LMP Focus Areas

How-To Guide: Workforce Development

Looking to advance your career? Check out these LMP career planning resources — and help share the information:

  • Download fliers for promoting career counseling, classes and financial aid available to union workers at Kaiser Permanente.
  • Post fliers on bulletin boards in breakrooms and other areas to steer eligible workers to the two LMP-supported education trust funds and KP's Career Planning website.
  • Read and share the stories to learn more about workforce development at KP and hear success stories from frontline workers.

Partnership Shapes the Workforce of the Future

Submitted by Paul Cohen on Tue, 12/20/2016 - 17:05
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2016 WoF conference.pc.doc
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The Labor Management Partnership is preparing Kaiser Permanente and its 114,000 union coalition-represented workers for the changes coming to health care in the coming years. Highlights from a 2016 Work of the Future Conference show what's coming.

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Partnership Shapes the Workforce of the Future
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Previewing health care system changes at Kaiser Permanente
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Amazon. Facebook. Uber. Count the ways that technology has changed the way people shop, share information, get around—and the way work is done in those industries. Now add health care to that list.

That was the message of the 2016 Work of the Future Conference in November, where 200 Kaiser Permanente managers and workers looked at how health care is changing, and how management and labor can collaboratively shape those changes at KP.

Industry and union leaders shared emerging workforce trends and practices. They also praised KP and the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions’ approach to performance improvement, problem solving and workforce development.

“Kaiser and the union coalition have nailed it when it comes to workforce training, workforce planning and making sure we're preparing for the future,” said Liz Shuler, secretary-treasurer of the AFL-CIO. “The collaborative approach really shines when we talk about training, workforce development and finding ways to help workers ladder up in their careers.”

Shared wisdom

With the help of unit-based teams, health care innovation has brought patients better and faster treatment at KP, said Nirav Shah, MD, senior vice president of clinical operations for the Southern California region. For instance, KP hip replacement patients often walk off the operating table, go home without spending a night in the hospital and get nursing care and physical therapy at home. “Radical transparency, shared data and the wisdom of unit-based teams” are essential to making such changes work, he said.

Skills for success

KP and union workforce planners shared how workers can prepare for more changes coming to health care by mastering four critical skills:

  • consumer focus
  • digital fluency
  • collaboration
  • process improvement

These skills are among the new training programs, previewed at the conference, to be offered to coalition union-represented workers in 2017 (learn more). Digital fluency, for instance, covers mobile devices, applications and their impact on health care. Kaiser Permanente and the coalition unions, working in partnership, have given KP workers a head start in at least two of the other critical skills—collaboration and process improvement.

Learning from others

Conference participants also learned from the experience of other organizations. DTE Energy, a Detroit-based public utility, worked with its unions to avoid layoffs even during the Great Recession, said Diane Antishin, DTE Energy’s vice president of HR Operations.

Michael Langford, president of Utility Workers Union of America, described his union’s training and apprenticeship programs, which have helped his members nationally adapt to changes in their industry.

As with our work in the Labor Management Partnership, interest-based bargaining helped both parties achieve their goals.

“If you come in with positional arguments you’ll never get it done,” said Langford. “But if you can get to what the underlying problem is, you can solve it.”

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Make the Workplace Safer: Nurses Providing Home Health Care

Submitted by Paul Cohen on Tue, 12/20/2016 - 16:00
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WPS_home health workers.pdf

A hands-on checklist of 33 potential hazards home health nurses may encounter on the job—with advice on how to spot hazards, propose solutions and take steps to eliminate risks.

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Seven pages, 8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Workplace safety co-leads, safety committee members, safety champions and frontline workers and supervisors

Best used:
This checklist of 33 potential hazards can help safety leaders and home health care nurses identify safety risks, propose solutions and resolve problems.

 

 

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Make the Workplace Safer: Maintenance Staff

Submitted by Paul Cohen on Tue, 12/20/2016 - 15:41
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wps_maintenance staff_pdf

A hands-on checklist of 31 potential hazards maintenance workers may encounter on the job—with advice on how to spot hazards, propose solutions and take steps to eliminate risks.

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

Format:
PDF

Size:
Seven pages, 8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Workplace safety co-leads, safety committee members and safety champions

Best used:
This checklist of 31 potential hazards can help workplace safety leaders and workers conduct onsite walk-throughs and identify safety risks for maintenance staff.

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Be Healthy, Change Lives: Marian Miles

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video_147_total_health_marian_miles
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A Kaiser Permanente employee shares her journey to better health, and how she is now helping her teammates do the same.

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Tyra Ferlatte
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VID-150_Be_Healthy_Change_Lives/VID-150_Be_Healthy_Change_Lives.zip
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After suffering from a serious digestive disorder, Marian Miles was inspired to take better care of her health. She changed her diet, became more active, and is now helping her San Diego co-workers change their lives too.

 

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