Patient Safety

SuperScrubs: How Ordinary Workers Save Lives

Submitted by paule on Mon, 04/15/2013 - 17:28
Tool Type
Format
other_comics_SuperScrubs_issue1

This comic book takes a humorous look at a serious subject—patient safety.

Non-LMP
Tyra Ferlatte
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
SuperScrubs: How Ordinary Workers Save Lives

Format:
PDF (color or black and white)

Size:
8 pages (trim size is 7" x 10" but this can be printed easily on 8.5" x 11" paper)

Intended audience:
Frontline managers and workers

Best used:
This lighthearted look at a serious subject can spark discussion within teams on how to keep patients safe.

 

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Making Health Care Safe

Submitted by Paul Cohen on Thu, 04/11/2013 - 14:06
Role
Request Number
sty_making healthcare safe_Catalyst_pc.doc
Long Teaser

A report by the Lucian Leape Institute finds a lack of psychological safety and respect at the workplace is one factor making health care a dangerous profession.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Photos & Artwork (reporters)
An Ontario EVS team stands together.
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Making Health Care Safe
Deck
Why a corrosive work environment is harmful to caregivers and patients
Story body part 1

Bringing joy and meaning to work may sound like a lofty aspiration. But if your workplace is lacking these things, it's more than dreary—it’s also dangerous, according to the Lucian Leape Institute at the National Patient Safety Foundation.

Start with the fact that health care itself is dangerous. The institute’s March 2013 report on workplace injuries in health care, “Through the Eyes of the Workforce: Creating Joy, Meaning and Safer Health Care,” noted that:

  • Health care workforce injuries are 30 times higher than other industries
  • More work days are lost due to occupational illness and injury in health care than in such industries as mining, machinery, manufacturing and construction
  • Seventy-six percent of nurses in a national survey said unsafe working conditions interfere with the delivery of care
  • An RN or MD has a five to six times higher risk of being assaulted than a city cab driver
  • Emotional abuse, bullying, threats and learning by humiliation often are accepted as “normal” conditions of the health care workplace

These conditions are harmful to patients, caregivers and the organization, according to the report:

“Workplace safety is inextricably linked to patient safety. Unless caregivers are given the protection, respect, and support they need, they are more likely to make errors, fail to follow safe practices, and not work well in teams.”

Role of leaders

The authors conclude, “The basic precondition of a safe workplace is the protection of the physical and psychological safety of the workforce.”

Physical and psychological safety is also a precondition to “reconnecting health care workers to the meaning and joy that drew them to health care originally,” said Lucian Leape Institute President Diane Pinakiewicz, at Kaiser Permanente’s second annual Workplace Safety Summit February 12.

“These preconditions enable employers to pursue excellence and continuous learning,” she said. “The purposeful maintenance of these preconditions is the primary role of leadership and governance.”

Systemic causes of harm

While pointed in their assessments, Pinakiewicz and the report’s authors refrain from finger-pointing. Pinakiewicz outlined systemic organizational stresses that work against workforce and patient safety. These include:

  • People feeling overwhelmed (58 percent of workers surveyed by the American Society of Professionals in Patient Safety cited overwork as an issue)
  • The volume of non-value adding work
  • Workforce safety and patient safety being managed separately and non-systemically
  • Operating pressures exacerbating traditional behavioral norms

The report identifies several “exemplar organizations,” including the Mayo Clinic, Virginia Mason Medical Center, Kaiser Permanente and the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions, that are working to “create cultures of safety and respect.” KP’s 2012 National Agreement provisions for workforce total health and interest-based problem solving are cited as contributors to that culture.

Seven strategies for improvement

The Lucian Leape Institute offers seven strategies for improving safety and restoring joy and meaning to the health care workplace:

  1. Develop and embody shared core values of mutual respect and civility; transparency and truth telling; safety of all workers and patients; and alignment and accountability from the boardroom through the front lines.
  2. Adopt the explicit aim to eliminate harm to the workforce and to patients.
  3. Commit to creating a high-reliability organization and demonstrate the discipline to achieve highly reliable performance.
  4. Create a learning and improvement system.
  5. Establish data capture, database and performance metrics for accountability and improvement.
  6. Recognize and celebrate the work and accomplishments of the workforce, regularly and with high visibility.
  7. Support industry-wide research to design and conduct studies that will explore issues and conditions in health care that are harming our workforce and our patients.

“Through the Eyes of the Workforce: Creating Joy, Meaning and Safer Health Care” is available online from the Lucian Leape Institute at the National Patient Safety Foundation.

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Team Presentations on Patient Safety

Submitted by Julie on Wed, 03/06/2013 - 16:55
Tool Type
Format
Tool_Virtual_UBT_Fair_Patient_Safety

These are slides from three teams that presented their outstanding work on patient safety in a March 2013 virtual UBT Fair.

Laureen Lazarovici
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Team Presentations on Patient Safety

Format:
Powerpoint

Size:
41 pages

Intended audience:
Frontline employees and managers

Best used:
These slides were presented by three teams that shared their outstanding work on patient safety in a virtual UBT Fair in March, 2013. Use to spread best practices on patient safety.

The teams featured are:

  • Cumberland (GA) infectious diseases/oncology team on medication reconciliation
  • Rock Creek (Colorado) gastroenterology team on equipment cleanliness
  • South San Francisco (NCAL) radiology team on a stop-the-line process to prevent wrong-site X-rays

 

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Preventing Pressure Ulcers

Request Number
video_preventing_pressure_ulcers
Long Teaser

This approximately 3-minute video highlights a Walnut Creek team that wiped out serious pressure ulcers from respiratory aids.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Video Media (reporters)
Download File URL
VID-11_preventingPressure/preventing_pressure_ulcers_2.zip
Running Time
2:59
Status
Released
Tracking (editors)
Flash
Date of publication

This approximately three-minute video highlights a Walnut Creek Respiratory Care Services team that has gone two years without a single instance of a serious pressure ulcer resulting from a respiratory aid.

 

 

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Poster: Medication Reconciliation Keeps Patients Safe

Submitted by Kellie Applen on Fri, 01/18/2013 - 15:39
Region
Tool Type
Format
Content Section
Taxonomy upgrade extras
bb_medication_reconciliation_patient_safety

This poster, which appears in the January/February 2013 Bulletin Board Packet, highlights a Georgia team that reduced duplicate medications listed in patient records.

Non-LMP
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Poster: Medication Reconciliation Keeps Patients Safe

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5” x 11”

Intended audience:
Frontline employees, managers and physicians

Best used:
This poster highlights a Georgia team that reduced duplicate medications listed in patient records. Post on bulletin boards, in break rooms and other staff areas.

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PDF
Northern California
bulletin board packet
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Poster: UBT Ends Losing Streak

Submitted by Kellie Applen on Mon, 01/07/2013 - 18:59
Region
Tool Type
Format
Content Section
Taxonomy upgrade extras
bb_surgical_instruments_Colo.

This poster, which appears in the January/February 2013 Bulletin Board Packet, highlights a Colorado team that found a way to better keep track of its surgical instruments and save thousands of dollars.

Non-LMP
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Poster: Assigning Ownership of Surgical Instruments Saves Thousands

Format:
PDF (color and black and white)

Size:
8.5” x 11”

Intended audience:
Frontline employees, managers and physicians

Best used:
Hang this poster highlighting a Colorado team's better way to keep track of surgical instruments—and save thousands of dollars—on bulletin boards, in break rooms and other staff areas.

 

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Northern California
bulletin board packet
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PPT: Medication Reconciliation Keeps Patients Safe

Submitted by Kellie Applen on Mon, 01/07/2013 - 18:49
Region
Tool Type
Format
Content Section
Taxonomy upgrade extras
ppt_medication_reconciliation_georgia

This PowerPoint slide, from the January/February 2013 Bulletin Board Packet, features a Georgia UBT that reduced duplicate medications listed in patient records.

Non-LMP
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
PPT: Medication Reconciliation Keeps Patients Safe

Format:
PPT

Size:
1 Slide

Intended audience:
LMP employees, UBT consultants, improvement advisers

Best used:
This PowerPoint slide features a Georgia UBT that reduced duplicate medications listed in patient records. Use in presentations to show some of the methods used and the measurable results being achieved by unit-based teams across Kaiser Permanente.

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Unit-Based Teams' Growing Focus on Cost of Care

Submitted by Paul Cohen on Thu, 11/08/2012 - 14:38
Tool Type
Format
Topics
Role
Taxonomy upgrade extras
ppt_UBTs solve for affordabilty.pc.ppt

Three PowerPoint slides show the growth in performance improvement projects focusing on affordability.

Non-LMP
Tool landing page copy (reporters)

Format:
PowerPoint

Size:
8.5" x 11", three pages

Intended audience:
Department managers, management and union co-leads and UBT sponsors

Best used:
Shows the growth of performance improvement projects, including cost reduction, efficiency and patient safety.

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Polish Your Skills, Save the Planet

Submitted by anjetta.thackeray on Tue, 10/30/2012 - 11:34
Taxonomy upgrade extras
Request Number
Sty_wfd_greenjobs
Long Teaser

Learn how EVS frontline workers are advancing their careers--and making Kaiser Permanente greener.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Non-LMP
Photos & Artwork (reporters)
Leroy Alaman, operations manager for the EVS department at the Los Angeles Medical Center, demonstrates battery recharging.
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Additional resources

Ben Hudnall Memorial Trust: http://benhudnallmemorialtrust.org/

SEIU UHW-West and Joint Employer Education Fund: http://www.seiu-uhweduc.org/

Healthcare Initiatives: http://www.doleta.gov/brg/indprof/health.cfm

Collaborate (reporters)
Collaborate
Waste not
Highlighted stories and tools (reporters)
Career Development Resources

Here are some tools to help you advance.

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Polish your skills, save the planet
Deck
Southern California EVS teams go green with new certificate program
Story body part 1

Cutting waste and saving money for Kaiser Permanente members and patients is good. But 350 Environmental Service workers in Southern California are taking that mission a step further by tending to Mother Earth as well.

Kaiser Permanente and two Labor Management Partnership-funded workforce development trusts are among the health care partners nationwide that are training frontline workers and managers in improved recycling, waste disposal, energy conservation and other green practices. The U.S. Department of Labor and the Healthcare Career Advancement Program, a national partnership of unions and hospitals, are leading the effort.

“‘Carbon footprint’ is a phrase that’s thrown around a lot,” says Milford “Leroy” Alaman, EVS operations manager at the Los Angeles Medical Center. “Now our staff is able to understand that when you are talking about conserving energy, water and electricity, you are talking about looking at the resources we have in our facility and holding on to just what we need instead of creating more waste for us and the planet.”

Leading change at work

Along the way, these “green teams” also are reducing operating costs, enhancing employee skills and morale, and improving patient and workplace safety. 

For example, the EVS department is now using environmentally friendly microfiber mops to clean a single patient room. This has the benefit of not spreading infections between rooms and preventing lifting and straining injuries caused by wringing traditional mops and hauling buckets of water.

The department also has started a project that is reducing the cost and trouble of replacing the 500 D-cell batteries used in the hospital restrooms’ automatic towel dispensers. The traditional batteries wore out in a matter of weeks—costing about $3,000 a year to replace and adding some 6,000 batteries a year to local waste or reprocessing streams. Starting in February 2012, workers installed new rechargeable batteries. Overall, EVS' green projects, including the use of rechargeable batteries, are saving an estimated $12,000 a year.

Enhancing skills, raising sights

“I feel better having conversations with anyone…doctors, nurses, I can tell them how to be green,” says EVS attendant Jose Velasco, an SEIU UHW member and a recent graduate of a green certification course offered at West Los Angeles Community College.

The program also was piloted at KP Riverside Medical Center, where the EVS unit-based team is reaching out to others with its newfound expertise. Now an EVS member is embedded with the Operating Room UBT—with others to follow—to help tackle waste and hygiene problems there.

The SEIU UHW-West & Joint Employer Education Fund and the Ben Hudnall Memorial Trust have helped underwrite the cost of the training for Kaiser Permanente’s LMP-represented workers. Eventually, frontline workers may be able to use their certifications for higher pay and promotions as medical center “green leads,” a program that would be negotiated between KP and the unions.

But the training already is making a difference to workers as well as to KP and the community. “They have more tools, more knowledge, so they are able to catch things,” says Angel Pacheco, management co-lead of the EVS UBT at Riverside. “We talked about saving the environment for future generations.”

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Word Search: Patient Safety

Submitted by tyra.l.ferlatte on Wed, 10/24/2012 - 17:54
Tool Type
Format
wordsearch_patientsafety

Use this word search to provide some variety in your next meeting.

Non-LMP
Tyra Ferlatte
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Word Search: Patient Safety

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Frontline workers, managers and physicians

Best used: 
For the times when you want to take a light approach to a serious topic at a team meeting. This word search includes patient safety terms.

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