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Celebrate 25 years of the Labor Management Partnership by listening to the people who work in partnership. Mariela Garcia-Gooch, a manager in Northern California, knows building trust and mutual respect will make the Partnership stronger. 

Videos

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Celebrate 25 years of the Labor Management Partnership by listening to the people who work in partnership. Joshua Holt, RN, a member of OFNHP, explains how Partnership ensures the voices of frontline workers are incorporated into solving problems. 

Videos

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Celebrate 25 years of the Labor Management Partnership by listening to the people who work in partnership. Heddy Steinman believes the LMP is such an important part of Kaiser Permanente that it should be taught about at our medical school.

TOOLS

Format:
PDF

Size:
18 pages 

Intended audience:
Anyone who wants to advance fairness at work and when providing care 

Best used:
Use the tools in this kit to create a more equitable workplace and deliver inclusive and supportive care for everyone. 

Related tools:

Getting Personal to Improve Patient Care

Deck
Teams collect patient demographic information

Story body part 1

Jenna Li and Autum Tomlin serve in different specialties at opposite ends of the country. Yet each plays a central part in efforts to harness patient data to improve care and eliminate health disparities at Kaiser Permanente.

Li is a chemical dependency counselor with the Mid-Valley Addiction Medicine team in Salem, Oregon. Members of her unit-based team, represented by Alliance-affiliated unions, make standard practice of asking patients about their sexual orientation, gender identity and preferred pronouns.

Tomlin is an urgent care technician at Reston Medical Center in Virginia. She and her team – represented by Alliance- and Coalition-affiliated unions – collect information about patients’ race, ethnicity, and preferred language. She has seen, first-hand, the power of speaking to patients in words they can understand.

“Usually, you can see the patient is at ease and feels a sense of relief that they are able to communicate in their preferred language,” says Tomlin, the team’s labor co-lead and a member of OPEIU Local 2, part of the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions.

Like others across the organization, the Level 5 unit-based teams are seeking to address disparities in health and access to quality care that persist across a range of dimensions – including race, language, gender, and sexual orientation. By asking patients about their backgrounds in a safe, respectful, and compassionate way, the teams are changing how they deliver care and service to members – and relate to one another.

“The effort is minimal, and the effectiveness can be really high when we help a patient feel seen and understood,” says Li, labor co-lead for the Mid-Valley team and a member of OFNHP Local 5017, part of the Alliance of Health Care Unions.

Making members feel welcome

To better understand patients’ health risks and needs, the Mid-Valley team began asking members about their sexual orientation and gender information. They asked the questions during the intake assessment and entered patients’ responses into their electronic health records, making important background information available to all KP providers.

The practice is already changing how the Northwest team delivers care to LGBTQ+ patients.

For instance, Mid-Valley is referring more members to a weekly group therapy session for LGBTQ+ patients to discuss their unique challenges. Misunderstandings about sexual orientation or gender identity are among the obstacles such patients face in accessing effective care. They also are at elevated risk from health threats including alcohol and substance abuse.

Recently, the team hustled to track down a teen-ager in crisis who had fled their clinic’s waiting room. Knowing the teen identified as nonbinary, staff members convinced them to return after expressing sensitivity to their fears and addressing them with their preferred pronouns.

Gestures to support these patients are especially important because they come to treatment reeling from the “double whammy” of stigmatization for their addiction struggles and LGTBQ+ identity.

“We can do a lot to make a member feel welcome by using language they are open to hearing,” says Carri McCrary, Mid-Valley clinical services manager and the team’s management co-lead.

TOOLS

Format:
PDF

Size:
One page, 8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
UBT health and safety champions

Best used: 
Tips for promoting psychological safety so everyone on your team feels safe to speak up.

Related tools:
Icebreaker: Intersectionality
PDF
Sherry.D.Crosby Fri, 06/02/2023 - 14:36
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Region
Tool Type
Format

Format:
PDF

Size:
11" x 8.5"

Intended audience:
Frontline workers, managers, and physicians

Best used:
Use this icebreaker activity to connect with teammates on a deeper level and build empathy and understanding.

Content-238

We all have unique identities that make us who we are. Cultivate empahty and understanding by sharing our commonalities and differences. 

Tracy Silveria
Sherry Crosby
Developing

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:

LMP Skills Booster - Issue Resolution Process

At the Labor Management Partnership, when issues or conflicts arise, seek to resolve them quickly and efficiently and at the lowest level possible.

Refresh your understanding of the issue resolution process by viewing this short video and using the related tools to boost your knowledge and skills.

Check out all the Learning Boosters.