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Wish you could go back to school? Or get some professional advice about advancing your career? Watch this short video to see how kpcareerplanning.org can help.

Produced by Alessandra Luckey

 

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Want to move up in your career? Watch this short video to see resources that can help.

Also visit kpcareerplanning.org or the SEIU UHW-West & Joint Employer Education Fund and the Ben Hudnall Memorial Trust websites to see what's available in your region.

Produced by Alessandra Luckey

 

Videos

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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

 

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A receptionist makes a mid-life career move, with the help of union educational benefits.

Find ways to grow your career at kpcareerplanning.org or the education trusts serving members of the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions: SEIU UHW-West & Joint Employer Education Fund and Ben Hudnall Memorial Trust.

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  • 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?

 

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  • Partnering with Pharmacy Analytics to identify and remove outdated drugs from the shelf
  • Engaging team members to “own” a section of the pharmacy and monitor expired or slow-moving medications

What can your team do to better manage your inventory? What else could you do to save money and keep KP affordable for members and patients?

 

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By working with other departments to get the data they need, members of this pharmacy team in the Northwest reduced their expired-medication costs by 90 percent. What can your team learn from its success to help keep Kaiser Permanente affordable?

Produced by Jennifer Gladwell.
Edited by Jennifer Gladwell and Kellie Applen.
Videography and Photography by Beverly White and Laura Morton.

 

 

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This medical assistant used to fear computers. Now that she’s taken a digital fluency course, she is empowered to provide better care for her patients—and her family. Watch the video and then read more.

Caring for the Caregivers

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Initiative seeks to ease the burden that falls to patients’ family members or friends

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Beep! Beep! Beep! The electronic sound of Cary Brown’s alarm clock wakes him at 5 a.m.

The Kaiser Permanente member rises to shower and make breakfast, careful not to disturb his sleeping wife, Elissa, who is recovering at home after surgery on a broken leg at the Woodland Hills Medical Center in Southern California.

On top of completing household chores, the retired Hollywood TV director spends his day making sure Elissa is comfortable and pain-free.

The experience has taken a toll on him.

“The hours of staying awake and the repetitive nature of it—and not having any life at all outside of home—is very difficult,” says Brown, who worked on the hit TV series Doogie Howser, M.D.

Now he’s part of an ambitious effort by the Southern California region to enhance support for caregivers, who play a vital role helping to heal and comfort patients outside the hospital. By reducing caregivers’ social isolation, integrating them into the hospital care team and addressing their health needs, regional leaders hope to improve patient safety and quality in the home.

‘Human-centered design’

Under the initiative, frontline workers, physicians and managers are partnering with KP members and their families to design the ideal in-home care experience for patients and caregivers. Participants are using a creative approach to problem solving known as human-centered design, which starts with the people you’re designing for and ends with solutions that are customized to their needs.

“It’s a way to engage the folks who are most affected from day one,” said Dr. Nirav Shah, senior vice president and chief operating officer for Clinical Operations in Southern California. “No program that I could ever design will be as good as one that had the people who are most affected design it with us. It’s about empathy and understanding.”

Human-centered design is also an ideal tool for unit-based teams to use on performance improvement projects. It delivers on the fundamental concept of the Value Compass—to put the member and patient at the center of decision making—and both frontline workers and Labor Management Partnership leaders, from management and the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions, have been supporting the caregiver project.

Reducing the overwhelm factor

At a meeting in Pasadena, the participants—patients and caregivers, KP employees and physicians—gathered in small groups to share personal tales and draw storyboards to help identify barriers, come up with potential solutions and provide insights to regional Home Health leaders.

Shawna Wallace, a senior physical therapist for Home Health and member of UNAC/UHCP, said the experience was eye-opening.

“I’ve gone into homes where caregivers really care about their loved ones, and they are extremely overwhelmed,” she said. “This is a great opportunity for us to see where we can make better programs for our caregivers and members in these scenarios.”

Brown is hopeful that the approach will give caregivers—and their loved ones—the emotional and physical support they need to thrive.

“If you take care of the family as a unit,” Brown says, “you make it possible for each individual in the family to be better.”

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  • Reviewing the department budget and using performance improvement tools to determine the causes of overtime
  • Revamping the department workflow and coordinating with each other to schedule a relief RN to cover those on break
  • Educating and reminding staff about the importance of clocking in and out on time
  • Encouraging nurses to notify their managers two hours before the end of shift if they expect to work overtime.

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