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Key Findings on How Workers Perceive Technology

Deck: 
Unit-based teams have positive impact

Story body part 1: 

Frontline workers see technology as important to their work. But they vary widely in their views on how easy it is to use tech at work.

What can help workers feel more at ease with tech? Unit-based teams.

"Of surveyed employees, 82% saw the importance of technology enabling work in their unit. At the same time, 52% saw this as difficult to do. Those involved in UBTs were more positive on the importance of technology and saw lower difficulty in implementing new technology," says Spencer Lewis, a Brandeis University doctoral student.

Lewis analyzed results of the most recent survey commissioned by Kaiser Permanente and the Alliance of Health Care Unions. The survey asked workers how they perceive technology, the Labor Management Partnership, and UBTs.

Here are 4 key findings:

1. The greater an employee's UBT involvement, the more effective they perceived workplace tech to be.

2. Frontline workers interested but not yet involved in UBTs were among the most optimistic about tech's importance, effectiveness, and ease of implementation.

3. Employees without LMP training are more pessimistic about tech.

4. Employees uninvolved and uninterested in UBTs are the most pessimistic about tech's importance, effectiveness, and ability to be implemented.

Learn more about UBTs.

Related: Teams Tackle Technology One Byte at a Time

 

 

Teams Tackle Technology One Byte at a Time

Deck: 
Survey shows how unit-based teams can boost tech’s effectiveness

Story body part 1: 

When you think of technology in health care, what comes to mind?

Virtual care? Medical devices? Electronic health care records?

In Washington, a radiology team increased its health and impact with an app to track a step challenge.

In Virginia, advice nurses bonded through Microsoft Teams and a buddy system.

Across the Labor Management Partnership, unit-based teams are embracing technology step by step. By doing so, they're strengthening teamwork, improving service, and becoming more efficient.

That reflects findings of a survey by Kaiser Permanente and the Alliance of Health Care Unions. The survey asked workers how they perceive technology, LMP, and UBTs. A Brandeis University analysis of the survey linked UBT interest and involvement with views of the importance of technology.

UBTs are natural work groups that collaborate to improve patient care. The Partnership has 3,700 UBTs. Each team is co-led by a manager and a worker and a physician — if it includes doctors.

Stepping up team activities

The Olympia Radiology UBT formed in 2022.

The step challenge was an early project. To track steps, team members downloaded an app to phones and smart watches. This led the team to walk more and raised interest in the UBT.

"People get excited," says management co-lead Lydon Fitzgerald, a radiology manager. "They want to be a part of it."

The team has 50 members, including techs for CT, MRI, and X-ray. It plans to add sonographers and mammography techs.

"They want a voice," says labor co-lead Jesse Toth, a radiologic tech and UFCW Local 3000 steward. "It's about inclusion."

Know the code

The radiology team took more tech steps. It began to use Microsoft Teams to share files and host some meetings.

Then the team focused on patient satisfaction scores. It added QR codes, so patients could give real-time feedback.

But many older patients weren't familiar with QR codes. The team then added signs and created scripts to show patients how to use QR codes with their phone.

"We're trying to keep patients happy and on time," Toth says.

Make time to train

When the unit got 2 new machines, the co-leads made sure workers got trained. The team learned how to use the equipment and found ways to work smarter.

"Tech is integral to workflows. How can we make it better?" Fitzgerald says. "We embody the principles of LMP, working together at the lowest level to find solutions."

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