Value Compass Concepts

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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 teams-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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TOOLS

Poster: Ask Your Sponsor for Help

Format:
PDF (color and black and white)

Size:
8.5” x 11”

Intended audience:
Unit-based teams and UBT sponsors

Best used:
This poster features a checklist UBT co-leads and sponsors may use to help teams develop. Post on bulletin boards, in break rooms and other staff areas.

Related tools:

TOOLS

Poster: Supporting Teams, Changing KP

Format:
PDF (color and black and white)

Size:
8.5” x 11”

Intended audience:
Unit-based teams and UBT sponsors

Best used:
This poster features UBT sponsorship advice from Priya Smith, a sponsor in Kaiser Permanente's Northern California region. Post on bulletin boards, in break rooms and other staff areas.

Related tools:

TOOLS

Poster: Sponsored Teams Give Great Care

Format:
PDF (color and black and white)

Size:
8.5” x 11”

Intended audience:
Unit-based teams and UBT sponsors

Best used:
This poster features UBT sponsorship advice from Gena Bailey, a sponsor in Kaiser Permanente's Northwest region. Posted on bulletin boards, in break rooms and other staff areas.

Related tools:

TOOLS

10 Essential Tips for Sponsors

Format: 
PDF

Size: 
8.5" x 11"

Intended audience: 
Frontline employees, managers and physicians, and UBT consultants

Best used:
Use this tipsheet, which includes 10 ideas from sponsors in the field, as a starting point for team discussions and brainstorming. 

 

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TOOLS

PPT: Optical Team Makes Fewer Fixes to Glasses

Format:
PPT

Size:
1 Slide

Intended audience:
LMP employees, UBT consultants, improvement advisers

Best used:
This PowerPoint slide features an optical team that lowered glasses redo rates. 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

10 Essential Tips for Improving Member Experience

Format: 
PDF

Size: 
8.5" x 11"

Intended audience: 
Frontline employees, managers and physicians, and UBT consultants.

Best used:
Help guide your team to making new members' experiences great ones; post on bulletin boards and discuss in team meetings as a starting point for team discussions and brainstorming.

 

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Want a Healthy Workforce? Try an Instant Recess

Deck: 
Exercise breaks reduce injuries, stress and sick days

Story body part 1: 

At 10:30 a.m. sharp, South Bay Medical Center appointment clerk Carolina Meza removes her telephone headset. She fires up what looks like the world’s tiniest iPod, attached to a portable speaker that’s not much bigger. She gathers four of her co-workers in a patch of open space near the coffee room. They do some neck rolls, march in place and then do a move Meza calls “the incredible hulk”—a shoulder stretch that brings welcome relief to those facing a computer screen for most of their day.

“When we go back to our stations, we feel refreshed,” says Meza, a member of SEIU UHW.

It’s called Instant Recess, and it’s the brainchild of Toni Yancey, MD, co-director of the UCLA Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Equity. It involves a quick, daily group exercise and is aimed at incorporating physical activity into a normal workday. It comes at a time when research is showing that workplace fitness initiatives targeting individual behavior (such as counseling and gym memberships) aren’t working. An organization’s whole infrastructure needs to be addressed, says Yancey. 

That’s what makes Instant Recess so appealing. It demonstrates KP’s commitment to Total Health—including for a healthy and safe work life for KP employees as well as the members and communities we serve. It’s consistent with KP’s Healthy Workforce push, and also seems to help reduce workplace injuries and improve attendance.

At the South Bay call center, for instance, annualized sick days fell almost one full day per full-time equivalent between 2010 and 2011, when the department began Instant Recess. The number of ergonomic injuries went from three to zero.  

Overcoming obstacles

While they are seeing results now, team members were wary when senior leaders at their medical center approached them about trying Instant Recess. “I was very skeptical,” says Darlene Zelaya, operations manager. “We can’t prevent the calls from coming in.” In fact, hold times for patients did go up when the team first implemented Instant Recess.

The unit-based team worked together with project manager Tiffany Creighton to adapt Instant Recess to their members’ needs. For instance, before calling a recess, team members check the reader board to assess how many agents can be off the phones at one time. They hold many small exercise bursts throughout the day instead of one or two longer ones. And they keep the music turned down low to avoid disturbing agents on the phone with patients.

Making it work locally

In the South Bay lab, Instant Recess looks and sounds totally different—but is getting similarly promising results. That department blasts a boom box for 10 full minutes during the Instant Recesses it incorporates into its huddles at shift change twice a day. Clinical lab scientist Nora Soriano steps away from her microscope to join in. She’s lost 43 pounds recently, and she partly credits Instant Recess. Soriano, a member of UFCW Local 770, says the initiative inspired her to exercise more at home. “My son got me an Xbox,” she says. “I don’t stop for half an hour, sometimes 45 minutes.”

Not all of Soriano’s co-workers were so enthused when they first heard about Instant Recess. “I was kind of negative,” admits Julia Ann Scrivens, a lab assistant and UHW member. “I thought, ‘I am so busy. You want me to do what?’ ” Area lab manager Dennis Edora says, “It was a shock. No one knew what to expect.” But the lab’s staff had just been through some stressful changes—including getting new equipment and moving to a new floor—and team members were hungry for something that would help rebuild morale.

“We collaborated with all the different job codes,” says Edora. “Everyone added their different flavor,” she says, noting that employees rotate as a leader, some choosing Hawaiian dance moves, others yoga-inspired stretches. “Instant Recess really got us together. It wasn’t just exercise.” Moreover, it was helping reduce injuries: the lab reported only one repetitive motion injury in 2011, after beginning Instant Recess in April. There were five such injuries in 2010.   

And Scrivens is sold as well. “It is fun,” she says. “It makes me happy.”

TOOLS

PPT: Team's Success Brings in $10 Million

Format:
PPT

Size:
1 slide

Intended audience:
LMP Staff, UBT consultants, improvement advisers

Best used:
This PowerPoint slide highlights a business services team that discovered a glitch, corrected it, and brought in $10 million in Medicare reimbursements. 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

PPT: Hawaii Team Cuts Wait Times in Half

Format:
PPT

Size:
1 slide

Intended audience:
LMP staff, UBT consultants and improvement advisers

Best used:
This PowerPoint slide features a team at the Honolulu Clinic that reduced patient wait times by making one nurse responsible for giving injections each day. 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:

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