UFCW L555

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

 

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Pharmacy Team Turns Inventory Blemish Into Success
  • Partnering with Pharmacy Analytics to identify and remove outdated drugs from the shelf
  • Engaging team members to “own” a section of the pharmacy and monitor expired or slow-moving medications

What can your team do to better manage your inventory? What else could you do to save money and keep KP affordable for members and patients?

 

Laureen Lazarovici Wed, 11/22/2017 - 13:47
How a Pharmacy Team Solved an Expensive Problem Kellie Applen Wed, 10/25/2017 - 13:54
Region
Download File URL
http://content.jwplatform.com/videos/PKGwiH0a-iq13QL4R.mp4
Request Number
VID-165_How_Pharmacy_Team_Solved_Expensive_Problem
Running Time
2:25
Long Teaser

In just six months, a pharmacy team in Portland, Ore., reduces its expired-medication costs by 90 percent—from $70,000 to $7,000.

Communicator (reporters)
Jennifer Gladwell
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Status
Done
Date of publication

By working with other departments to get the data they need, members of this pharmacy team in the Northwest reduced their expired-medication costs by 90 percent. What can your team learn from its success to help keep Kaiser Permanente affordable?

Produced by Jennifer Gladwell.
Edited by Jennifer Gladwell and Kellie Applen.
Videography and Photography by Beverly White and Laura Morton.

 

 

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Savings From Around the Regions Laureen Lazarovici Sun, 06/18/2017 - 11:42
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Topics
Hank
Headline (for informational purposes only)
Savings From Around the Regions
Deck
eSignatures and more from coast to coast
Request Number
sty_Hank51_around the regions
Long Teaser

Find out how innovations such as eSignatures are helping teams save money while boosting quality and service in every KP region. 

Story body part 1

Northern California: Staff laptops make life easier 

Even in a fast-paced Emergency Department, change doesn’t always come swiftly.

“I’m old school,” says Jacinta Laupua, a clerk and SEIU-UHW member, who was one of the last holdouts when her team decided to try using laptop computers to gather member signatures. 

“I thought of every excuse in the book. But now I love it,” she continues. “If I don’t have a laptop assigned to me, I ask other clerks if they are using theirs, because I want one. In fact, we need more.”

The laptops, provided through a regional initiative, are at the heart of a successful unit-based team project to reduce paper and copying costs in the Emergency Department at the South Sacramento Medical Center. The total savings came to more than $88,000 in 2016. 

The Level 5 UBT’s project got under way in late 2015, when clerks and the team’s co-leads—Bianca Ruff, a clerk and SEIU-UHW member, and managers Susan Velasquez, administrative services manager, and Neeta Kumar, administrative clerical supervisor—brainstormed ways to improve cost savings and efficiency. Their first goal was to save $27,820 over four months. 

Soon team members were trying out the use of laptops with signature capture pads. The technology makes it possible for clerks to register patients at their bedside and record their information and signature electronically. Not only does this eliminate the need for paper registration forms, it also increases the clerks’ mobility and efficiency.

There were many small tests of change needed before everything was working smoothly, but the project has been so successful the department has invested in nine laptops on wheels. And all Emergency Department clerks are trained on
the computers. 

“It’s almost too painful to remember how we used to process forms,” jokes Ruff.

—Tracy Lee Silveria

Northwest: Pharmacy team ‘owns’ its inventory, saves thousands

When team members at the Community Care Pharmacy in the Northwest region did a routine inventory, they were astounded at the value of their expired medications that no longer could be returned. 

“We took a $70,000 loss,” says Rob Yancey, the pharmacy’s manager. The pharmacy serves patients in extended care facilities and often fills prescriptions for costly and uncommon drugs.

Susan Luu, an inventory technician and member of UFCW Local 555, spearheaded a successful project that drew on the free-to-speak culture and collaborative spirit that helps make this a Level 5 team. 

“I knew it was too much to do by myself,” Luu says. “I felt comfortable talking with my manager, and his response was, ‘Let me see how can I can help.’” 

Different staff members “owned” a section of the pharmacy to check for outdated or slow-moving medications. By the time the team did its next inventory, losses had dropped to $7,000.

—Jennifer Gladwell

Mid-Atlantic States: Tackling unwanted side effect of a computer upgrade

When the South Baltimore County Medical Center laboratory in the Mid-Atlantic States region upgraded its computer system in December 2015, it inadvertently increased lab costs. 

The problem? While the new system has many great features, it doesn't have a way to alert staff when providers add a new test to an existing order. In May 2016, the lab missed 32 percent of these “add-ons,” a total of 30 tests, says Samuel Endalew, the lab’s lead technician, a UFCW Local 27 member and the team’s labor co-lead. 

The mistake inconveniences members, who must return to the lab to provide a new specimen. Each missed add-on costs Kaiser Permanente about $35 in extra supplies and employee time. 

The solution: a system to check the lab’s inbox for add-on tests and a team binder to track their progress. By February 2017, the team was missing only 2 percent of add-ons and saving about $1,050 a month.

Leaders from other area labs are considering adopting the process.

—Otesa Miles

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

Worker Wins Support for Life-Altering Test

  • Cultivating a culture of partnership and freedom to speak up with new ideas
  • Enlisting a physician champion to approach the regional medical director
  • Researching the new technology, including its money-saving potential 

What can your team do to identify the barriers that stop employees from speaking up? What else could your team do to encourage everyone to share ideas, suggestions and concerns?

 

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.

 

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