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All Hands on Deck

Deck
Labor pools fill staffing gaps

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COVID-19 is testing partnership as never before.

Management and labor have had to work together quickly to retool the delivery system to support rapidly changing needs. Employees’ and physicians’ skills and talents are needed in new ways and in new places — so leaders from Kaiser Permanente and unions created labor pools to get KP employees to where they were needed.  

It’s one of dozens of innovations made to provide top-quality care at a time when every day is bringing new challenges. The swift work was possible in part because of the foundation provided by the relationships and values of the Labor Management Partnership.

In Southern California's Riverside service area, “It’s all-hands on deck,” says Jiji Abraham, area chief financial officer. “Even physicians are in the labor pool.”

 

Videos

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Four years ago, several departments at the Rancho Cucamonga Medical Offices formally adopted a model of team-based care. The transition took effort and time, but today physicians and union workers at the facility say they wouldn't want to work any other way. See how team-based care made the medical offices a better place to work and receive care.

 

 

Physical Therapists Use Whiteboard to Help Rehab Communication

  • Collaborating on “hand-off” messages between Physical Therapy and nursing staff
  • Writing specific messages about daily therapy sessions on a board in the patient’s room
  • Standardizing information placed on the boards

What can your team do to encourage better communication between team members?

 

 

HANK Spring 2013

Labor History: Physician, Kaiser Permanente President, Ironworker

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Do corporate leaders understand the lives of working people? Some do. In the long history of Kaiser Permanente, several executives—including Henry J. Kaiser himself—worked their way up from poverty. Clifford Keene, MD, was another. In a 1985 interview, he described his roots:

“I came from a very humble family. My father was a factory foreman at best....During the summer I always worked. I sold papers or worked in factories doing minor tasks. Then, when I was fourteen I went to work in the steel industry as a steel construction punk, an apprentice first....I would find myself doing construction all over western New York State. I became a connecter; that is, a person who gets up on the steel and puts it together. I became accustomed to being up in the air and being up high, although I was always frightened of being up in the air. I don't think anyone is not frightened when you're way up in the air and the steel moves. It's a situation that commands your respect and gets your attention, I can tell you. I earned quite good money and continued to do that until I was a sophomore in medical school.”

The experience stayed with him throughout his life. He reflected on it when commenting on a successful infant bowel surgery while serving as a cancer specialist at the University of Michigan State Hospital at the end of the 1930s:

“When I was in the army I further developed my interest in bowel surgery, and reconstruction of all kinds, and also in plastic procedures, orthopedic procedures, all of which were an extension of my interest in doing things with my hands. I [had been] a steel worker* and it was satisfying to correct things with my hands.”