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TOOLS

Glossary: The Building Blocks of Partnership

Format:
PDF

Size:
2 pages, 8.5” x 11”

Intended audience:
Members and leaders of unit-based teams

Best Used:
Use this glossary to understand key concepts and terms related to the Labor Management Partnership and interest-based bargaining.

Related tools:

Humans of Partnership:

I’ve worked at Kaiser Permanente for 42 years. I’m a patient registration representative and have been working as a greeter since COVID-19 hit. Most everyone I have encountered has been fabulous, but I had a particular situation when a member was very upset about answering the screening questions and wearing a mask. He was aggressive and verbally abusive. I had to remind myself that the person in front of me might be dealing with fear or medical issues and that he was just trying to get through the day. I explained the safety precautions as calmly and empathetically as I could and the member calmed down and complied with the rules. I work hard to be positive and helpful with our members; If I can make their encounter positive, I’ve done a good thing.

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Videos

A Robot Can't Reason

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When a state-of-the-art lab opened, some feared the new technology. Employees worried it would replace jobs. But the results may surprise you. See how adapting to change is helping patients, workers and Kaiser Permanente.

Humans of Partnership:

I have a great passion for my job in Message Management.  I love assisting our members with their questions, concerns, and booking the appropriate appointments for them. It keeps me going. As I head into work, I wonder how I am going to make a difference in someone's life. All day long, I call members with their test results and help them with their prescription refill requests. Being able to help members during this hard time is very inspiring. I work closely with physicians to provide members with the appropriate plan of care.  I can tell this helps to alleviate some of their anxiety and stress.  It makes them feel like we care for their well-being at a time like this. Member satisfaction is our goal and priority, now more than ever.

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Humans of Partnership:

Knowing that I am backed by the LMP and having a good working relationship with management has enabled me to speak freely about my feelings and ideas. For example, when too many visitors entered the building, I was very comfortable talking with my manager about the current visitation policy which she took to the building manager. We are now informing patients before they arrive about the number of visitors they may bring. I really and truly enjoy my job and the people I work with. Every morning, the midwife and I pull a card from a deck called 'Empowering Questions and Affirmation Cards.' It helps us start our day on the right foot.

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Humans of Partnership:

There are two things that keep me going: First is my faith and second is knowing that I can be here to support our members, management, our nurses and our hospitalists. I have learned individually and collectively the true meaning of what is involved when working together as a team. Some of us have to be willing to step up to the plate and others need to be willing to let someone else lead – and that is what has transpired. I’m seeing the true value in my supportive role within the Continuing Care Department, and that is very fulfilling.

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Humans of Partnership:

Nothing is the same. We’ve had to rethink everything we do — not just how we do medicine but each diagnosis. We treat every patient as if they have COVID-19. The disease has such a broad presentation and there is so much unknown, we take it day by day and we are very flexible. Our team is close. There are days you know that it could have been a lot worse and you’re thankful for having a great team. There are also times when you can look at another team member and know that they’re thinking, ‘I got you,’ and there will be days when I will do the same for them. That’s the best part of us.

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Strength in Partnership

Deck: 
Labor and management collaborate to address pandemic

Story body part 1: 

In 1997, the Labor Management Partnership turned strife between Kaiser Permanente and its unions into strength.

That strength is coming to the forefront again today. Decades of working in partnership are helping the organization respond to the COVID-19 pandemic, move forward together and provide a model for the health care industry.

With interest-based problem solving, a Free to Speak culture and performance improvement through unit-based teams, the Partnership has built a foundation that’s given leaders, managers and union members tools and relationships to collaboratively address this crisis.

Acting fast

Some of the response took place at the highest levels. Over a weekend, Kaiser Permanente and union leaders reached an agreement to temporarily enhance benefits for physicians and frontline employees.

“I’ve never negotiated anything as fast,” says Dennis Dabney, senior vice president of National Labor Relations and the Office of Labor Management Partnership.

Throughout the crisis, union leaders joined twice-weekly calls with top Kaiser Permanente leaders and played a central role with command centers and surge planning.

The key to making faster decisions was directly involving labor in operations meetings, says Hal Ruddick, executive director for the Alliance of Health Care Unions.

Having a voice

Partnership laid the groundwork for a nimble response in other ways, too. When COVID-19 hit, most vision appointments were canceled.

In Northern California, IFPTE/ESC Local 20 negotiated with management to have optometrists work in different roles. More than 120 optometrists volunteered to staff the COVID-19 test results call-in line.

“We showed our willingness to do alternative work — work that would be meaningful and keep our union members safe,” says optometrist John Corpus, a member of the local union’s optometry unit board.

Having a voice on the job equipped members to negotiate that deal, which included training, laptops and greater flexibility to work remotely.

“If our teams remain safe, are listened to and feel respected in the changes, they can live with the changes during this time,” Corpus says.

Improving workflows

At Beaverton Medical Office in Oregon, after COVID-19 testing began, managers saw that patients often needed multiple services. A new workflow was required — and the Nurse Treatment Room team’s registered nurses and medical assistants rose to the challenge.

“Everyone began sharing ideas and brainstorming possible solutions,” says nurse manager Cyndy Gillis. “The team formulated a plan that respected scope of practice, safety for the staff and patients, and a streamlined workflow that continues to adjust to new challenges.”

“It was the epitome of collaboration,” says team member Kellie Butchino, a certified medical assistant and SEIU Local 49 member.

Fighting together

One of the most vexing problems during the pandemic has been getting caregivers the personal protective equipment they need to safely care for patients. Working in partnership has helped.

“It’s not perfect,” says UNAC/UHCP member Andrew Calderon, a physician assistant at South Bay Medical Center in Southern California.

“But labor and management were there updating staff regularly and fighting to get us the materials we needed.

“We are able to provide the best care for our members because of partnership.”

Looking forward

Such collaboration across the enterprise will help Kaiser Permanente navigate the future — and inspire others, too.

In May, LMP leaders shared their pandemic experiences during a Labor and Employment Relations Association webinar, drawing praise from members of a 4-year-old labor- management partnership in Massachusetts.

“We are trying to proceed on the premise that there is no business case for adversarial labor relations,” says Bart Metzger, chief human resources officer for UMass Memorial Health Care. Partnership is “the only way we can push organizations such as ours forward.”

Partnership is an effective strategy for labor and management, Ruddick says.

“It’s harder, but it’s worth it because the results that you get are better.”

 

Transforming Care With Partnership Tools

Deck: 
Behavioral Health teams pivot to virtual house calls

Story body part 1: 

After government stay-at-home orders derailed their plans for a patient support group, members of Kaiser Permanente’s Marlow Heights Behavioral Health team in Maryland set up a video chat for vulnerable individuals sheltering in place.

“With the COVID-19 pandemic, we had to be open and receptive to connecting with our members in a different way,” says Dawn Anderson, a psychotherapist with UFCW Local 400 and union co-lead for the Level 4 unit-based team. “This way we’re still supporting patients with serious health issues.”

Propelled by the global pandemic, Behavioral Health teams across the Mid-Atlantic States are using partnership principles and tools to transform how and where patients seek care — resulting in changes likely to outlast the crisis.

Connecting with patients

Therapists are working from home and counseling patients via telephone and video. Unit-based team members are meeting virtually, too, using collaborative digital tools to identify challenges and solutions.

They’re also using such tried-and-true performance improvement tools as the Rapid Improvement Model to reveal the best ways to connect with patients by telephone and video.

“Sometimes I will connect with patients on video, then after 5 minutes something will cause a disruption and I’ll have to ask if we can connect via telephone,” says Anderson. “We are still adapting to telehealth technology.”

Adapting quickly

The rapid-fire changes haven’t been easy for team members, who are conducting assessments with patients by phone instead of in person because of social distancing requirements.

“We’ve done things in this pandemic season that we normally would not have done,” says Reuben Steele, Behavioral Health operations manager and management co-lead. “That has caused some initial anxiety but, ultimately, the team has been able to adapt and adjust quickly.”

Being heard

Team members agree having a voice in decisions about ways to deliver care is helping them cope with change. A key feature of the Labor Management Partnership is involving frontline workers and union leaders in decision making.

“The LMP is a great way to think outside of the box and figure out what we can do to meet people’s needs,” says Lindsey McDaniel, a psychotherapist, UFCW Local 400 member and labor co-lead for the Silver Spring Behavioral Health team, a Level 4 UBT in Maryland.

Anderson agrees.

“We’re able to ‘check egos at the door’ and come forth with ideas and suggestions. That’s what I love about the UBT setting,” she says. “Our UBT consultant and manager support us and are open to feedback on team projects and goals. This is the forum where I feel my colleagues and I are being heard.”

 

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