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Labor Management Partnership:

Labor Management Partnership: Kaiser Permanente’s strategy for frontline engagement and performance July 2012. Our Labor Management Partnership. Largest and most comprehensive labor-management partnership in the country

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Labor Management Partnership:

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  1. Labor Management Partnership: Kaiser Permanente’s strategy for frontline engagement and performance July 2012

  2. Our Labor Management Partnership • Largest and most comprehensive labor-management partnership in the country • 29 local unions representing more than 95,000 KP workers (including nurses, technicians, clerical and service employees) • The partnership reflects our business strategy to: • Improve organizational performance • Deliver high quality care and service to our members • Involve the union and individual workers in decisions that affect the workplace • Make Kaiser Permanente the best place to get care and best place to work

  3. Core principles of partnership since 1997 “Health care services and the institutions that provide them are undergoing rapid change... Now is the time to enter into a new way of doing business…to unite around our common purposes and work together to most effectively deliver high quality health care and prevail in our new, highly competitive environment.” - National Partnership Agreement, 1997

  4. Unit-based team: A natural work group of frontline workers, physicians and managers who solve problems and enhance quality for tangible results. UBTs work together to: • Set goals • Review and evaluate performance • Identify and solve problems • Contribute to decisions on budget, staffing and scheduling What’s a unit-based team?

  5. KP Value Compass

  6. UBT Path to Performance Roadmap for team development

  7. High-performance criteria * Selected examples of Level 5 performance metrics

  8. Growth of high-performing teams 1,167 teams were rated high-performing as of June 2012 7

  9. Rapid Improvement Model: Plan, Do, Study, Act

  10. FEATURED TEAM: Ambulatory Surgery Recovery, Moanalua Medical Center, HonoluluCutting costs, clutter in the OR WHAT THEY ARE DOING: Team members created a more organized supply room by clearly labeling shelves and supplies, helping them keep better track of their inventory. They are also maintaining the inventory on a computer. RESULTS: The team saved nearly $10,000 per month by reducing duplicate and overstocked supplies for medical center’s operating room. Labor co-lead:Avis Yasumura, RN, Hawaii Nurses Association, OPEIU Local 50 Management co-lead:Janet Lundberg, RN, procedural sedation manager Read more about the teams work and other successful practices on the Labor Management website, www.LMPartnership.org.

  11. FEATURED TEAM: Labor and Delivery, Moanalua Medical Center, HonoluluNurses help newborns get closer to moms WHAT THEY DID RESULTS The percentage of newborn babies spending at least 60 minutes with their mothers in skin-to-skin contact right after birth: • The team created a baseline measure by tabulating instances of skin-to-skin contact for each patient in a spreadsheet, using KP HealthConnect data. • Members of the representative UBT did one-on-one education with fellow nurses and other staff members • The team communicated in different ways, including informal conversations, bulletin board posters and handouts. Read more about the teams work and other successful practices on the Labor Management website, www.LMPartnership.org.

  12. FEATURED TEAM: Inpatient Pediatrics, South Bay Medical CenterCute Kids Inspire Clean Hands WHAT THEY DO To boost low scores on hand-washing observation surveys, staff members: RESULTS Percent of staff members observed by peers to follow good hand-hygiene practices: • Tabulated peer observations of hand-hygiene practices • Hung posters outside patient rooms featuring photos of cute kids, reminding staff members and visitors to wash their hands or clean them with sanitizing gel. • Mounted sanitizer dispensers outside and inside patient rooms. • Began a practice of talking to patients while cleaning hands to raise their awareness of the issue.

  13. UBTs advance patient safety 2 North-South Medical-Surgical units, San Diego: Improving patient safety • WHAT THEY DID: • Patient-turning checklist: Key things that should be done when turning a patient, such as ensuring a patient’s bed rails have been lowered. • Regular safety observations, staff safety training and observations of teams turning patients; peer feedback on handling techniques. • Set goals and celebrate small goals RESULTS: 389 days without a patient-handling injury as of early 2011

  14. Leveraging Partnership to Grow KP Enhancing the New Member Experience to Boost Retention Colorado has rolled out its "Love at First Visit" training to all clinical staff. The training has helped boost first-visit satisfaction scores in the region. For example, the Hidden Lake Medical Office improved its scores by 20 percent from December 2010 to August 2011. UBTs elsewhere are developing effective ways to get new members more information – especially cost-sharing members who often need help understanding how their plan works. The Mid-Atlantic States recently recruited 3,200 new members through joint union-management efforts. Knowing the importance of the new member experience to member satisfaction and retention, the Falls Church UBT (which previously had lagged the region in service scores) developed bilingual informational kits and facility tours. This contributed to a 12-point increase in Falls Church service scores in 2011, exceeding the service area's goal.

  15. Building a learning culture • “Performance is increasingly determined by factors that can't be overseen: intelligent experimentation, ingenuity, interpersonal skills, resilience in the face of adversity.... People rely on their own and their colleagues’ judgment and expertise, rather than on management direction, to decide what to do.” Amy C. Edmondson, The Competitive Imperative of Learning Harvard Business School

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