Performance Improvement

UBT Tracker

UBT Tracker is a web-based tool to collect and report data about unit-based teams.

Each UBT creates a record to track its membership, assign key team roles and describe its projects and tests of change.

Unit-based team members can search the database to find out what other teams in similar departments are doing and learn about projects that address a particular performance measure.

Sponsors and leaders use the information from UBT Tracker to understand what teams are working on and how UBTs contribute to the organization’s goals.

Use of UBT Tracker is required. Teams are rated on their progress on the Path to Performance in part by the data they enter in Tracker. 

 

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Non-LMP
Editor
Tyra Ferlatte
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Long Teaser

The UBT Tracker is a web-based tool that helps teams and the people who support teams collect and report data related to performance improvement.

Highlighted Stories and Tools
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Finding Your Way With UBT Tracker
Sidebar text

Log on to UBT Tracker: Go to HRconnect and sign on. After you have entered your NUID and password, navigate to Performance > Optimize Team Performance > UBT Tracker.

Alternatively, navigate to Work @ KP > Labor & LMP > UBT Tracker. 

These tools will help you find and enter information in UBT Tracker: 

KP Readiness-to-Receive Assessment

Submitted by kevino on Wed, 08/04/2010 - 16:01
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Taxonomy upgrade extras
KP Readiness-to-Receive Assessment

The purpose of this assessment tool is to help a site/area determine its readiness to receive a successful practice from outside of its area.

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

Format:
Word Doc

Size:
Nine pages, 8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
UBT co-leads, consultants, physicians and facility-level and service area leadership.

Best used: This checklist will help a site/area assess whether a group is ready to receive a successful practice from outside its area.

 

 

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When the Going Gets Tough, Teams Need Tools

Submitted by kevino on Wed, 07/28/2010 - 13:51
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When the going gets tough...teams need tools
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This story from the Spring 2010 issue of Hank shows how huddling is a key tool for helping unit-based teams improve communication--and performance.

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When the going gets tough… …teams need tools
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Huddles aren’t a magic bullet—but they can be one part of the formula that adds up to success
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Hemaxi Khalashi isn’t afraid of strange smells. As a clinical lab scientist, her nose is in all kinds of odd odors. But the stench that filled her corner of the Northern California Regional Lab one recent morning put her and many of the other lab workers on edge.

“It was like a bad, old gassy smell, or something deteriorating,” Khalashi said. “I asked my supervisor to walk with me to that corner of the room and asked her what she smelled, and she said, ‘Something dead—rotten.’”

The lab employees quickly fingered the culprit—a new instrument that tests blood samples for Hepatitis B—but they needed a solution, and fast. Their first step: to huddle.

The 15-minute meeting gave lab workers the chance to air their concerns, and provided managers with the opportunity to let the team know the vendor already had been contacted and would be coming by that day. Khalashi spoke up and asked what could be done, right away, to help those who worked near the machine. The section manager suggested masks, which are always available for lab employees.

“Huddles are usually the starting point for getting something done,” said Larry Ratto, a lab assistant and SEIU UHW-West member whose desk is the rallying spot for such meetings. “They are really good for making immediate change—and they never last more than 15 minutes, tops.”

In short order that morning, an issue that might have caused an undercurrent of anxiety was aired and laid to rest. Lab employees and managers determined test results weren’t being compromised and that the odor, though unpleasant, was harmless—and thanks to the huddle, everyone knew it. They later decided to install an air purifier next to the instrument and developed new procedures for handling its waste. The two steps have mitigated the smell.

The lab workers’ instinct to huddle, which stemmed from a year’s worth of practice, is one shared by many high-performing teams throughout Kaiser Permanente. The most successful unit-based teams, those that improve performance and meet goals, are using huddles regularly and effectively—and not just when a major problem needs to be solved.

Huddles aren’t a substitute for the training and skill-building that members of unit-based teams need as they shift into new ways of working—training and skills that help create the learning environment where frontline workers are engaged in decision making and see the connection between their work and larger, strategic outcomes.

But those who study group dynamics say routine huddles can give teams the opportunity to get good at solving problems together when the stakes are low—practice that increases the odds of solving problems successfully when the stakes are high. Frequent, candid conversations, these experts say, create working environments conducive to improvement and change.

“I see it in our group,” said Denise Ja, microbiology section manager. “Huddles have improved our communication, our camaraderie and our teamwork.”

Amy Edmondson, a Harvard Business School professor whose research examines what factors foster outstanding performance in health care settings, says huddles are a way of building what sociologists call “social capital.” In other words, they build social connections that produce real value by increasing productivity.

“The more we know each other and…(have) exchanged our thinking, the more we’ve just connected as human beings—the better we do,” said Edmondson, who led two workshops at this spring’s Union Delegates Conference.  “If we’re friends, I will make that extra little cognitive effort to think, ‘Oh, I wonder why she thinks it’s that way?’ Or, ‘I wonder why she sees it that way?’”

The willingness to extend that extra effort can make a world of difference in solving problems, creating a healthy work environment—and improving patient outcomes.

Many shapes and sizes

In Northern and Southern California, 79 percent of high-performing UBTs were huddling as of November 2009. Just 30 percent of newly established teams were doing the same. Once a team has gotten trained in the Rapid Improvement Model and other fundamental techniques, huddles can be an addition that helps improve working relationships.

Huddles mean different things to different departments. Some teams meet daily; others do it weekly. Many departments convene at the same time and same place; others are more spontaneous. Most huddles are short.

Part of what makes huddles effective is that they create frequent, regular opportunities for all the members of the unit-based team—the people whose work naturally draws them together—to come together and contribute ideas.

And they have a casualness that makes even the most reticent team member comfortable speaking up.

“I think because we’re close together in physical proximity, people feel less inhibited,” Ja said. She finds that in more formal meetings, some team members hold back. But when the team huddles in the work area, she said, “It’s kind of a hustle-bustle, and people are anxious to put their two cents in.”

Ja’s team usually huddles every Friday. But during the height of the H1N1 epidemic, the number of specimens the lab handled skyrocketed from 30 to 900 per day, and the team resorted to meeting daily and sometimes even hourly.

As team members worked frantically to devise a new system for tracking samples, the huddles became the place to test new ideas. It was in a huddle that someone suggested a coding system using letters, but the team quickly ran through the alphabet. The team members huddled and re-huddled until they were using a combination of letters, dates and numbers.

Huddles helped the lab workers keep up with the onslaught of work, pulling off what had seemed impossible.

“Everyone contributed ideas,” said Mark Stanley, microbiology director. “We depended on everyone’s knowledge.”

Figurative huddle

Even teams whose members don’t all work in the same location find that huddling works.

Colorado’s asthma care coordinators are spread out across the region, and usually see each other only two or three times a month. But when the department of seven launched a big push to improve the refill rate of an asthma control medication among children, team members decided to huddle once a week over the phone.

During their phone chats, which usually ran 30 to 45 minutes, team members related their progress in reaching out to members ages 5 to 17 who had not refilled their prescription in four months. Developing a habit of sharing their best practices, successes and failures with colleagues made the team members more accountable, said Kristie Wuerker-Delange, RN, an asthma care coordinator and member of UFCW Local 7.

“It’s kind of an, ‘Uh oh, I have to get this done because we’re going to talk to everybody, and they are going to want to know what I’ve been doing for the week,’” she said.

During one huddle, for example, asthma care coordinator Cindy Lamb told the team she had found that promoting the convenience of the mail-order pharmacy, giving members the telephone number to the regular pharmacy, and providing the member’s prescription number helped patients get their refills faster.

Within eight months, the refill rate of inhaled corticosteroids leapt nearly 20 percentage points, from 43 percent in March 2009 to 60 percent in January 2010—a feat that would not have taken longer without their huddles, Wuerker-Delange said.

“They kept the team focused on the same goal,” said Lamb, a member of UFCW Local 7. 

While other teams have the benefit of simply moseying over to a colleague’s desk, meeting over the phone has its pluses.

“I feel like people open up a bit more,” Wuerker-Delange said. “They are more apt to say a certain thing if someone’s not looking at them.”

Morning ritual

For the Family Medicine department at the Culver Marina Medical Offices campus in Southern California, huddles are part of the morning routine, like brushing your teeth after breakfast.

At 8:25 a.m., Department Administrator Barbara Matthews pokes her head into team members’ offices, her cue that it’s time to convene in the hallway. Patients already are beginning to arrive, so huddles rarely last more than five or 10 minutes.

Doctors, nurses, medical assistants—everyone who is working that day—attend. Co-leads use the time to relay who is working, share a workplace safety message, offer service reminders and more.

“I am upset if I can’t make our morning huddles,” said Krystle Harris, a medical assistant and SEIU UHW-West member. “If I am screening a patient and have to miss it, then I’ll ask one of my co-workers, ‘Aw man, what was the huddle about?’”

Matthews said in the beginning it wasn’t easy getting everyone to huddle and some team members still might choose not to attend if given that option.

But she thinks it’s no coincidence that since the department started huddling a year ago, its hospitality scores have increased, from 83 percent in December 2008 to approximately 89 percent in December 2009.

Other shifts, more subtle but just as significant, are taking place as well. Gene Oppenheim, MD, the physician in charge of the Culver Marina Medical Offices, notes that employees who frequently used to arrive five or 10 minutes late are on time now. Matthews says team members like Harris, who used to say little during meetings, are doing a lot more talking.

That’s a clue that team members are confident their views are valued and they aren’t afraid they may get in trouble for sharing their thoughts—two key characteristics that research shows leads to high performance.

One day recently Harris overheard licensed vocational nurse Jolavette Pye, an SEIU UHW-West member, trying to schedule a specialist appointment for a patient.

The specialist was booked for quite some time, but Pye called back a week later and sure enough, there was a cancellation.

“I brought it to the huddle to congratulate her,” Harris said. “She went out of her way—and the patient was really happy.”

Harris said she thinks sharing with the team the praise she’s overheard co-workers receiving from a patient helps morale, so she does it whenever she can.

“I am shy and I don’t like to speak around a lot of people,” Harris said. “But I am beginning to speak up and discuss little things that are on my mind. I’m just more comfortable in the huddle setting.” 

Have questions about huddling you’d like to bounce off one of the team co-leads interviewed for this article? Email Denise.Ja@kp.org, Concepcion.Savoy@kp.org, Kristine.Wuerker-Delange@kp.org, Deana.L.Parker@kp.org or Barbara.J.Matthews@kp.org for their thoughts.

9 reasons to huddle

  1. Resolves small problems before they become big problems.
  2. Provides real-time collaboration.
  3. Makes it easier for employees to speak up, due to informal nature.
  4. Encourages people to raise questions and share ideas.
  5. Increases the pool of ideas for addressing an issue.
  6. Leads to better communication through frequent communication.
  7. Improves staff morale.
  8. Lays the foundation for taking on big problems by providing routine practice at solving small problems.
  9. Keeps you warm on cold days.

New to huddling?

Here are some tips to help you get the most out of your huddles.

  • Get the group’s attention. Set a positive tone. Use people’s names.
  • Describe the plan or topic for discussion, including relevant background information and contingencies.
  • Explicitly ask for input. Have a two-way conversation. Effective team leaders continuously invite others into the conversation.
  • Encourage ongoing monitoring and cross-checking.
  • Specifically ask people to speak up if they have questions or concerns.

Some ideas of what to discuss:

  • Observed workplace safety issues that everyone can learn from.
  • Other departments’ work that may impact the team’s work that day.
  • Small tests of change to resolve identified issues and help improve performance.
  • How everyone is doing and who may need extra support that day.
  • New policies or procedures or other changes.


—From the Sponsor and Leader Resource Guide for UBTs.
 

‘Huddles have improved our communication, our camaraderie and our teamwork.’

Denise Ja, microbiology section manager, Northern California Regional Lab



Surgical checklists improve patient safety, strengthen team dynamics

In high-risk industries—including aviation and high-rise construction as well as health care—surgeon and best-selling author Atul Gawande has found that a good checklist not only specifies common sense safety measures, it also ensures “that people talk to one another about each case, at least just for a minute before starting,” he writes. “[It is] basically a strategy to foster teamwork—a kind of team huddle.”

A major theme of Gawande’s latest book, The Checklist Manifesto: How to Get Things Right, is that the best checklists are not just a top-down set of tasks for others to follow. They’re a tool for better team communication, coordination and inquiry. Read more about using checklists here

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Checklist for an Effective Steward

Submitted by anjetta.thackeray on Tue, 07/27/2010 - 23:43
Tool Type
Format
tips_effectivestewards

Use this checklist as part of training for new union stewards.

Non-LMP
Work compeleted by Tia, ready to post with stewards' story
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Checklist for an Effective Steward

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5" x 11”

Intended audience:
Union stewards

Best used:
Share these tips for becoming an effective union steward at trainings and meetings.

 

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Transforming KP
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tips (checklist, etc.)
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littlehank
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bulletin board packet
union website
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UBT Tracker User Guide

Submitted by anjetta.thackeray on Tue, 07/13/2010 - 17:32
Tool Type
Format
other_UBT Tracker user guide

This step-by-step guide shows users how to use UBT Tracker, an online tool for tracking team performance, recording tests of change and more.

Non-LMP
Tyra Ferlatte
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
UBT Tracker User Guide

Format:
PDF

Size:
57 pages; 8.5"  x 11"

Intended audience:
Unit-based teams and UBT and performance improvement consultants and facilitators

Best used: 
Download and print the guide to use in team huddles and meetings, or at consultant and facilitator coaching sessions. This booklet provides detailed instructions on using UBT Tracker.

You may also be interested in: 
Five tip sheets that cover the basics on how to use UBT Tracker and get the most out of it.

 

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Understanding Change

Submitted by kevino on Sat, 07/10/2010 - 09:01
Tool Type
Format
Running Your Team
Taxonomy upgrade extras
Understanding Change

Sponsors and leaders have a responsibility to understand the change process and support their colleagues and employees in a caring and respectful manner as they move through the transition. By nature, change is disruptive, even if the change is self-imposed and considered to be positive.

Non-LMP
Tool landing page copy (reporters)

Format:
PDF

Size:
One page, 8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Nurses and other Kaiser Permanente caregivers

Best used:
To educate team members about the process of change and how to help patients through that transition.

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Stages of Change

Submitted by kevino on Sat, 07/10/2010 - 08:55
Tool Type
Format
Running Your Team
Taxonomy upgrade extras
Stages of Change

There are different “stages” in the change process and not everyone goes through them at the same time or in the same way. Learn about the stages of change.

Non-LMP
Tyra Ferlatte
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Stages of Change

Format:
PDF

Size:
8" x 11"

Intended audience:
Frontline employees, managers and physicians

Best used:
Share this checklist with your team to inspire greater awareness and understanding of the stages in the change process. 

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The Case for Unit-Based Teams

Submitted by Paul Cohen on Thu, 07/01/2010 - 15:58
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Long Teaser

Article excerpt from Summer 2010 issue of The Permanente Journal showing the benefits of physician involvement in unit-based teams.

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Non-LMP
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Includes link to full article in Permanente Journal:
Paul C., do you have art work for what goes with this caption?:
Joseph Imarah, MD, an anesthesiologist at Riverside Medical Center, engages his UBT

http://www.thepermanentejournal.org/current-issue/commentary/114-the-case-for-unit-based-teams-a-model-for-frontline-engagement-and-performance-improvement.html

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The case for unit-based teams
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A model for frontline engagement and performance improvement
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An Internal Medicine team in Ohio improved its workflow and increased from 62 percent to 74 percent the number of diabetes patients with cholesterol levels under control—surpassing the region’s goal—even while coping with a staff shortage.

A medical/surgical unit at Fontana Medical Center, in Southern California, went 23 consecutive months without an incidence of hospital-acquired pressure ulcers—after previously experiencing seven to 10 cases a year.

Colorado’s regional laboratory improved the accuracy of its transfer and tracking records from 90 percent to 98 percent, significantly reducing rework and speeding turnaround times for patients’ lab results.

These outcomes, and hundreds of others across Kaiser Permanente, were the result of performance-improvement projects undertaken by unit-based teams (UBTs)—Kaiser Permanente’s strategy for frontline engagement and collaboration.

Physician involvement in UBTs to date has varied, and generally remains limited. However, based on evidence from across Kaiser Permanente, we believe unit-based teams can help physicians achieve their clinical goals and improve their efficiency and deserve their broader involvement.

How UBTs work

Teams identify performance gaps and opportunities within their purview—issues they can address in the course of the day-to-day work, such as workflow or process improvement. By focusing on clear, agreed-upon goals, UBTs encourage greater accountability and allow team members to work up to their scope of practice or job description. Achieving agreed-upon goals, in turn, promotes continuous learning, productive interaction, and the capacity to lead further meaningful change.

As a strategy for process and quality improvement, UBTs draw on the study of “clinical microsystems” by Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center and the Institute for Healthcare Improvement. “If we want to optimize a system, it's going to be around teams and teamwork, and it's going to cut across hierarchies and professional norms,” says Donald Berwick, MD, president and CEO of IHI and President’s Obama’s nominee to head the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. “Unit-based teams and much better relationships between those who organize systems and those who work in the systems are going to be essential.”

Four kinds of benefits

The focused nature of UBT activities translates to four broad benefits to physicians and patients:

  • Clinical benefits: Saving lives and improving health
  • Operational benefits: Using resources wisely and improving efficiency
  • Member/Patient benefits: Giving a great patient-care experience
  • Physician/team benefits: Improving team performance and worklife

The example below, of a positive clinical outcome in one unit, shows how UBTs use practical, frontline perspective to solve problems.

Simple solutions get results

The Internal Medicine department at Hill Road Medical Offices in Ventura (SCAL) faced a practical challenge: Patients with an initial elevated blood pressure reading need to be retested after waiting at least two minutes—but they often left the office before the staff could do a second test. In fact, the staff was doing needed second checks only 26 percent of the time as of March 2008. 

The team’s simple solution: A bright yellow sign reading, “Caution: Second blood pressure reading is required on this patient,” which employees hang on the exam room door so the physician or staff would be sure to do the test.“The teams come up with good ideas about workflow because these are the folks in the trenches and they see the headaches,” says Prakash Patel, MD. “They share ideas and work out processes that help.”

In just one month, the department’s score on giving second blood pressure tests was 100 percent. Their score on the regional clinical goal of hypertension control went from 76 percent in August 2008 to 79.8 in May 2009, just below the regional goal of 80.1 percent.

"I strongly encourage all chiefs of service to champion the unit-based team in their department by either active participation or as a physician advisor, particularly regarding quality, service and access initiatives," says Virginia L Ambrosini, MD, assistant executive medical director, Permanente Human Resources.

UBTs are taking hold at the right moment for Kaiser Permanente. At a time when health care providers are under pressure to contain costs, maintain quality, and improve service, UBTs have the problem-solving tools to address those issues.

Read the full article, including principles of employee engagement and tips for selecting a performance improvement project.

 

 

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MIT Study of LMP 2002-2004

Submitted by Kristi on Sun, 06/20/2010 - 19:07
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Format
Content Section
Taxonomy upgrade extras
MIT Study of LMP 2002-2004

This report analyzes LMP's evolution from 2002 to 2004 and identifies critical issues and challenges moving forward.

Non-LMP
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
MIT Study of LMP 2002-2004

Format:
PDF

Size:
53 pages

Intended audience:
Managers; UBT consultants, co-leads and sponsors

Best used:
This report analyzes the KP Labor Management Partnership's evolution from 2002 to 2004 and identifies critical issues and challenges moving forward.

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Physicians' Roles

Submitted by Kristi on Sun, 06/20/2010 - 19:06
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Format
Taxonomy upgrade extras
Physicians' roles

A letter-sized leaflet to help physicians figure out their UBT roles and responsibilities.

Tyra Ferlatte
Tyra Ferlatte
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Physicians' roles

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5” x 11”

Intended audience:
Physicians working in unit-based teams

Description:
Physicians play a variety of roles integral to improving patient care through a UBT. This leaflet can help you determine your role and what that means for your future responsibilities and influence.

 

 

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