about the KP system. Additional resources at the fair included workplace safety tips, healthy lunch tips and answers on health plan benefit questions. SEIU 32BJ was impressed with the health fair, which got positive feedback from attendees.

Creating value for members

Throughout the campaign, the team learned a lot about KP’s SEIU 32BJ members and their needs. The team identified several areas for improvement, and it is determining how to continue to engage these members through workshops, further education, health fairs and promotion of preventive health.

“SEIU 32BJ is a potential growth area,” Muñoz says. “In order to retain these members and encourage growth, we must provide the resources they need to show them that KP is not only committed to providing them with high-quality health care, but that we can provide culturally competent care.”

An earlier version of this story appeared in Inside KP Mid-Atlantic States, July 2, 2014.

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Growing Stronger Together

Submitted by Paul Cohen on Fri, 07/11/2014 - 16:15
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Kaiser Permanente's Labor Management Partnership is unique not only as a model of workplace engagement but also as a strategy for market outreach and growth. Find out how it works in this cover story from the Summer 2014 Hank.

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Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
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Union members such as speech pathologist Ute Kongsbak, an OFNHP member, work to improve quality and affordability in the Northwest region—work that builds Kaiser Permanente’s reputation and attracts members.
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Help People Make the Right Choice

Kaiser Permanente prides itself on its great staff, from clinicial to clerical to support. But the organization is only as good and as strong as its membership. And KP takes even greater pride in serving its members.

Here are some stories and tools to see how you and your team can help grow KP membership.

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Working with LMP is important for outreach and as strategy in the public sector
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 “I was almost devastated,” says Karen Cardosa, a grocery clerk in Albany, Oregon, “when UFCW told us they were no longer offering Kaiser Permanente as an insurance option.”

Cardosa and her family had been KP members for years through the union’s Local 555 Employers Health Trust. That changed in 2009 when a variety of issues resulted in KP losing the account, which covered many Local 555 members. The union continued to represent nearly 2,000 Kaiser Permanente pharmacy and radiology employees, who—as KP staff members—continued to have KP health care.

Today, it’s a new story. Thanks to a 36-month KP offering that was finalized in April, Kaiser Permanente is again an option for up to 15,000 UFCW members and dependents in the Northwest region who are covered by the health trust.

“Our work with LMP is probably some of the most important work done in Public Sector strategy in the last two years. Working with our union partners, we’ve been able to come to the table with customer solutions that meet everybody’s needs—including the unions that aren’t part of KP, who have tremendous influence in purchase decisions. We are unique in having a strong labor partnership in our own business, and we can speak that language.”

—Kate Kessler, a Member Sales and Service Administration director

“When I was hired four years ago, my manager told me my Number One job was to get UFCW back,” Ehren Cline, a KP Sales and Account manager. Cline, including Jeston Black, the region’s senior labor liaison, and other colleagues partnered with Dan Clay, president of Local 555, to do just that.

“KPNW brought us a package we couldn’t refuse,” Clay says. An affordable price, high quality, a new hospital, expanded clinics and a new billing system helped seal the deal.

Clay’s own union members pushed for the new commitment.

“I have not been to a union meeting in the last five years where someone didn’t ask, ‘When do we get to go back to Kaiser?’” Clay says.

But something else was also at play. Thanks to Labor Management Partnership, Kaiser Permanente enjoys a joint union-management approach to winning and keeping health plan members that is almost unheard elsewhere in this country.

Read on and learn how it all comes together.

How the LMP Growth Campaign Works

Real Commitment, Real Results

Leaders of the local and international unions that belong to the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente unions take an active role in advocating for KP as the preferred health care provider when negotiating contracts or benefit programs with employers.

“We are big believers in Kaiser Permanente and its model of care,” says Steve Kreisberg, director of collective bargaining for AFSCME, whose affiliates include UNAC/UHCP in Southern California. “Our union members work at KP to provide great care and service, and they have a strong voice on the job through partnership. We have bargained to make Kaiser a part of the benefits offered in our non-KP contracts when feasible.”

Other outreach efforts, while building membership in less direct ways, have furthered KP and the unions’ shared social mission. For instance, SEIU Locals 49 and 503 in Oregon enrolled more than 2,300 eligible union members in KP through the state health care exchange and Medicaid. The union push accounted for a significant share of KP Northwest members so enrolled.

Such efforts are a unique benefit of partnership for KP, its unions and the public.

“Building new, productive relationships with our own unions as part of our sales and marketing efforts, in the marketplace, both enables Kaiser Permanente to grow and ensures more consumers have access to our world-class care,” says Wade Overgaard, the senior vice president of California Health Plan Operations.

The Proof? More Members.

Joint marketing efforts have produced impressive results. In the last two years, for example, LMP labor liaisons and Kaiser Permanente Sales and Account Management teams have:

  • Helped close sales with eight public sector accounts in California and the Northwest, bringing KP some 5,000 new health plan members. KP is the exclusive health care provider for three of the accounts.
  • Brought more than 12,000 new dental plan members KP in the Northwest—the largest membership jump ever for the dental plan—by winning exclusive coverage for home care workers represented by SEIU Local 503.
  • Helped save at-risk accounts of more than 65,000 members in the Mid-Atlantic States and California.
  • Reached more than 85,000 public sector employees, including teachers, police and firefighters in Baltimore and Washington, D.C., and other areas during open enrollment.
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Growing Stronger Together: An Infographic

Submitted by tyra.l.ferlatte on Fri, 07/11/2014 - 16:14
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growing stronger together infographic

This infographic explains the multiple parts of the LMP growth campaign—and shows that everyone has a role to play.

Non-LMP
Tyra Ferlatte
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Growing Stronger Together: An Infographic

Format:
PDF

Size:
11" x 17" (tabloid)

Intended audience:
Frontline workers, managers and physicians

Best used:
UBT members can find their place in the LMP growth campaign to bring in more members.

 

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Poster: New Members Are Coming Our Way (v2)

Submitted by Beverly White on Fri, 07/11/2014 - 16:12
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Format
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hank49_poster_New_members_are_coming_our_way

This poster, which appears on the back cover of the Summer 2014 Hank, features information to assist in welcoming new Kaiser Permanente members.

Tyra Ferlatte
Tyra Ferlatte
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Poster: New Members Are Coming Our Way

Format:
PDF (color and black and white)

Size:
8.5” x 11”

Intended audience:
Frontline employees, managers and physicians

Best used:
Post on bulletin boards, in break rooms and other staff areas to highlight information to assist in welcoming new Kaiser Permanente members.

You may also be interested in:

 

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