Unit-based team concepts

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TOOLS

PPT: Bolder Communication Helps Diagnose Malnutrition

Format:
PPT

Size:
1 Slide

Intended audience:
Frontline employees, managers and physicians; LMP staff, UBT consultants, and improvement advisers

Best used:
This poster features a Northern California team that improved communication and its ability to diagnose malnutrition. Use in presentations to show some of the methods used and the measurable results being achieved by unit-based teams across Kaiser Permanente. 

Related tools:

TOOLS

Poster: Bolder Communication Helps Diagnose Malnutrition

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Frontline employees, managers and physicians

Best used:
Gain inspiration from this Northern California team that improved communication and its ability to diagnose malnutrition.

Related tools:

TOOLS

PPT: Better Workflow Controls Blood Pressure

Format:
PPT

Size:
1 slide

Intended audience:
LMP staff, UBT consultants, improvement advisers

Best used:
Share this with your team to gain inspiration from this Maryland UBT that got more hypertensive patients' blood pressure under control.

 

Related tools:

TOOLS

PPT: Zumba Helps Team Meet Health Assessment Goal

Format:
PPT

Size:
1 Slide

Intended audience:
LMP staff, UBT consultants, improvement advisers

Best used:
This poster features a Fontana UBT in which 95 percent of members have taken KP's health assessment. Use in presentations to show some of the methods used and the measurable results being achieved by unit-based teams across Kaiser Permanente. 

Related tools:

TOOLS

Virtual UBT Fair on Affordability

Format: 
PowerPoint

Size: 
30 slides 

Intended audience:
UBT co-leads, sponsors and consultants

Best used:
To find out what other teams are doing and adapt their successful practices. 

Download PPT

Related tools:

TOOLS

Poster: Service Is Our Passion

Format:
PDF (color and black and white)

Size:
8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Frontline employees, managers and physicians

Best used:
This poster with the KP Service Credo, showing the patient/member at the center being cared for by a team of KP workers, reminds us that when we provide superior service, we make lives better. Post on bulletin boards, in break rooms and other staff areas.

Related tools:

Flying the Talk

Deck: 
The power of partnership in the air

Story body part 1: 

The patient at the center of the Value Compass isn’t always a KP member, as two Colorado RNs proved on a flight home from the Mid-Atlantic States region last fall—and the experience they shared in the air also brought a fresh appreciation of their shared values and commitment to partnership.

Debbie Zuege, Colorado’s senior director of Nursing and Women’s Health, and Becky Sassaman, a nurse at the Arapahoe After-Hours clinic in Denver, work together as co-leads for the Nursing Partnership Council but had never teamed up clinically. That changed on their return flight from the Mid-Atlantic States, where they had talked about partnership with a group of union stewards.

Shortly after takeoff, Zuege was settling in and starting to read a magazine when something caught her eye.

“A flight attendant came down the aisle, holding an oxygen tank,” Zuege said. She alerted Sassaman, and they joined the flight attendant, who was tending to a woman lying down in the aisle. The woman was pale, sweating excessively and seemed confused. She’d been sick to her stomach. Two physicians on the flight joined in to help move her to the back of the plane.

The hastily formed team concluded the woman was dehydrated. Her pulse was weak. They elevated her feet and gave her liquids to drink; Sassaman placed an IV into her hand to administer fluids they found in the onboard medical kit, and Zuege administered oxygen. The woman responded well, with her pulse and color returning to normal. The doctors and nurses decided she’d be fine for the duration of the flight, and the attendant rearranged passengers so Sassaman could sit with her. The team kept the IV in place, suspending the fluids from a hanger hooked to the overhead bin, and gave her medicine for her nausea. Zuege and the two physicians checked in throughout the flight.

“The lady was so incredibly sweet and grateful,” says Sassaman, who helped her get clean, found her jacket and even lent her a pair of workout pants. “She kept saying ‘Thank you’ and ‘How can you do this?...I made a scene.’ I told her we are nurses, and it is what we do.”

 

TOOLS

All in a Day's Work: Everyday Magic

Format:
PDF (color or black and white)

Size:
7.25" x 7.25" (prints out on 8.5" x 11") 

Intended audience:
Anyone with a sense of humor

Best used:
Download and post this humorous look at providing superior service on bulletin boards and in your cubicle, and attach it to emails. Have fun!

 

 

Related tools:

Behind-the-Scenes Service

Story body part 1: 

In 2011, the Medical Records unit-based team in the Northwest received 1,222,361 pages of outside records that required indexing into patients’ electronic medical records—a staggering 725,000 more pages than it received in 2010.

Yet team members met and mastered the challenges facing them, whittling down an enormous backlog and reducing the turnaround time for processing from 62 days in December 2010 to three days by December 2011—benefiting both their internal customers and KP’s members and patients. And they’re sustaining that success.

The steady increase had been debilitating. Overtime hours went through the roof, with more than 2,450 hours logged in 2010. The 37 team members work 24 hours a day, seven days a week and have seven different work classifications. Staff members were worn out. Piles of paperwork were stacked high, waiting for processing. Morale was at an all-time low.

The case illustrates vividly that service is not just a bedside issue at Kaiser Permanente. For a variety of reasons, many KP members see outside providers—and when those providers submit paper or electronic records with the patient’s medical information to Kaiser Permanente, the records have to get indexed into KP HealthConnect. If there’s a delay, the patient’s regular physician may be missing important information the next time the member is seen at KP.

“When the clinician needs medical information on their patients in order to treat their current medical condition, we’re able to provide updated and accurate records,” says the team’s union co-lead, Kathleen Boland, a data quality clerk and SEIU Local 49 member. And, she notes, members aren’t having to repeat critical tests and procedures, saving them time and money.

Things started to change when, through unit-based team training, team members learned such skills as process mapping and how to understand data. They created SMART goals (specific, measurable, attainable, realistic/relevant, time-bound), started huddling and developed a greater understanding of roles and responsibilities.

The team receives more than 700 different types of documents, so variation was rampant. Team members developed cheat sheets to standardize how documents should be prepped for indexing and to get everyone to use the same process for each task. They also cross-trained and helped each other out when someone was on vacation or ill.

“In the beginning,” says Bruce Corkum, RN, a UBT resource team specialist, “they didn’t share the work. Then they started understanding how they could help each other work toward the same goal.”

Not only did the backlog disappear, but the need for overtime is nonexistent now, they’ve improved attendance and “morale has improved,” says Burgandy Muzzy, a health records clerk and member of SEIU Local 49. People are happy to be at work.

“People are talking about us in a positive way now,” says manager Debbie Lang, “instead of as ‘those people who lose everything.’ ”

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