Performance Improvement

UBT Tracker Tip Sheet #1

Submitted by Shawn Masten on Tue, 04/19/2011 - 10:30
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Format
UBT_Tracker _tipsheet_1_revised

UBT Tracker Tip Sheet #1 provides examples of ways to incorporate Tracker into your team's workflow and some UBT Tracker basics.

Non-LMP
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
UBT Tracker Tip Sheet #1

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5" x 11"

Intended Audience:
UBT co-leads, consultants, team members and senior leadership

Best used:
This tip sheet will be helpful when entering or finding data or information in UBT Tracker. It provides tips on how best to incorporate data entry into the workflow of your unit-based team. Includes basic information for signing onto UBT Tracker, bookmarking teams and searching for projects. Print it out (double sided) and bring to your next UBT meeting.

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Study of KP's High-Performing Unit-Based Teams

Submitted by Paul Cohen on Thu, 03/17/2011 - 12:03
Tool Type
Format
Content Section
Taxonomy upgrade extras
pdf_rutgers study of UBTs

A study by Rutgers, Johns Hopkins and KP researchers shows five key elements to UBT performance and development. Full report and executive summary available.

Non-LMP
Tyra Ferlatte
Tool comprises two related PDFs-- full report and an executive summary. Use title page of pdf as art.
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
A Study of KP's High-Performing Unit-Based Teams

Format:
PDF (15 or 3 pages)

Size:
8.5" x 11"

Intended audience: 
UBT sponsors, co-leads and members; KP and union leaders

Best used: 
To help unit-based team leaders and sponsors—and UBT members—better understand five elements that enable team performance and development.

Two options for reading:

  • The 15-page study by Rutgers University, Johns Hopkins and Kaiser Permanente researchers identifies five key enablers of unit-based team performance and development: leadership; line of sight; team cohesion; processes and methods; and infrastructure and support. The report includes examples of successful team practices in each area. It includes an executive summary and conclusions.
  • The 3-page executive summary of the study provides an overview of the findings, focusing on the five enablers of high performance. A good choice for those wanting a quick takeaway of these issues and for teams wanting to address issues raised by the study.
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Transforming KP
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UBT Tracker At-a-Glance: View Team Info Shawn Masten Thu, 02/03/2011 - 15:46
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UBT Tracker At-A-Glance
Tool Type
Format
Taxonomy upgrade extras

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5" x 11"

Intended Audience:
Frontline employees, managers, leadership

Best used:
An easy-to-use reference guide that shows you how to sign on to UBT Tracker and view basic team information.

For more in-depth instructions, check out  the UBT Tracker At-a-Glance for Co-Leads, Administrators and Proxies

You can also download the complete UBT Tracker User Guide.

UBT Tracker_AtaGlance_ViewTeamInfo_cm.pdf

An easy-to-use reference guide for viewing team information in UBT Tracker.

Non-LMP
Released

UBT Tracker at a Glance for Co-Leads

Submitted by Shawn Masten on Thu, 02/03/2011 - 15:19
Tool Type
Format
Taxonomy upgrade extras
UBT Tracker_AtaGlance_Co-Leads_cm.pdf

A five-page visual user guide for co-leads, proxies and administrators to use when entering performance improvement data in UBT Tracker.

Non-LMP
Tyra Ferlatte
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
UBT Tracker Tool for Co-Leads, Administrators and Proxies

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5" x 11"

Intended audience: 
UBT co-leads, administrators and their proxies

Best used: 
When you need to enter performance improvement data in UBT Tracker, keep this easy guide at hand. 

Need more? 
For basic information about signing on and getting team information, check out the UBT Track At a Glance: View Team Info. You can also download the complete UBT Tracker User Guide

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Cartoon: Driving Performance

Submitted by tyra.l.ferlatte on Wed, 01/05/2011 - 15:23
Tool Type
Format
Taxonomy upgrade extras
other_cartoon_hank_summer 2010

 View this cartoon and be reminded: How does your team's ability to work together and improve performance compare with other teams?

Tyra Ferlatte
Tyra Ferlatte
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
All in a Day's Work: Driving Performance

Format:
PDF (color or black and white)

Size:
5" x 5" 

Intended audience:
Anyone with a sense of humor

Best used:
Download and post this cartoon on bulletin boards, your cubicle or in emails. 
What is your team's ability to work together and improve performance?

 

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Smaller Teams Help Radiology Department Improve Performance

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Tue, 12/21/2010 - 12:44
Request Number
sty_radiology_woodlandhills
Long Teaser

Turning its diversity into an opportunity, a once-struggling radiology department achieves success.

Communicator (reporters)
Laureen Lazarovici
Notes (as needed)
use links in "highlighted" section for "related tools" links on home page when story gets posted; but they shouldn't be featured in a box in the story. tlf, 12/29/10

no caption w/photo. tlf, 1/11/11
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Smaller teams help Radiology Department improve performance
Story body part 1

After a false start, the diagnostic imaging department at Woodland Hills Medical Center has found its stride. Its results are impressive: By drawing on the wide experience of the team, it’s improving workflow and boosting attendance.

To get those results, the department created one large UBT with several subcommittees and involved a physician champion. Two radiology summits, which were held to set priorities, included the whole team: 

  • More than 160 employees and physicians who see a quarter-million patients a year.
  • Staff in eight far-flung clinics as well as throughout the medical center. They range in age from late teens to 40-year veterans of Kaiser Permanente.
  • Team members in eight areas of expertise, including ultrasound, MRI, CAT scan, nuclear medicine, mammography, general x-ray, and special procedures.  

From confusion to clarity

At first, the team’s diverse skills and experience flummoxed the department-based team (the term Woodland Hills uses instead of unit-based team).  

“We didn’t know the scope of our work,” says Selena Marchand, a lead sonographer and labor co-lead. “The old DBT got stalled talking about things like the doctors’ parking lot.”

Lessons for large teams

  • Ensure your representative group is truly representative: strive to create a structure that includes someone from each location, modality, shift, etc.
  • Include physicians
  • Reach out to trained facilitators for help
  • Focus on what your department has the power to change

A secret society?

In addition, says Marchand, the representative group—which was working without a facilitator—didn’t communicate with its co-workers about the DBT’s projects. “They thought we were some sort of secret society,” says Marchand, a member of SEIU UHW. 

The team restructured in October 2009, electing one delegate from each “modality,” as the areas of expertise are known, to the representative group.

“Pushing responsibility and accountability back to different modalities has been one of our successes,” says Mike Bruse, the department administrator and management co-lead. “We’re focused on things that we can control in our department.”

Summits get everyone involved

The co-leads convened two department-wide summits to focus on improving team performance and set priorities. Staff members brainstormed about what the challenging issues facing the department were and wrote them on flip chart pages on the wall. Then, each employee attached a sticky note to the issues that most concerned them. The team and managers set out to tackle the seven issues that received the most tags. As the work got under way, progress reports were posted in the employee break room to keep everyone on the team—not just the representatives—informed.

Better workflow

The department also improved the way it distributes film to radiologists, so that patients’ results get to primary care physicians faster. Before the change, technicians were forced to constantly interrupt doctors to read films. Now, there is a tally sheet on each radiologist’s door indicating how many films he or she is reading. This allows techs to know who is available to read a film—and allows radiologists to work undisturbed. An aide to the technologists tracks the process, acting as a traffic controller.

“It was a relatively simple thing that improved satisfaction and patient care a lot,” says Mark Schwartz, MD, who represents physicians on the UBT. “And it didn’t cost any money.”

Better attendance

The team also improved attendance, decreasing last-minute sick calls by 14 days from the end of 2009 to October 2010. They beat the Lab Department in a friendly competition two quarters in a row and were rewarded with a barbeque. To do this, team members simplified presentation of attendance data and posted up-to-the-minute metrics.  

Beyond these gains, management co-lead Bruse says the most significant change is employees’ confidence in their own ability to make improvements.

“Our meetings used to be ‘complain to Mike,’ ” he said. “These days, when people see a problem, they take steps to solve it themselves.”

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Adapt, Adopt, Abandon

Submitted by cassandra.braun on Fri, 12/10/2010 - 17:02
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Request Number
sty_mistakes_hank26.doc
Long Teaser

How do teams learn from small tests of change that don't turn out as expected? And why is it necessary to take risks when the goal is to improve performance?

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Notes (as needed)
as noted in "highlighted stories and tools" section, needs a highlights box that links to:
http://www.lmpartnership.org/stories-videos/what-can-leaders-do-be-good-model

additional captions:
Hank26_coverstory_2.jpg:
Like other teams, San Diego Medical Center’s Nuclear Medicine team has sometimes learned the most from tests of change that didn’t pan out. Above, technologist Ken Lukaszewski, an OPEIU Local 30 member.

Hank26_coverstory_6.jpg:
Assistant technologist Jessica Larson is labor co-lead of San Diego Medical Center’s Nuclear Medicine unit-based team.

Photos & Artwork (reporters)
The San Diego Nuclear Medicine team discovered that the premise of their first performance improvement project—high repeats of heart scans—was not the problem they initially suspected. Above, assistant technologist and labor co-lead Jessica Larson (left) and technologist Christine Cook (right) assist patient Robert Evans. Larson and Cook are members of OPEIU Local 30.
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Adapt, adopt, abandon
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Why teams that try and fail are better than teams that always succeed
Story body part 1

"Anyone who has never made a mistake has never tried anything new."

—Albert Einstein

This is the story of a team that never failed a test of change. No matter what the team members did, rapid improvement cycle after rapid improvement cycle, every small test tried was a better jewel than the one before. They received an A for their PDSAs.

They were fearless—in their imaginations. The only problem with the team’s brilliant tests of change was that they never got tested, never got to the stage where stumbling or failed ideas might have real consequences. There was no learning, no innovation, no growth—just intriguing ideas that remained bottled.

In health care, it’s still frowned upon to talk about failures or things that don’t work out perfectly for fear the information will be used against the people involved. But even in a high-stakes industry where the consequence of some decisions means life or death, there is plenty of room for improving performance by learning from small failures.

Using small failures as learning opportunities is the cornerstone of creating a learning organization. Small failures are at the heart of the Rapid Improvement Model and its plan, do, study, act cycles.

“Despite the increased rate of failure that accompanies deliberate experimentation, organizations that experiment effectively…are likely to be more innovative, productive and successful,” writes Amy Edmondson, a professor at Harvard Business School, in a December 2004 article in the Quality and Safety in Healthcare Journal.

This in fact is a story of false starts: the story of unit-based teams and employees throughout Kaiser Permanente who already are learning, developing and innovating from missteps or downright unsuccessful small tests of change.

From projects that changed direction after data contradicted the original premise, to tests of change that were tweaked or abandoned all together, workers describe how they tried a small improvement that didn't turn out as expected and still gained from the experience. And even, eventually, found success.

Learning to fail

At San Diego Medical Center’s Nuclear Medicine department, the unit-based team decided its first test of change project would look at reducing the number of redundant heart scans, which technologists were certain were wasting time and resources.

In November 2009, team members began to track the number of repeat scans to establish a baseline. They figured repeats would be at least 25 percent of the heart scans. After a month of logging the scans, however, they discovered something quite different.

“The number of repeat heart scans was actually between 7 to 10 percent,” says the UBT’s labor co-lead, Jessica Larson, a tech assistant and OPEIU Local 30 member.

The team’s hypothesis was amiss. It switched gears.

Since several of the staff recommendations for test of change projects related to heart scans, the team focused next on the variation in the instructions patients were given. If team members gave identical instructions, they might be able to all but eliminate repeat heart scans.

“The test of change at that point was to make sure everyone was following the protocol,” says Randy Andres, a nuclear medicine technologist and OPEIU Local 30 member.

HIGHLIGHTED STORIES OR TOOLS

What can leaders do? Be a good model. [story]
 

The team created laminated handouts with one set of clear instructions that technologists and receptionists were to hand out to every patient before a scan.

“We did that for a few weeks, and found it was a lot more complicated than we anticipated,” Larson says. “You had inpatients, outpatients, observation-unit patients….Forms were getting misplaced because patients would leave them in the waiting rooms or in their purse. Or people weren’t even giving them out.”

During the same time, a supply shortage meant the department had to switch the type of injectable radioactive isotope it was using. The change meant a whole new set of protocols. Compounding it all, the department’s longtime manager retired.

It was time to shelve the test of change.

But was it a waste of time? Not at all, say Larson and Andres. Both say it provided valuable information about the department’s work flow—as well as practical knowledge of how to conduct tests of change.

“This was a very good teaching experience for us,” Andres says. “We didn’t even know about tests of change before this. It’s not simply a matter of just changing something. You have to go through this process.”

Too much of a good thing

Further north at Redwood City Medical Center, the Gastroenterology department discovered you can have too much of a good thing.

Contracting with an Oregon company that specializes in mass outreach calls, the department began using automatic robocalls to reach patients ages 50 to 75 who were due or overdue for colorectal screenings.

“We had to think outside the box,” says Julie Dalcin, director of medicine. “This was a way to reach a lot of people.”

The first round of robocalls went out in November 2009, with some 10,000 calls made. They reached 97 percent of the members who were due for the tests—but there was a problem. The calls were made within a span of three hours, and the response overwhelmed the department and the facility. The voicemail box the team had set up in advance barely helped; it could take only 50 messages.

“We got bombarded by calls from patients calling back with questions or requests. Our operator was inundated,” says manager Isabel Uibel. “Physicians in other departments were also bombarded with calls. People…were like, ‘What’s going on?’”

Michele Coons, a medical assistant and SEIU UHW member, was devoted to returning the calls and to mailing “FIT kits,” the at-home stool tests that help detect early signs of colorectal cancer, to those who had requested them.

“Many people had a lot of questions,” Coons says. “‘Why did I get this call?’ ‘What does a FIT kit test mean?’”

It took a week to figure out a system for getting back to all the patients, she says.

“I think at the end of day you have to be willing to try,” Uibel says. “And forgive yourself for the time you put into something that didn’t work. And don’t lose motivation. But also know when…you’ve got to say, ‘We’re not going down the right path at all.’”

In some workplaces, what had happened would be labeled a disaster. But not in Redwood City. The essential idea was sound. For the second round of calls, the team addressed the overwhelming response by having the calls made over a two-week period.

“We didn’t think we needed to throw the baby out with the bathwater,” Uibel says. “We just had to keep tweaking to make the system work for us.”

Too good to be true

When it came to how quickly patient messages are responded to, the Internal Medicine at the East Denver Medical Office in Colorado was pretty close to bottom—only 8 percent of patient advice calls were answered within an hour. The team members were open to trying anything, and after several small tests of change, they hit on something so ridiculously simple that some people resisted it.

Nurses tape neon orange cards with the patient message to the door of the exam room where the doctor is working. The doctor sees the message on the way out of the room and goes back to his or her office to respond.

Within the first three months of the test, the department saw message turnaround times soar to 30 percent answered within the hour.

“You had some tangible symbol that you were trying to make these numbers move. It was a great motivator,” says Christopher Hicks, MD, the team’s physician co-lead. “It was different. It wasn’t something that was happening electronically.”

Then they hit a wall.

“We were sitting around threshold or target and then would drop back down,” explains Olivia Wright, supervisor and management co-lead. “We were just hovering around 20 to 30 percent.”

The team brainstormed about why it couldn’t move the number above 30 percent.

Someone suggested one reason could be that the call center opened at 7 a.m. and most of the staff didn’t start until 8 a.m. They were starting the day already behind the curve with waiting messages. Two nurses changed their schedule and started coming in at 7:30 a.m. That seemed to help: 52 percent of patient messages got a reply within an hour.

“You’ve got to give something a shot,” Wright says. “The first thing you come out of the gate with isn’t necessarily going to be the end-all be-all, but you’ve got to start somewhere.”

One of the most surprising lessons for the entire department was the fact that small changes could have such a large impact.

“There was a sense of disbelief,” Wright recalls. “We had to reassure the team that the volume of work hadn’t gone down or that it wasn’t because of the time of year. We’ve sustained these results since May, and it finally started to sink in that small, subtle changes really are the reason for these results.”

Failure is part of experimentation

Experts who study organizations like health care and the airline industry corroborate the importance the process of experimentation plays in organizational learning.

“Under conditions where there’s a lot of uncertainty and constantly moving parts and work is customized or unique, the only way to make it work is to allow the right level of leeway for teams…to experiment thoughtfully,” Edmondson says. In the long run, lasting success comes from a willingness to try new things; but, if you try new things, you're going to fail sometimes.

This isn’t license for projects based on haphazard hypotheses, but it underscores the fact that performance improvement methods such as the Rapid Improvement Model are made for small failures. Because the process allows for quick experimentation, with results evaluated within 30 to 60 days, there is little to lose.

Barbara Grimm, senior vice president of the Labor Management Partnership, would have people ask themselves a few questions that can help them weigh the possibility of failure.

“Have you reasoned through the consequences? That is key,” Grimm says. “Do you have the patient’s interest absolutely there? Do you have a plan if it doesn’t go well?”

Edmondson argues there are two key reasons health care organizations still resist learning from small failures: The culture often discourages questions, challenges, or admissions of error, and a demanding workload and pace force staff to rely on quick fixes when something doesn’t work, instead of systematic problem solving.

That is changing at Kaiser Permanente with the commitment to providing frontline staff with training and support to conduct root cause analysis and problem solving with RIM, RIM+ and other performance improvement tools. And unit-based teams give staff members the place and time to do this work.

John August, executive director of the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions, believes the

true purpose of the Labor Management Partnership is to recognize the mission of KP and the mission of the unions are at profound risk due to the economic, competitive and public policy environment in which we operate.

“We must continually remind everyone in the organization that the why of what we do in partnership is driven by this fundamental recognition and agreement,” August says. “If we don’t make the effort to discuss the reasons why we’re doing this, people will get the impression that people are just being asked to do something. And being asked to do something doesn’t create an atmosphere of safety.”

Edmondson says the sense of safety will further develop when we learn to accept and work with our limitations.

“People need a sense of psychological safety, and frankly a sense of humor about our humanness,” Edmondson says. “Somewhere along the line we get socialized and begin to buy into the absurd notion that we should be perfect.”

Back at the lab

In San Diego, Larson thinks even if the tests of change didn’t work exactly as planned, it gave the team something even more important—the beginning of a different work culture.

“Being able to work on small tests of change enabled us to get past what’s always been,” Larson says. “There are people who have been here longer than I’ve been alive and so are accustomed to the way it was always done. But trying something new can save us time, and save the company money, and can be better for the patient. So I found it nice to look at it like, ‘Let’s try just this little thing and it might just make it better.’”

Larson is certain the eventual reward will outweigh any frustrations in wrong hypotheses or failed tests.

“Either you find you can fix something or you can’t, and you just move on,” Larson says. “Just keep trying. Because ultimately, it’s going to be a success in the end.”

 

 

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Many Small UBTs Do What One Large One Can’t

Submitted by Andrea Buffa on Wed, 11/17/2010 - 15:20
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Request Number
sty_NCAL_charitablehealth
Long Teaser

When Charitable Health Coverage switched from having one large UBT to having several smaller ones, it struck upon a formula for success. For the first time, the department processed every application in time for insurance coverage to begin on the first of the following month.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Notes (as needed)
I will find a photo from the photo library.
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Many small UBTs do what one large one can’t
Deck
The Charitable Health Coverage Operations department reorganizes—and achieves a goal that had eluded it for years
Story body part 1

The employees in Charitable Health Coverage Operations (CHCO) felt good about their Northern California department’s mission—but not so good about how long it took sometimes to help the thousands of low-income children who benefit from KP-subsidized health care.

The department handles the eligibility paperwork for a KP program that provides health coverage to people who don’t qualify for employer-based health coverage or public programs like Medicaid. At the team’s low point in 2005, it had a six-month applications backlog.

“Our primary customers are children,” said Nancy Waring, CHCO customer care manager. “We have over 80,000 children, most of them low income. About 50 percent of our population is Spanish speaking. And the program is completely subsidized by Kaiser.”

Too large a group

In the past, one representative unit-based team encompassed the whole department.  Because employees within the same department were doing very different types of work—processing mail, entering data, processing enrollments, providing customer service, and servicing the regions outside of California—they didn’t share a single set of problems. So the UBT tended to work on departmentwide problems like attendance.

But the single UBT struggled.

 “We basically failed from 2006 to 2009 to do anything,” says Suber Corley, the department’s director, “simply because we were looking at too large a group trying to solve too large a problem.”

So they reorganized. The department now has five UBTs that correspond with employees’ functions.

Setting priorities

The smaller teams set their sites on a number of changes, but they also coordinated with each other on one common goal: to process every application by the 20th of the month.

In their UBT, the mail-room employees decided to look at priorities differently.

“We identified that what we really needed to do was to have a prioritization scheme for every week of the month,” says Victor Romero, CHCO operations manager. He explains that during the first week of January, a recertification application that’s due on April 1 would be low priority in the mail room, whereas a new application—which would need to be processed by January 20 for insurance coverage to begin on February 1—would be high priority. After the 20th, attention moves to the low-priority documents.

The data entry, scanning and enrollment UBTs came up with other solutions, too.

“We instituted several changes in how the application is handled,” says Carl Artis, an enrollment processor team lead and OPEIU Local 29 shop steward. “If we couldn’t process an application, the application was sent back to the customers very early so they could make necessary corrections. We also streamlined our process—there were some things we were doing twice, which wasn’t necessary.”

Artis emphasizes that the changes were developed jointly by frontline workers and managers.

“I have to admit they (the managers) have some really great ideas,” he says, “and they were really able to listen to some great ideas.”

It worked. In October, for the first time in the department’s history, the team was able to process all its new applications by the 20th, so coverage for those applicants could start in November.

“The end result is that poor children did not go without health coverage,” Romero says.

Addressing burnout

In addition to the project to reduce the amount of time it takes to process new applications, the smaller teams have taken on other projects, like reducing burnout among customer service agents who spend all day answering phone calls. They’ve also done charity work together, raising funds to provide school supplies for low-income students at a local high school.

Artis passes on the story of his department’s flourishing UBTs to other members of Local 29.

“I’ve heard some people say, ‘Oh, that’s too much work to take on,’ or, ‘We don’t have the resources we need to address the issue’ or ‘Management would never go for that,’ ” Artis says. “But what I’ve learned is—just try it, and don’t be afraid to fail.”

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Five Tips to Help Teams Achieve Their Goals

Submitted by Shawn Masten on Tue, 11/16/2010 - 16:42
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sty_oc_julie miller phipps
Long Teaser

Senior Orange County executive shares keys to success

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Notes (as needed)
To run with photo of Julie Miller-Phipps
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Julie Miller-Phipps, Senior Vice President Executive Director, Kaiser Permanente Orange County
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Affecting change through unit-based teams
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Senior Orange County executive share keys to success
Story body part 1

I have worked at Kaiser Permanente for 33 years, starting as a distribution worker in materials management. Being on the front lines helped me better understand the challenges staff face—and helped me, in my current role, see what it takes to spread and sustain change in a complex organization.

When we launched our first unit-based teams in 2007, I knew they could give our managers and teams a powerful tool for change. But to achieve their full potential, UBTs need the support of leaders at every level. In working with UBTs every day, I have found five practices that can help teams achieve their goals, and have helped me be a more effective leader.

Have patience

I’m not a patient person by nature, and it took a visit to the world-class health care system in Jonkoping, Sweden, for me to see that it takes patience to sustain meaningful change. When you’re solving problems in a team-based workplace, real systemic change takes time. But it also takes hold deeper into the organization.

Really see the work

Spend time with a UBT, or hear teams present their test of change, to understand what they’re working on and how you can support them. There’s no way you can feel the excitement and energy from the team members and not feel proud and motivated by their work.

Spread good work

In Orange County—which has two large hospitals, in Irvine and Anaheim—we expect all teams to continually test and then spread their ideas and successful practices. We call it “One OC” and we talk about it all the time. You’re never going to achieve greatness globally if you don’t spread good work locally.

Provide tools

Early on we formed an Integrated Leaders group of senior labor and management leaders who meet monthly to monitor and assist our 107 UBTs. If a team is struggling, the IL group doesn’t descend on them and try to fix the problem. We provide tools and resources that help the team work through a problem and get results. For instance, we put together a UBT Start-up Toolkit with information on everything from setting up teams to finding training. We’re also looking at toolkits on fishbone diagramming, conducting small tests of change and providing rewards and recognition. And we’re asking how to make it easier for teams to access resources quickly—for instance by identifying go-to people for questions on budgeting, patient satisfaction metrics and so on.

Then, get out of the way

 I have a saying: “Hire great people, give them the coaching and mentoring they need, then get the heck out of their way and let them do what they were hired to do.” I think that works at all levels of the organization, whether or not people are your direct hires. You don’t tell people to make a change or streamline a process without any encouragement or support, but you don’t need to micromanage them either. Delivering great health care is not just a job. It is a calling. Whether you’re a housekeeper preventing infection or a surgeon treating cancer, people’s lives are in our hands. That shared mission drives us to be the best.

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Poster: Check-in Made Easy

Submitted by Kellie Applen on Tue, 11/02/2010 - 11:26
Region
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Format
Content Section
bb_northwest_checkin

This poster highlights a team of receptionists in the Northwest that found a way to improve customer service.

Non-LMP
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Poster: Check-in Made Easy

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5” x 11”

Intended audience: 
Union-represented employees

Best used:
Share these efficiency tips with staff and receptionists to improve customer service and streamline the check-in process.

Released
Tracking (editors)
Obsolete (webmaster)
poster
PDF
Northwest
not migrated