Southern California

Help Video

How to Find UBT Basics on the LMP Website

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LMP Website Overview

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How to Find How-To Guides

This short animated video explains how to find and use our powerful how-to guides

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How to Find and Use Team-Tested Practices

Does your team want to improve service? Or clinical quality? If you don't know where to start, check out the team-tested practices on the LMP website. This short video shows you how. 

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How to Use the Search Function on the LMP Website

Having trouble using the search function? Check out this short video to help you search like a pro!

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How to Find the Tools on the LMP Website

Need to find a checklist, template or puzzle? Don't know where to start? Check out this short video to find the tools you need on the LMP website with just a few clicks. 

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Transformed Team Tracks Kidney Transplant Patients Follow-up Care

  • Hosting a short-term special clinic for post-transplant patients, enabling them to get all their follow-up care in one visit
  • Creating an Excel spreadsheet of post-transplant patients and their follow-up needs
  • Making outreach calls to patients with care gaps

What can your team do to fill patient care gaps? What else could your team do to proactively meet patient needs?

 

Surgery Team Drops Accidental Needle Sticks to 0

  • Creating “Pass Free Zone,” to discourage staff from directly handing needles and other sharps to one another
  • Educating staff on how to handle used needles, and employing face-to-face conversations
  • Issuing fliers with the count of needle-stick, injury-free days posted throughout the medical center

What can your team do to decrease injuries in your area? What else could your team use to encourage each other?

 

 

Videos

Inventing Better Care

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Imagine a workplace where every member of every team has a say in how the work gets done. That is the goal of the more than 3,600 unit-based teams now up and running  across Kaiser Permanente. Watch this short video for a quick explanation of what a unit-based team is, and to see how UBT members are working together to make KP a better place to work and receive care.

Around the Regions (Spring 2014)

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Colorado

The new Lone Tree Specialty Care Medical Office, a 25-acre campus, boasts outdoor patios, picturesque mountain views and a walkway around the perimeter of the building. The facility, which opened in December 2013, was awarded a LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) Silver certification by the United States Green Building Council. Lone Tree, which is near a light rail line, used recycled materials, water-wise fixtures and shading devices for balancing solar heat to win the LEED designation. The facility has nearly 350 employees and 45 physicians to take care of the 3,000 ambulatory surgeries and 3,000 minor procedures expected per year.

Georgia

What happens when two nurses from two different high-performing UBTs transfer to the same brand-new Level 1 team? That team zooms to a Level 4 in only 10 months. Jane Baxter and Ingrid Baillie, both RNs, had been UBT co-leads at the Crescent and Cumberland medical centers, respectively, and then joined the Ob/Gyn staff at Alpharetta. Drawing on their experience—at different times, they each have been UFCW Local 1996 members and members of management—they helped their new UBT move up through the Path to Performance. “We knew the steps in the process and what to expect,” says Baxter. Their advice to fledging teams: Start with small performance improvement projects in areas that clearly are Kaiser Permanente priorities and that already have lots of data collected.

Hawaii

Nurses on the 1-West Medical-Surgical unit-based team at Moanalua Medical Center vastly improved how well they educate patients about medications, moving from about 40 percent of surveyed patients saying they understood side effects and other aspects of their prescriptions to 96 percent reporting this awareness. Between April and December 2013, the RNs, who are members of the Hawaii Nurses’ Association (HNA), made notations on patient room whiteboards, rounded hourly and did daily teach-backs on every shift. The team members designed a three-day survey for a sampling of patients to report what they understood about side effects of their medicine. The survey provided speedier feedback than waiting more than three months for HCAHPS (Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems) scores.

Mid-Atlantic States

A Nephrology team at Tysons Corner Medical Center in Virginia helped patients prevent or manage chronic kidney disease by getting them into the classroom. Just 70 percent of the unit’s patients at risk of renal failure were enrolling in KP disease management classes in February 2013. But several successful tests of change boosted at-risk patient enrollment in March to 100 percent, where it has remained since. The team noted on individual patient charts if the member suffered chronic kidney disease, developed scripting for in-person coaching, mailed class invitations to patients’ homes and handed out class agendas with after-visit summaries.

Northern California

The Modesto Pediatrics UBT improved wait times for immunizations—and not only increased service scores but also reduced overtime costs, an example of how a change can affect an entire system. The team reduced patient waits for immunizations from 45 minutes to 15 minutes between June and August 2013 and maintained the improvement through the rest of the year. A workflow change was key to the dramatic reduction. When a patient is ready for an injection, physicians now copy the orders to a nursing in-box instead of searching for a licensed vocational nurse to give the shot. The half-hour reduction in wait times—which is credited with improving service scores from 86 percent to 95 percent—also reduced the need for LVN overtime by an hour a day, resulting in savings of more than $16,600 over six months. 

Northwest

The regional Employee Health and Safety department won KP’s “Engaging the Frontline” National Workplace Safety Award. Through the Northwest’s Safety Committee Challenge, facilities had to complete a rigorous set of tasks, including regularly scheduled safety meetings, joint planning with NW Permanente and Permanente Dental Associates, safety conversation training, awareness plans and a safety promotion event during the year. Of the 16 facilities that rose to the challenge, nine met all of the qualifications. The region ended the year with a 4 percent reduction in accepted claims compared with 2013. Leonard Hayes, regional EVS manager, won the individual award for his work, which contributed to the East service area’s EVS team going injury-free for the last four years.

Southern California

The regional LMP council has set a 2014 Performance Sharing Program (PSP) goal to power up unit-based teams’ achievements on improving affordability. When at least 50 percent of a medical center’s UBTs complete a project that saves money or improves revenue capture—and if the region meets its financial goals—eligible employees and managers there will get a boost in their bonus. “Imagine how powerful it will be to have a majority of unit-based teams achieving measurable cost-savings and revenue-capture improvements,” says Josh Rutkoff, a national coordinator for the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions. “The idea is to take all the strong work on affordability at the front line to a whole new level.”

Taking a Closer Look Reduces Eyeglass Redo Rates

  • Logging each redo in a tracking book
  • Creating a unit “redo monitor” and a lead optician position, to troubleshoot service gaps and help team members close those gaps
  • Coaching employees on new protocols in HealthConnect to identify possible factors contributing to lens problems, on collaborating with optometry and ophthalmology in problem solving, and on counseling patients about eye health as well as manufacturing warranty limits 

What can your team do to identify potential problems in your workflow?

Let's Talk About Copayments—Increasing Collection

  • Training a group of master trainers who coached peers about the importance of copay collection and the process
  • Educating inpatient nursing and frontline staff about the importance of copay collection and financial counseling availability for patients
  • Hiring a financial counselor who answered patient questions during the admitting process and interviewed those in need of financial assistance

What can your team do to ensure team members have the skills to have difficult conversations?

Staff Buddies Up to Inform Patients of Delays

  • Huddling before the clinics open for the day to determine who will buddy up in groups of two.
  • Spending the day communicating with each other how the clinics’ schedules are progressing and finding out from medical assistants and nurses whether any providers are running behind.
  • Delivering information to patients on waiting room delays that is as specific as possible.

What can your team do to communicate better with each other and patients? What else could your team do to make the day go smoothly?

On Speaking Up When You're Not the Boss

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Advice from two workers

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When employees speak up, teams score high on patient safety, quality, service and workplace safety. But it can be hard to speak up when you don’t feel safe or comfortable. Gain the confidence to use your voice with these tips from two frontline workers with the Ambulatory Care Pharmacy team in West Los Angeles. 

Chakana Mayo, pharmacy technician, UFCW Local 770, Workplace safety champion

Practicing speaking up when you feel safe. “When we first began peer rounding, people were comfortable speaking to one another versus speaking with management. Once people were comfortable speaking with one another, then they felt like they could be comfortable speaking with management.”

Your voice can make a difference. “It’s important to speak up early because you can prevent long-term injuries from occurring. If you’re confident enough to speak up to your manager and just let them know what’s going on, they’ll appreciate it more.”

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