Value Compass Concepts

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:

Tips for Flu Prevention

Deck: 
How to protect yourself and our members from this virus

Story body part 1: 

When flu season arrives, it’s important to stay well. As a matter of patient and workplace safety and professional pride, we can take steps to protect ourselves, our families, co-workers, and members and patients from flu and other infectious diseases. Here’s how. 

Vaccinate yourself and others

  • If you don’t get the flu, you won’t pass it on. The vaccine reduces the chance you will get the flu. Encourage others to get vaccinated, too.

Keep flu out of the air

  • Limit the time patients with suspected flu spend in open waiting rooms; separate them from others.
  • Offer surgical masks to people who are coughing or sneezing and encourage them to cover their coughs. Supply tissues, trash cans and hand sanitizer in waiting areas.
  • Place patients with flu in a private room.
  • Avoid unnecessary transport of infectious patients — and have them wear surgical masks outside their rooms.

Keep flu off of yourself. Follow standard and droplet precautions

  • Wear eye protection, gown and gloves.
  • Wear respiratory protection when in the room with the patient and until the air has cleared after the patient has left the room (about one hour), or if you are doing procedures that may aerosolize infectious particles.
  • Wash your hands often. Use hand sanitizer or wash with soap and water before and after all patient care.
  • Avoid touching your face, clothing or mask with your hands.

Keep the environment clean

  • Focus cleaning on high-contact surfaces: door knobs, elevator buttons, reception desks, exam tables, pharmacy furniture. 

Tips for Improving Copay Collection

Deck: 
Putting employees, patients at ease while keeping affordability in mind

Story body part 1: 

Keeping the affordability point on the Value Compass in mind, unit-based teams are taking a hard look at the obstacles to collecting copayments and conducting small tests of change around proposed improvements. New practices like these are generating hundreds of thousands of dollars in new revenue.

  1. Educate employees about the importance of copay collection.
  2. Train employees in how to ask for payment. Use role playing to help them become more comfortable with asking for payments, and create and distribute talking points or scripts.
  3. Provide visual reminders for members to check in at the front desk, so a receptionist can determine if a copayment is due.
  4. Post a sign with a telephone number directing patients with questions about co-payments and financial concerns to a financial counselor.
  5. Call patients a week in advance of a scheduled procedure to advise them a copay will be due and, if possible, to collect it before they are admitted.
  6. Add the copayment amount to patient’s outstanding balance and ask for the total amount. If balance is $100 or more, ask for payment on the account.
  7. Refer patients who can’t afford to pay to facility-based financial counselors.
  8. Station a full-time financial counselor in the Emergency Department.
  9. Make sure financial aid applications are processed promptly by having co-workers share the load. Report workload status at weekly huddles.
  10. Create a uniform note-taking system for financial forms and assign a counselor to every patient referred to financial services.

 

Tips for Improving Attendance

Deck: 
Being here for our patients and members

Story body part 1: 

Unit-based teams encourage employees to make wise use of the National Agreement's sick-leave provisions, which help ensure that individuals have income in the event of a long-term illness or disability. Absences can also create hardship on other employees and affect member service and care. Here are some tips for improving attendance in your department: 

  1. Survey your unit or department to determine if there’s confusion about the use of sick time. If needed, find ways to educate staff on sick leave, tardiness and clocking in and out.
  2. Create an “attendance star” board to recognize staff members with great attendance.
  3. Encourage colleagues to schedule routine appointments during off-hours or in conjunction with lunch or breaks when possible.
  4. Track call-outs and use anonymous surveys to test for reasons why they are occurring.
  5. Use cause-and-effect tools such as fishbone diagrams to address unforeseen circumstances, morale, physical environment, workload or personal reasons.
  6. Engage staff with frequent conversations and be alert for — and respond to — indications of unhappiness or tension.
  7. Recruit an attendance champion to be on the lookout for opportunities to coach others on the importance of banking sick leave.
  8. Help employees track sick-leave usage by printing out and distributing the attendance calendar.
  9. Use the attendance scorecard to learn about the six essentials of good attendance and to see how your team rates. Then  develop small tests of change to address the weak spots identified by the scorecard.

eStore

back to eStore
Hank cover

Hank Q4-2017

Celebrate the 20th anniversary of the Labor Management Partnership. We are taking the high road, and there's no turning back!

Plus: Tips and tools for both rookie and veteran leaders of unit-based teams, as well as puzzles and games to mark our milestone. 

You can also visit the Q4-2017 Hank web page in the Gallery section to read the issue online or download a PDF of it. 

 

 

Minimum order: 25

12 Tips for Building Your Team

Deck: 
Take one action for every month of the year

Story body part 1: 

Want to take your team to the next level? Make good things happen for yourself, your co-workers and your members and patients? Collaboration is one of the four critical skills needed to meet future challenges with ease. Use these 12 team-building tips to make every month count in 2018.

1. Par-tay

Celebrate your team’s successes and acknowledge — even celebrate — failures. Failures are great opportunities for learning if you focus on where the process (not the person) needs improvement. After each test of change, recognize and reward contributing team members at huddles and meetings. Use small wins to keep the momentum going.

2. In and out

Help employees track their sick days and time off by printing out and distributing our colorful, always popular attendance calendar.

3. Follow the money

Learn your department’s budget as a team and get everyone’s ideas on how to reduce costs. Sign up for a business literacy training. 

4. Track it in tracker

Document your team’s work regularly, accurately and concisely in UBT Tracker. It will let others see and learn from your team’s accomplishments.

5. Stop the line

Ask for help or call a stop to the work when you see an imminent danger or need help to safely complete a task. Then look for system improvements and root causes of problems — ask not just what happened, but why.

6. Grow leaders

Rotate responsibilities for leading meetings and managing improvement projects among all team members. This will build your team’s skills and strengths.

7. Two words

Huddle daily. It works. Watch the video “Huddle Power” and use the tools there to get you started huddling with your team.

8. Clean up your act

Become supply savvy. Make a full assessment of supplies — track inventory, tidy up storage areas and streamline ordering. Simple changes can save thousands of dollars. Download our 6S tool to make this work a snap. 

9. Take a (waste) walk on the wild side

Perform a waste walk. Impartially observe a work area or work process to identify waste or inefficiency. Get walking with our online Waste Walk toolkit

10. Save a tree

Go paperless. Don’t print out agendas and documents. Send them out via email or use a projector instead.

11. Get online

Help patients sign up on kp.org. Remind them they can securely view their medical records and most lab results, email their doctors, schedule appointments and refill prescriptions online. Bonus tip: Encourage tech-savvy members to download the kp.org app so they can access these features on their phones. Check out how one team got 90 percent of its patients signed up.

12. Spread and borrow

Did something work for your team? Spread the word to others. Need inspiration for your next improvement project? Look for other teams that have succeeded. Work with your UBT consultant or union partnership representative to spread your successes. Visit our Team-Tested Practices section to get ideas you can try with your team!

Videos

Giving Team Members a Voice

Loading the player...

(2:54)

A Food and Nutrition team creates an environment where employees feel free to voice their opinions and ideas—and can expect action to be taken on their input.

Produced by Sherry Crosby
Videography by Paul Erskine
Edited by Sherry Crosby and Kellie Applen

 

Free to Speak Communications Training

Story body part 1: 

Everyone has a voice at Kaiser Permanente — and KP needs to hear yours. This empowering training helps teams understand why every voice matters and how to be sure all are heard. 

Training description

Creating a space where workers feel safe speaking up leads to better patient care and a better workplace. This fast-paced, interactive workshop helps frontline workers and managers learn what a speaking-up culture looks like, why it matters and how to manage difficult conversations through role play and group exercises.  

Path to Performance

Levels 1—5

Duration

Usually 90 minutes, but this training can be customized to suit your team's needs.

Who should attend

This in-person training is for unit-based teams, LMP councils, units/departments and other groups.

 

 

Embracing Change Helps Team Save Thousands of Dollars

  • Reviewing the Emergency Department’s patient intake procedure and documenting the number of forms used
  • Brainstorming ways to reduce multiple forms and frequency of contact between clerks and patients
  • Educating clerks and staff on the new technology, including the use of electronic signature pads

What can your team do to leverage technology to save money and improve the patient experience? What else could you do to help keep KP affordable for our member and patients?

 

Pages

Subscribe to RSS - Value Compass Concepts