Team-Tested Practices
Path To Performance
LMP Focus Areas
Learning Portal
Contracts and Agreements
About LMP
Search Results
Optical Team Solves Swirling Mystery guy.x.ashley Tue, 11/28/2023 - 12:43
Migrated
not migrated
Region
Role
Deck
Techs overcome problem damaging new eyeglass lenses
Request Number
Content-276
Long Teaser

By tweaking procedures, a team of optical technicians in the Northwest overcame a problem that was causing damage to new eyeglass lenses it prepared for KP members.

Story body part 1

If one word inspires dread in the Optical Lab Surface department, it is “swirl.”

The Northwest team helps make eyeglasses for Kaiser Permanente members. Their work is sometimes complicated by swirls – circular scratches on the lenses that can occur during the production process.

In 2022, the team - based at Kaiser Permanente Sunnyside Medical Center outside Portland - grappled with a mysterious increase of swirls.

“Normally, we will get about one swirl per day that we can’t polish out,” says Rodney Edwards, department supervisor and the team’s management co-lead. “But suddenly we were seeing 12 or 13 per day. We knew we were dealing with something very strange.”

When extra polishing can't remove a swirl, the team must fashion a new set of lenses. This raises costs and slows production, delaying delivery of eyeglasses to KP members.

By conducting a painstaking review of its processes, the team uncovered the cause of the swirl surge and improved care and service.  

When everyone participates in performance improvement, the better the results and the stronger the work environment. Collaborating on performance improvement also advances a culture at KP in which continuous learning and improvement come naturally.

From technicians to sleuths

Finding the source of the swirls was not easy. The Level 4 team prepares about 700 eyeglass lenses each day.

“It’s tough for us to troubleshoot these things," says Dustin Rushing, an optical lab technician and OFNHP Local 5017 member, who is the team's labor co-lead. "We’re operating at such a high volume we can’t really stop the presses."

To identify the problem, the team performed multiple tests of change.

Team members analyzed vats of liquid lens polish. They improvised new polish filtration devices. They scrutinized surfacing procedures and the calibrations of each piece of machinery. The tests and tweaks occurred while the team tried to keep up with high demand for eyeglasses.

Weeks of testing uncovered the problem: wear and tear on machinery was leaving metal shavings in liquid used to polish new lenses. The solution? Modifying worker procedures and intensifying maintenance and replacement of machine parts.

As a result, the team saw a 94% reduction in swirls during the first 4 months of 2023. That success continues. The team reduced monthly costs to replace damaged lenses, from $525 to $31, for a projected annual savings of $6,000.

While the cost savings may seem small, it illustrates the impact of unit-based teams. Enterprisewide, more than 3,600 teams contribute to KP’s national leadership in measures of affordability, quality, service, and care.

The project earned the optical lab team a UBT Excellence Award from regional leaders.

“The biggest reason for this project’s success was the openness and communication between us all,” Edwards says. “That really opened up some doors for us as a team.”

Communicator (reporters)
Guy Ashley
Editor (if known, reporters)
Sherry Crosby
Only use image in listings (editors)
not listing only
Status
Developing
Take Action: Get to Know Your Patients

By asking patients about their backgrounds in a respectful, and compassionate way, teams across Kaiser Permanente are changing how they deliver care and service to members.

Share these resources with your team to improve health equity for everyone:

  • Icebreaker: Intersectionality. Use this activity to connect with your teammates and build empathy and understanding critical for workplace equity.
  • Hank: Equity for All. Find inspiration in this Hank magazine issue featuring frontline teams who are advancing equity for patients and workers.
  • Speaking the Same Language. See how the Urgent Care team from Reston, Virginia, used a simple reminder card to collect patient demographic information.
  • Personalizing Care for Patients. Learn how the Mid-Valley Addiction Medicine team is seeking to better understand the health needs of LGBTQ+ patients.

TOOLS

Format:
PPT

Size:
19 slides

Intended audience:
Unit-based team members 

Best used:
Download and share this slide deck, packed with inspirational stories, tips and tools for unit-based teams to make care more affordable for our members, patients and the communities we serve.

Use the buttons at right to download a special version of the slide deck for use by KP and Alliance audiences. Complements the How-To Guide: Alliance PSP in a Box.

Related tools: