Library

Help Video

How to Find UBT Basics on the LMP Website

Learn how to use the LMP website:

LMP Website Overview

Learn how to use the LMP website:

How to Find How-To Guides

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

Learn how to use the LMP website:

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 teams-tested practices on the LMP website. This short video shows you how. 

Learn how to use the LMP website:

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!

Learn how to use the LMP website:

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. 

Learn how to use the LMP website:

Hank Summer 2014

See the whole issue

Growing Stronger Together

alt="Ute Kongsbak is a speech pathologist."

Union members such as speech pathologist Ute Kongsbak, an OFNHP member, work to improve quality and affordability in the Northwest region—work that builds Kaiser Permanente’s reputation and attracts members.

Working with LMP is important for outreach and as strategy in the public sector

 “I was almost devastated,” says Karen Cardosa, a grocery clerk in Albany, Oregon, “when UFCW told us they were no longer offering Kaiser Permanente as an insurance option.”

Cardosa and her family had been KP members for years through the union’s Local 555 Employers Health Trust. That changed in 2009 when a variety of issues resulted in KP losing the account, which covered many Local 555 members. The union continued to represent nearly 2,000 Kaiser Permanente pharmacy and radiology employees, who—as KP staff members—continued to have KP health care.

Today, it’s a new story. Thanks to a 36-month KP offering that was finalized in April, Kaiser Permanente is again an option for up to 15,000 UFCW members and dependents in the Northwest region who are covered by the health trust.

“Our work with LMP is probably some of the most important work done in Public Sector strategy in the last two years. Working with our union partners, we’ve been able to come to the table with customer solutions that meet everybody’s needs—including the unions that aren’t part of KP, who have tremendous influence in purchase decisions. We are unique in having a strong labor partnership in our own business, and we can speak that language.”

—Kate Kessler, a Member Sales and Service Administration director

“When I was hired four years ago, my manager told me my Number One job was to get UFCW back,” Ehren Cline, a KP Sales and Account manager. Cline, including Jeston Black, the region’s senior labor liaison, and other colleagues partnered with Dan Clay, president of Local 555, to do just that.

“KPNW brought us a package we couldn’t refuse,” Clay says. An affordable price, high quality, a new hospital, expanded clinics and a new billing system helped seal the deal.

Clay’s own union members pushed for the new commitment.

“I have not been to a union meeting in the last five years where someone didn’t ask, ‘When do we get to go back to Kaiser?’” Clay says.

But something else was also at play. Thanks to Labor Management Partnership, Kaiser Permanente enjoys a joint union-management approach to winning and keeping health plan members that is almost unheard elsewhere in this country.

Read on and learn how it all comes together.

How the LMP Growth Campaign Works

Real Commitment, Real Results

Leaders of the local and international unions that belong to the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente unions take an active role in advocating for KP as the preferred health care provider when negotiating contracts or benefit programs with employers.

“We are big believers in Kaiser Permanente and its model of care,” says Steve Kreisberg, director of collective bargaining for AFSCME, whose affiliates include UNAC/UHCP in Southern California. “Our union members work at KP to provide great care and service, and they have a strong voice on the job through partnership. We have bargained to make Kaiser a part of the benefits offered in our non-KP contracts when feasible.”

Other outreach efforts, while building membership in less direct ways, have furthered KP and the unions’ shared social mission. For instance, SEIU Locals 49 and 503 in Oregon enrolled more than 2,300 eligible union members in KP through the state health care exchange and Medicaid. The union push accounted for a significant share of KP Northwest members so enrolled.

Such efforts are a unique benefit of partnership for KP, its unions and the public.

“Building new, productive relationships with our own unions as part of our sales and marketing efforts, in the marketplace, both enables Kaiser Permanente to grow and ensures more consumers have access to our world-class care,” says Wade Overgaard, the senior vice president of California Health Plan Operations.

Team Members - Color Help People Make the Right Choice

Kaiser Permanente prides itself on its great staff, from clinicial to clerical to support. But the organization is only as good and as strong as its membership. And KP takes even greater pride in serving its members.

Here are some stories and tools to see how you and your team can help grow KP membership.

The Proof? More Members.

Joint marketing efforts have produced impressive results. In the last two years, for example, LMP labor liaisons and Kaiser Permanente Sales and Account Management teams have:

  • Helped close sales with eight public sector accounts in California and the Northwest, bringing KP some 5,000 new health plan members. KP is the exclusive health care provider for three of the accounts.
  • Brought more than 12,000 new dental plan members KP in the Northwest—the largest membership jump ever for the dental plan—by winning exclusive coverage for home care workers represented by SEIU Local 503.
  • Helped save at-risk accounts of more than 65,000 members in the Mid-Atlantic States and California.
  • Reached more than 85,000 public sector employees, including teachers, police and firefighters in Baltimore and Washington, D.C., and other areas during open enrollment.
57 people found this helpful. Was it helpful to you? YesNo