Frontline Workers

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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Humans of Partnership:

Going through the joint staffing training with my labor co-lead helped strengthen our relationship as co-leads and build our partnership within our team. The foundation of working together successfully will be done with transparency and honesty. I’m motivated to follow through with the joint staffing process as this is an opportunity to work closely together to ensure daily staffing meets the needs of our members and patients, making it a win for our members and our team. 

—Eileen Rodriguez, assistant service unit manager and UBT management co-lead, obstetrics/gynecology (left)


The joint staffing training helped my management co-lead and me align our approach and strengthen our collaboration. It also gave us the confidence to tackle the joint staffing plan we are creating with our team. Partnership can be a strength that helps our workers understand various topics, like staffing metrics. The joint staffing process is work, but it is worth it. When labor and management plan together, everyone wins.

—Laura Hayes, medical assistant and UBT labor co-lead, SEIU UHW, obstetrics/gynecology (right)

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TOOLS

2026 Attendance Calendar

Format:
PDF

Size:

8.5" x 11" (2 pages) Use landscape setting when printing

Intended audience:
Frontline workers and managers

Best used:
Print out this colorful attendance calendar and use it to track and plan your time away from work. See HRconnect Holidays for more detailed information. 

 

Related tools:

TOOLS

PSP Palooza PPT Template for Team Presentations

Format:
PPT, 11 slides, 16:9

Intended audience:
Frontline staff, managers, and physicians; regional and facility leaders

Best used:
Unit-based teams can use this PowerPoint template to share their successful practices at a PSP Palooza. This is an alternative to creating a storyboard. The template guides teams to insert key information (such as SMART goals, small tests of change, metrics, and learnings) onto each of the 11 slides for a quick and easy way to create a presentation for a PSP Palooza or similar event. 

For more tools, please visit the How-To Guide: PSP Palooza in a Box.

Related tools:

TOOLS

PSP Palooza Passports

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5" x 11"  

Intended audience:
PSP Palooza guests, including frontline workers, managers, and physicians

Best used:
Download, print and hand out these passports at your PSP Palooza to ensure participants visit teams and learn about their successful practices. Teams presenting at the fair can mark off participants’ passports with a pen or colorful sticker. Participants can redeem the passports for snacks or giveaways. Also, use the passports as tickets for raffle drawings at your event.

For more tools, please visit the How-To Guide: PSP Palooza in a Box.

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TOOLS

PSP Palooza Poster Template

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5" x 11" 

Intended audience:
Unit-based team co-leads, sponsors, consultants and others who are holding a PSP Palooza.

Best used:
Use this fill-in-the-blanks flier template to promote your PSP Palooza. Post fliers in breakrooms, union halls and other places where frontline workers and managers gather.

For more tools, please visit the How-To Guide: PSP Palooza in a Box.

Related tools:

Great Care Delivers Star Reviews

  • Stationing support staff at facility entrances to greet members, provide directions and help with other needs  
  • Training staff members to seek patient feedback and encourage Google star reviews as a tool to improve service 
  • Reaching out to members who leave negative reviews to ensure their concerns are addressed

What can your team do to solicit member feedback and make Kaiser Permanente the best place to receive care? 

Northwest Team Creates Better Cancer-Care Experience

Deck: 
Educating staff minimizes patient disruptions, maintains highest quality

Story body part 1: 

Cancer is a scary diagnosis. Patients who receive this devastating news find support and hope from the Central Interstate Oncology and Infusion team.

The Portland-based team manages an infusion clinic where an average of 70 patients receive chemotherapy daily.

Thanks to a UBT project launched in 2023, the team is helping patients better manage chemotherapy side effects. Results have led to a steep drop in the number of patients sent to the hospital because of severe reactions.

The results illustrate the power of the Labor Management Partnership. The project brought together physicians, managers, and frontline staff to find ways to lower hospitalizations and ease the burden on patients.

“This is just one highlight of how amazingly well our cancer team works as a whole,” says Christine Barnett, MD, chief of Oncology at Central Interstate.

Rising hospitalizations

The oncology and infusion unit-based team set out to reduce the number of patients hospitalized for severe chemotherapy reactions.

They began by closely reviewing an unexplained rise in patients receiving infusion treatment in the hospital.

The team found that about half of these patients could have continued with outpatient infusion treatment, which typically lasts 2 to 3 hours. Hospital infusions can take up to 11 hours and involve patient monitoring and additional medication measures.

“It really spoke to the need for providing more thorough onboarding and training and review for existing staff,” says Monica Hahn, manager of Central Interstate’s Cancer Service Line and Medical Oncology back office.

Significant turnover on the team during the COVID-19 pandemic led to gaps in understanding of the different treatment options available to patients, says Hahn, the team’s management co-lead.

The team’s journey pointed to a larger issue as well. During the pandemic, many teams paused important UBT work to meet increased demand for patient care.

The Central Interstate team was no exception. By early 2023, the team had dropped from Level 5 to Level 1 on the Path to Performance as completed UBT projects fell off. The Path to Performance is a five-stage “growth chart” teams use to measure success.

The care experience project marked one step in the team’s renewed focus on UBT work. They returned to Level 5 in just 10 months.

Refreshing skills

To reduce unneeded hospital visits, the team developed a skills refresher for everyone.

Pharmacy staff conducted in-service training to help employees understand the range of medications available to ease difficult side effects.

Unit-based team leaders also received training. They reviewed ways to assess chemotherapy reactions and determine which patients required hospitalization.

The training was led by Dr. Barnett, Chyna Turnbull, a nurse practitioner, and Jennie Burns, a registered nurse, both members of OFNHP Local 5017.

This educational push led team leaders to develop a 2-page handout of clinical practices. Staff members review the information with patients to help them understand expected side effects.

After taking these steps, the team saw hospitalizations for chemotherapy drop by more than 90% over 2 months in 2023. The team continues to maintain the lower level of hospitalizations.

This is good news for patients, who often must pay high deductibles for hospital admissions. And it’s good news for Kaiser Permanente, which is saving an estimated $198,000 annually due to reduced hospitalizations.

Patients also have a better care experience. They develop trusting relationships with infusion team members and maximize recuperation time at home.

“They come in for their treatment and they’re home in time for dinner,” says Burns, the team’s lead registered nurse.

“The patients see that we are all together in this,” says Rebel Herbert, the team’s labor co-lead, who is a medical assistant and member of SEIU Local 49. “We’re always just a phone call or an email message away.”

Humans of Partnership:

I get the flu vaccine every year. So does everyone in my family. Once we even took a family trip to the drive-through clinic. My son, Alex, who was 5 years old at the time, climbed from the very back seat of our car to the front seat and sat on his sister’s lap. And then we went to breakfast! My kids’ attendance at school improved after we all started getting vaccinated. Before, when I got the flu, I’d get it really bad: aches, fever, several days in bed, the whole 9 yards. After I started getting the flu vaccine, if I did get the flu, it went away quickly and was just a couple of coughs and sneezes. One year, I missed the vaccine, and I got sick. That’s when I knew I had to get it every year. My husband, who has diabetes, saw how much it helped me. Now he gets it every year also. As soon as the availability is announced every September, we decide together about which day we’re going, what time and what restaurant to eat at after – just as we do with consensus decision-making. I want my kids to have a say and be able to speak up and share concerns without fear of retaliation ­– just like I do at work. I am teaching them that they have a right to be heard. They have a right to speak up in the family and in the world.

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TOOLS

Coalition PSP Fact Sheet

Format:
PDF 

Size:
8.5"x11" (2 pages) 

Intended audience:
Frontline union members, managers, and leaders involved in the Coalition Performance Sharing Program 

Best used: Understand the goals, metrics, and eligibility for bonuses under the Coalition Performance Sharing Program for plan years 2024 to 2027.

Related tools:

Humans of Partnership:

As an oncology nurse navigator, I coordinate cancer care as well as provide education and resources to patients. A few years ago, one of my colleagues, an Alliance-represented union member, enrolled in the Ben Hudnall Memorial Trust program and was working on her master’s degree. Ben Hudnall Memorial Trust is one of 3 education trusts backed by the Labor Management Partnership. The Alliance, the Coalition, and Kaiser Permanente negotiated these benefits so members of partnership unions can access education, training, and career advice. I decided to take advantage of this opportunity and received my Master of Science in Nursing degree with a specialty in care coordination in April 2023. I feel very blessed. I had support from Kaiser Permanente, the union, and my leadership team to pursue my professional goal of receiving a graduate degree. The Ben Hudnall Memorial Trust paid for my tuition, books, and time. This experience gave me more than just a better understanding of the health care system and skills to improve my practice, it rejuvenated my nursing soul.

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