Permanente Federation

Giving Team Members a Voice

Topic
Request Number
VID-168_giving_team_members_voice
Long Teaser

A Food and Nutrition team creates an environment where employees feel free to voice their opinions and ideas—and can expect action to be taken on their input.

Communicator (reporters)
Sherry Crosby
Editor (if known, reporters)
Non-LMP
Notes (as needed)
VID-132_Speak_Up_Change_a_Life/VID-132_Speak_Up_Change_A_Life2.jpg
Video Media (reporters)
Download File URL
http://content.jwplatform.com/videos/ehO3Ddnv-iq13QL4R.mp4
Running Time
2:54
Status
Released
Tracking (editors)
Date of publication

A Food and Nutrition team creates an environment where employees feel free to voice their opinions and ideas—and can expect action to be taken on their input.

Produced by Sherry Crosby
Videography by Paul Erskine
Edited by Sherry Crosby and Kellie Applen

 

Migrated
not migrated
Partnership: Just What the Doctor Ordered Laureen Lazarovici Tue, 09/05/2017 - 14:54
Migrated
not migrated
Region
Keywords
Topics
Hank
Headline (for informational purposes only)
Partnership: Just What the Doctor Ordered
Deck
Georgia physician becomes an LMP advocate
Request Number
ED-1139
Long Teaser

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. 

Story body part 1

Emile Pinera, MD, a second-generation Kaiser Permanente employee, came to the company five years ago and immediately became co-lead of an adult medicine unit-based team in the Georgia region.

“I had the clinical part down,” says Pinera, who is now lead physician for diversity and inclusion in Georgia and an adviser on the region’s transgender task force. But being a co-lead and working in a UBT were unfamiliar. “I had to implement my medical knowledge in a team, as opposed to a top-down approach where the doctor tells everyone what to do.” 

He wasn’t convinced at first—but the partnership approach and physician participation helped elevate the team’s performance, and it posted some of the region’s highest quality scores for managing diabetes and blood pressure. 

“We achieved it through hard work and collaboration,” Pinera says. “I loved working with my management and labor co-leads. We were respectfully honest about what was achievable. Working in the UBT gave us the tools to effectively communicate, track, adjust and improve.”

Pinera currently guides and supports co-leads as a UBT sponsor for three teams and is lead physician for three adult medicine offices. His enthusiasm helps his teams, the members and the Georgia region. 

“I was skeptical at first about UBTs’ relevance, but we couldn’t achieve our success with hypertension and diabetes management without each other’s help. I’m a believer,” he says. “My tip for fellow providers is to be engaged as much as possible, because it will help us achieve better outcomes and help our patients thrive.”

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Only use image in listings (editors)
not listing only
Status
Developing

Speak Up, Change a Life

Region
Topic
Request Number
VID-132_speakup_change_a_life
Long Teaser

Here is a real example of the impact that an empowered worker had on our patients—starting with 8-year-old Lucy Scott.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Non-LMP
Notes (as needed)
VID-132_Speak_Up_Change_a_Life/VID-132_Speak_Up_Change_A_Life2.jpg
Video Media (reporters)
Download File URL
VID-132_Speak_Up_Change_a_Life/VID-132Speak_Up_Change_A_Life%20%283%29.zip
Running Time
3:00
Status
Released
Tracking (editors)
Date of publication

Here is a real example of the impact that an empowered worker had on our patients—starting with 8-year-old Lucy Scott.

 

Migrated
not migrated

PPT: Primary Care UBT Helps Control Blood Pressure

Submitted by Beverly White on Fri, 05/15/2015 - 12:57
Tool Type
Format
ppt_Burke_UBT_control_blood_pressure_in_patients

This PowerPoint slide from the May/June 2015 Bulletin Board Packet features a Burke Primary Care UBT from the Mid-Atlantic States that was able to increase the percentage of patients whose blood pressure was under control.

Non-LMP
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
PPT: Quality - Primary Care UBT Helps Control Blood Pressure

Format:
PPT

Size:
1 Slide

Intended audience:
LMP employees, UBT consultants, improvement advisers

Best used: 
Inspire your team members with the methods and results of this Primary Care UBT in helping patients get and keep their blood pressure under control.

 

Released
Tracking (editors)
Obsolete (webmaster)
not migrated

Labor History: Physician, Kaiser Permanente President, Ironworker

Submitted by Shawn Masten on Wed, 05/01/2013 - 17:09
Keywords
Topics
Request Number
hank_35_labor_history
Long Teaser

A profile of Clifford Keeene, MD, first president and CEO of the Kaiser Foundation Hospitals and Health Plan.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Photos & Artwork (reporters)
Clifford Keene, MD, then-president and CEO of Kaiser Foundation Hospitals and Health Plan, at the dedication ceremony for the West Los Angeles Medical Center in 1974. Early in his career, Dr. Keene was an Ironworker and belonged to the International
Only use image in listings (editors)
not listing only
Learn more (reporters)
Additional resources

Lincoln Cushing, lincoln.m.cushing@kp.org

Highlighted stories and tools (reporters)
Highlighted Tools
Status
Released
Tracking (editors)
Filed
Flash
Story content (editors)
Headline (for informational purposes only)
LABOR HISTORY
Story body part 1

Do corporate leaders understand the lives of working people? Some do. In the long history of Kaiser Permanente, several executives—including Henry J. Kaiser himself—worked their way up from poverty. Clifford Keene, MD, was another. In a 1985 interview, he described his roots:

“I came from a very humble family. My father was a factory foreman at best....During the summer I always worked. I sold papers or worked in factories doing minor tasks. Then, when I was fourteen I went to work in the steel industry as a steel construction punk, an apprentice first....I would find myself doing construction all over western New York State. I became a connecter; that is, a person who gets up on the steel and puts it together. I became accustomed to being up in the air and being up high, although I was always frightened of being up in the air. I don't think anyone is not frightened when you're way up in the air and the steel moves. It's a situation that commands your respect and gets your attention, I can tell you. I earned quite good money and continued to do that until I was a sophomore in medical school.”

The experience stayed with him throughout his life. He reflected on it when commenting on a successful infant bowel surgery while serving as a cancer specialist at the University of Michigan State Hospital at the end of the 1930s:

“When I was in the army I further developed my interest in bowel surgery, and reconstruction of all kinds, and also in plastic procedures, orthopedic procedures, all of which were an extension of my interest in doing things with my hands. I [had been] a steel worker* and it was satisfying to correct things with my hands.”

Obsolete (webmaster)
Migrated
not migrated

How UBTs Help Doctors Improve the Care They Give

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Mon, 11/12/2012 - 14:48
Region
Keywords
Request Number
sty_David_Jones_doctors_support_UBTs
Long Teaser

David Jones, MD, explains how unit-based teams can help doctors improve the care they give patients and transform care delivery.

Communicator (reporters)
Laureen Lazarovici
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Notes (as needed)
From Laureen: this is an edited transcript from a video of Jones. It is referenced in the Fall 2012 issue of Hank (in the Around the Regions section for Georgia).
Photos & Artwork (reporters)
David Jones, MD
Only use image in listings (editors)
not listing only
Learn more (reporters)
Physician co-lead(s)

David.W.Jones@kp.org, 404-812-1218

Highlighted stories and tools (reporters)
Highlighted Tools
Status
Released
Tracking (editors)
Flash
Story content (editors)
Deck
Show its value by taking the mystery out of the UBT
Story body part 1

David Jones, MD, works in the Georgia region with the Southeast Permanente Medical Group. He has been with the medical group for more than 11 years, and currently works in the Panola Medical Office. He spoke with LMP senior communications consultant Julie Light.

Q. What is your partnership role?

A. My role with the Labor Management Partnership in Georgia is assistant to the medical director for unit-based teams. I serve as the physician regional co-lead for all the UBTs for the region. I’m excited about this role and how it can help engage our physicians.In this role, I work closely with all of the teams, with a particular focus around supporting the physicians and helping them understand the value of UBTs and how UBTs really can improve what we do day to day in the offices and how they can improve the care for patients. It also means removing any potential barriers that the physicians may face, or anticipate, to allow them to be more engaged with the UBT process.  Another part of my role is working with our unit-based team’s resource team. In that capacity, I bring more of a clinical perspective to UBTs.

Q. How do teams improve care?

A. A project I had personal involvement with was the pediatric team at our Panola office, which addressed ADHD (Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder) medication management. Before our UBT project, we were meeting the goal of having a follow-up visit within 30 days approximately 25 percent of the time. Through our UBT work, we increased those results to reaching and sustaining a rate above 90 percent after three months.

Q. Why haven’t more physicians embraced partnership?

A. The first thing I tell physicians about the UBTs is that it is about improving the work that we’re already doing. It’s not about adding more work, it’s about looking at the work that you're doing and figuring out how to do it better.

I think one of the barriers physicians face has been just lack of understanding. It wasn’t clear to physicians the value that UBTs can bring to the team. So it’s taking the UBT process and putting that into terms that are meaningful to physicians. Time is always a barrier for most people, and particularly for physicians. That’s why it’s important to have them understand that it’s not about doing more or working harder, it’s about working better. This is a very new way of thinking about teamwork. It’s about the physician being engaged and involved and still having a leadership role, but also embracing the value and the input, perspectives, talents and skills of the whole team, and understanding how everybody can share the same goal and work together and improve the accountability across the board.

What it really takes is physicians and teams going through the process. I can talk with them all I want, and tell them how it is in theory, but once they start to go through the process and see the results, and see how morale and efficiency improves—that’s when they become believers.

Obsolete (webmaster)
Migrated
not migrated