Value Compass Concepts

What's Your Phrase Coloring Page

Submitted by Beverly White on Tue, 03/14/2017 - 15:51
Tool Type
Format
Running Your Team
Topics
Hank
Taxonomy upgrade extras
poster_what's_your_phrase_coloring_page

What's a phrase that helps you keep your cool in a tense situation?

Jennifer Gladwell
Tyra Ferlatte
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Backcover: What's a phrase that helps you keep your cool in a tense situation?

Format: PDF (color and black and white)

Size: 8.5" x 11"

Intended audience: Frontline workers, unit-based teams

Best used: Write in the box a phrase that helps you keep your cool in a tense situation. Color the diagram and hang in your work space. 

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PDF
hank
lmpartnership.org
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SuperScrubs: From the Ground Up

Submitted by Beverly White on Tue, 03/14/2017 - 15:48
Tool Type
Format
Running Your Team
Topics
Hank
hank50_superscrubs

Our comic superhero shows how everyone has a part in solving problems in their department's UBT.

Tyra Ferlatte
Tyra Ferlatte
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
SuperScrubs: From the Ground Up

Format:
PDF (color and black and white)

Size:
8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Anyone with a sense of humor

Best used:
Our comic superhero helps make it clear that everyone has a part in solving problems in their department's UBT.

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Word Search: The Best of Partnership

Submitted by Beverly White on Tue, 03/14/2017 - 15:46
Tool Type
Format
Topics
Hank
Taxonomy upgrade extras
wordsearch_the_best_of_partnership

Use this word search to unlock key words and phrases that relate to key elements of working in partnership.

Tyra Ferlatte
Tyra Ferlatte
Photos & Artwork (editors)
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Word Search: The Best of Partnership

Format:
PDF

Size: 
8.5" x 11"

Intended audience: 
Frontline workers, managers and physicians

Best used: 
Print out and share copies of this word search at the start of your next meeting. Team members will look for the words and phrases that express elements of working in partnership.

 

 

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lmpartnership.org
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New Book Spotlights Partnership Success

Submitted by Paul Cohen on Mon, 03/06/2017 - 15:51
Role
Request Number
LERA book article_pc3.pw.cmo.doc
Long Teaser

A 2016 book published by Cornell University Press and the Labor and Employnent Relations Association includes three chapters on the Labor Management Partnership. Read excerpts and get a link.

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Non-LMP
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Non-LMP
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Highlighted stories and tools (reporters)
Leading Change Together

Read the chapter by Jim Pruitt, vice president of labor relations for the Permanente Federation, and Paul Cohen, LMP senior business consultant, that explains the conditions that gave rise to the partnership—and how partnership achieves results. 

Status
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Deck
After 20 years, Labor Management Partnership still draws followers from health care and beyond
Story body part 1

When the leaders of Kaiser Permanente and the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions shook hands on their Labor Management Partnership 20 years ago, they weren’t sure where it would take them. Today, it is the largest, longest-running partnership of its kind. It is also the most studied by university researchers.

A new book published by the Labor and Employment Relations Association (LERA) and Cornell University Press shows that the partnership remains a model for workplace innovation. “The Evolving Healthcare Landscape: How Employees, Organizations, and Institutions are Adapting and Innovating” devotes three chapters to LMP’s history, accomplishments and challenges.

Lessons for others

Adrienne Eaton and Rebecca Givan, professors at Rutgers University, and Peter Lazes, a director and researcher at The City University of New York, studied six health care partnerships, including LMP. They were struck by:

“…the extent to which unions have been proactive in driving [all] these efforts....Another development in health care partnerships has been a significant deepening of the role of labor relations staff in operational matters.

“It is [also] important to note that the cases described here have influenced one another because the key stakeholders have directly learned from each other....[For example,] union and management stakeholders in Los Angeles [Department of Health Services and SEIU Local 721] as well as union leaders from the University of Vermont Medical Center have looked to Kaiser for answers.”

Another chapter, by Jody Gittell of Brandeis University and KP Northwest staff members Joan Resnick, Sarah Lax and Eliana Temkin, reports on regional efforts to promote collaboration across work teams. KP was selected for the study in part for what the authors call its “record of leadership and innovation [including] in patient care delivery, health information systems and labor-management relations.” Several strategies, including “living room huddles”—an informal, building-wide get-together—and job shadowing across departments led to higher employee engagement and patient satisfaction scores.

An inside look

The chapter “Leading Change Together” by Jim Pruitt, vice president of labor relations for the Permanente Federation, and Paul Cohen, LMP senior business consultant, explains the conditions that gave rise to the partnership, the need to implement it consistently across the organization and the way it achieves results:

“By bringing together diverse points of view and providing a framework for joint problem solving, the Labor Management Partnership has helped Kaiser Permanente tackle difficult issues....The partnership formed because conditions demanded change. It has endured because it has achieved measurable results. And it continues to flex and grow because we follow a few key principles and practices [including] self-directed work teams, interest-based problem solving and honest conversations.”

All of which explains why outside experts continue to take an interest in the joint efforts of KP and the union coalition. Pruitt and Cohen quote Thomas Kochan, a professor at MIT's Sloan School of Management, who put it this way in a 2013 study:

“Kaiser Permanente is now one of the nation’s leaders in the use of frontline teams to improve health care delivery....The Labor Management Partnership continues to serve…as a model for health care delivery and improvement.”

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Leading Change Together

Submitted by Paul Cohen on Fri, 03/03/2017 - 17:02
Tool Type
Format
Role
LeadingChangeTogether_LERA.pdf

This book chapter from "The Evolving Health Care Landscape" provides an inside view of the history, accomplishments and challenges of the Labor Management Partnership.

Non-LMP
Tool landing page copy (reporters)

Format:
PDF

Size:
12 pages, 8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
All workers, managers, physicians or others interested in the Labor Management Partnership

Best used:
This chapter from a Labor and Employment Relations Association (LERA) book on workforce innovation highlights the history and results of the Labor Management Partnership.

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Unit-Based Teams Are Getting Results: 2017

Submitted by Paul Cohen on Mon, 01/30/2017 - 14:52
Region
Tool Type
Format
Role
UBTs get results_2017.ppt

Unit-based teams are the platform for frontline performance improvement at Kaiser Permanente. See 12 examples of how they are reducing costs, improving service, enhancing quality and building a stronger workplace.

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

Format:
PowerPoint

Size:
12 pages, 8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Unit-based team members, co-leads, sponsors and consultants; union and KP leaders

Best used: 
Share in presentations or team meetings to see successful practices from UBTs across Kaiser Permanente.

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Working as Equals

Topic
Request Number
VID-152_Working_as_Equals
Long Teaser

Four years ago, the Rancho Cucamonga Medical Offices formally adopted a team-based model of care. Today physicians and union workers say they don't want to work any other way.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Video Media (reporters)
Download File URL
VID-152_Working_as_Equals/VID-152_Working_as_Equals.mp4.zip
Running Time
3:13
Status
Released
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Date of publication

Four years ago, several departments at the Rancho Cucamonga Medical Offices formally adopted a model of team-based care. The transition took effort and time, but today physicians and union workers at the facility say they wouldn't want to work any other way. See how team-based care made the medical offices a better place to work and receive care.

 

 

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