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

Health and Safety Champions — September 2019 Focus

Format:
PDF

Size:
One page, 8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
UBT health and safety champions

Best used:
Make it easier to speak up and be heard by creating a safe space to ask questions and discuss team challenges. 

Related tools:

Visit to Nursing Unit Yields Workflow Solution

  • Taking “voice of the customer” training, which advocates direct input from clients to improve a process or service
  • Shadowing nurses to better understand their perspective and identify the root causes of complaints about late or missing medication
  • Starting the morning shift 30 minutes earlier to ensure timely delivery of medications

What can your team do to listen to the voice of your customers? Especially if those customers are fellow employees in a different department? 

TOOLS

Health and Safety Champions — July 2019 Focus

Format:
PDF

Size:
One page, 8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
UBT health and safety champions

Best used:
Help your team make positive choices that can prevent diabetes. 

Related tools:

Videos

Speaking Up for New Moms

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(2:16)

This labor and delivery team cultivates a #FreeToSpeak culture, which has helped members provide consistently excellent care and service to new moms. 

TOOLS

Health and Safety Champions — May 2019 Focus

Format:
PDF

Size:
One page, 8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
UBT health and safety champions

Best used:
Encourage your teammates to stay up to date on their health screenings.

Related tools:

How Unit-Based Teams Make Kaiser Permanente a Better Place to Work

Deck: 
Positive results for KP members, patients and workers

Story body part 1: 

Do teams get better results when frontline workers are engaged, free to speak and can influence decisions? Yes, say the people who know best — Kaiser Permanente workers and managers themselves.

Recent People Pulse surveys confirm that unit-based teams get positive results for health plan members and patients, the organization and workers themselves.

For instance, the 2017 People Pulse survey of more than 155,000 KP employees showed that when union-represented employees are highly involved in UBT activities, they get 29 percent higher scores on measures of their willingness to speak up — a key driver of patient and workplace safety and satisfaction. They also get 33 percent higher scores on questions regarding workplace health and wellness.

Improved safety and satisfaction

Further analysis, included in the 2016 People Pulse survey, showed that teams with high employee involvement have:

  • 18 percent fewer workplace injuries
  • 13 percent fewer lost work days
  • 4 percent higher patient satisfaction

“Our findings show that employees who are highly involved in their unit-based teams feel more able to speak up and more encouraged to take care of their health,” says Nicole VanderHorst, principal research consultant with KP Engagement & Inclusion Analytics. “That makes them more likely to have better performance outcomes.” 

A better way to work

Workers’ greater propensity to speak up and look after their health when they’re involved in team activities covers several questions (see chart below). For example, workers who are highly involved in their UBTs are far more likely to say:

  • The Labor Management Partnership has helped improve organizational performance and working conditions.
  • They can influence decisions affecting their work.
  • They’re comfortable voicing differing opinions.
  • Management uses their ideas to improve care.
  • They’re encouraged, and encourage others, to take care of their health.
Unit-Based Team Involvement

Click to enlarge.

Roots of workforce engagement

All these factors contribute to a better employee experience as well as performance. And UBTs reflect KP’s unique history with the labor movement.

“Henry Kaiser was perhaps the 20th century’s most worker-friendly industrialist. He supported organized labor and knew that people step up when allowed to exert their job experience, as they do with UBTs,” says KP archivist and historian Lincoln Cushing.  “He trusted employees to make decisions that benefitted themselves and their organizations.”

If you belong to a unit-based team — and most union-represented employees do — talk with a team co-lead about ways to get more involved.

TOOLS

Stoplight Report: Your Voice Matters

Format:
PDF

Size:

  • One page, 8.5"x11"
  • Large-size format, 24"x36"

Intended audience:
Frontline managers and unit-based team co-leads

Best used:
Use this visual aid to show team members the status of issues raised in rounding conversations; available in standard size and as a 24"x36" poster for large-format printers.

Related tools:

Pages

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