- Phyllis Chartier from EKG Memorial, “Gifted Touch”- Christmas tree skirts, lighted baskets, Christmas towels, quilts, and decorative Christmas trees
- Rita Caputo from Primary Care, “Ree’s Creations”- Swarowski crystal and pearl handcrafted jewelry
- Anne Bouley from Rheumatology, “Bouley’s Baubles” – Handcrafted jewelry bags and jewelry
- Joe Laventure from Materials Management, “Bekki’s Stitches”- Cross stitch pictures
- Elaine Wrubel from Diabetes and Endocrinology, “GramEz GoodEz”- crochet afghans and baby items
- Missy Lucier from Division of Preventive & Behavioral Medicine, “Bella Colori Jewelry”- Handcrafted jewelry from metals, beads, crystals, etc.
- Erin Cofske from Endoscopy, “Erin Cofske Designs”- Hand sewn wallets, bags, coasters, and fleece blankets
- Catherine Faiola from Anatomical Pathology, “Shady Lady”- Beaded nightlight shades, sock snowmen, twirly scarfs
- Kathleen Murray form Surgery & ENT, “Angel Wings & Pretty Things”- Handmade crystal and beaded jewelry
- Barbara Laconto from Health Information Management, “Barbara Laconto Designs”- Primitive Snowmen, Santas, Christmas items
- Vince Pillari from Blood Bank/Transfusion, “Gifted”- Stained glass, wood carvings, and metal sculpture
- Jessica Stoneham from 8 West, “Quilt”- Handmade quilts and rice warmers
- Lisa Geneva from Employee Health, “Lisa’s Soap Kitchen”- Handmade soap, candles, wreaths, and story stones
- Tanya Cournoyer from Primary Care, “Podunk Mittens”- Handmade mittens from recycled sweaters
- Suzanne Ashton from Pre-surgical Evaluations, “Resuscitated”- Hand painted repurposed Scrubs and vintage jewelry
- Patty Amelin from Anesthesiology, “Patty’s Pottery”- Handmade pottery
- Thomas Callahan from Financial Reporting, “Creations in Glass”- Cheese platters, bottle clocks, fused glass jewelry, and stained glass
- Genevieve Rentas from Pediatric Clinic, “Nini’s Wreaths”- Seasonal wreath
- Michelle Imbody from Primary Care, “Nypsy’s Creations”- Etched glass items
- Heather Tessier from Plastic Surgery, “Green Fibers”- Crochet rugs , bath scrubbies, ear warmers, etc. from eco-friendly materials
Congratulations, Joann Shoup!
Deb Church, Bobbi-Jo Lewis, and Joann Shoup |
We Need YOUR Opinions and Ideas!
This is the first step towards a new contract. The survey turns the conversations SHARE members have everyday -- about how things are going and what should change -- into data that helps us to figure out our collective priorities for contract negotiations. We want to make sure we include all opinions and ideas -- from SHARE members from all departments and all shifts, all ages and all jobs. (Many thanks to the hundreds of you who already filled out the survey!)
Here's the link: www.surveymonkey.com/r/SHARE2016
Topics on the survey include:
- What parts of working at UMass Memorial are satisfying, and what parts are not?
- Staffing Levels, Breaks, Lunches and Vacations
- Getting the Work Done and Process Improvement
- Co-Workers and Working as a Team
- Supervisors and Managers
- Training and Career Development
- The SHARE Union
- Your Priorities: What would help most to improve how it feels to come to work?
Super Convenient Ways to Take the Survey -- Come to the SHARE table to pick up a paper copy of the survey, or fill it out on a laptop right there, or pick up a postcard with the link to remind yourself to do it at home:
Memorial: Wednesday, November 11th, 1:45 am - 1:15 pm in the hospital cafeteria
370 Main Street: Thursday, November 12th, Noon - 1:00 pm in the 5th floor conference room
University: Friday, November 13th, 11:45 am - 1:15 pm in the hospital cafeteria
Can you help spread the word to your co-workers?
Please encourage your co-workers to take the survey! If you would like some postcards with the link on them to hand out, just call the SHARE office and we will bring you some!
Having trouble with the survey?
If you are having any trouble getting into Survey Monkey to do the SHARE survey, try typing the link above into your browser. If that doesn't work, please let us know so we can figure out what's wrong.
Would you rather fill out a paper survey?
Follow this link to a .pdf that you can print. Then mail us or fax us your survey -- call us if you want a postage paid envelope.
All questions or ideas -- You can talk to your local SHARE Rep, your SHARE Organizer, or call the office at SHARE 508-929-4020. Leave a message at extension 10. Or you can send an email to share.comment@theshareunion.org.
5 Tidbit Friday: November 6, 3015
During lunchtime last Friday, UMass Memorial’s Central Billing Office opened its doors for the costumed children of employees to trick-or-treat among the cubicles . . . and receive candy from the jesters and bakers and witches and pirates who work there. What a way to transform the workday! What a fun family event! So many adorable minions! Nice work, CBO.
- The project was founded by Harvard University and MIT, and a number of colleges and universities have since joined in.
- New courses are continually being offered.
- The program does not adhere to a traditional academic calendar.
- At any given moment, a few million students are enrolled in the courses, and the website promotes a variety of ways of interacting with other students in your class, wherever in the world they may be.
- EdX offers certificates of successful completion, but does not offer course credit. Whether or not a college or university offers credit for an edX course is within the sole discretion of that school.
Five-Tidbit Frightday: October 30, 2015
WHAT IS a HEALTHY DIET?
Recognizing Respiratory Therapists
SHARE Respiratory Therapists on the Memorial Campus
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SHARE Respiratory Therapists on the University Campus
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Five-Tidbit Friday: October 23, 2015
- University Campus – October 27 (Tuesday)
- Worcester Business Center – October 28 (Wednesday)
- Memorial Campus – October 29 (Thursday)
- What does the plan cover?
- How much does the plan cost? (for SHARE members, the plan costs are roughly the same, with the exception of the PPO plan, which costs more.)
- Which doctors and hospitals are in the plan?
MEDICAL ULTRASOUND AWARENESS MONTH
See you here next Friday! Hope you have a great weekend.
2016 Contract Negotiations: Where We’ve Been, One Big Problem, and the Year Ahead
When UMass and then Memorial employees voted to form the SHARE union, the main goal was participation. People wanted a say in decisions that affect them at work.
With a merger, and with healthcare changing rapidly all around us since, there have been many decisions being made that affect SHARE members. As a new union and in the 18 years since those votes, we’ve checked off most of “the biggies” from our list:
SHARE members wanted to make raises predictable, with raises every year, and a salary system that was fair, transparent, and moved people up to grade max over time.
SHARE members wanted to hold onto the benefits they had, in spite of the merger, especially:
Health insurance, keeping the 85%/15% premium split the state workers had had.
A defined benefit pension.
SHARE members wanted to land safely in new jobs when there were layoffs, especially in the highly uncertain times of the early merger. And we wanted to feel that seniority was valued equally no matter which campus you came from.
SHARE members from Memorial and UMass wanted to have the same policies across campuses, without going to the lowest-common-denominators among those policies. And we wanted to continually improve on these policies.
We all know that there’s plenty more we can do to improve even further on those goals. Still, our achievements have been significant and hard-won. Congratulations to all of us for sticking together when our union has faced hard times and hard negotiations.
Changing How it Feels to Come to Work
While we have steadily, persistently ticked the goals off our list, there’s one important nut that we haven’t cracked: We really want to change how it feels to come to work every day.
We want to save lives and improve patient health to the best of our ability.
We want patients’ experience -- from making an appointment to paying the bill – to go smoothly and give the patients what they need.
We want to have fun at work
We want to be able brag to our neighbors that we work at UMass Memorial, to have the respect of our peers and leaders, and to leave work consistently with our heads held high.
SHARE wants to focus on that problem -- how to re-imagine and improve our entire work culture -- in our next contract negotiations.
Many forces combine to cause our work to be stressful and frustrating:
Constant change, and financial pressure that leads to “doing more with less”
Work systems that are complicated and wasteful rather than clear and efficient
An old culture of “command and control,” and a “shame and blame” approach to problems that make positive teamwork tough to establish
Changing how it feels to come to work is not a simple goal. We have lots to figure out, and we may need to try several approaches before we figure out what works.
We Need Your Ideas!
We hope that all SHARE members will take part in this conversation as we prepare to tackle this difficult set of problems. We are starting with a survey for all SHARE members to get your thoughts, questions, concerns, and ideas.
We will negotiate about raises and benefits too – so there will be a lot going on in this coming year. We will set up lunch-time SHARE information meetings across the hospital’s campuses in the new year. You can also contact your SHARE reps and organizers through the SHARE office any time.
And of course, we will post updates here on this blog. Stay tuned…
2016 SHARE Member Negotiations Survey
Report from ThedaCare
- Make SHARE members’ work easier,
- Increase SHARE members’ “say” at work, and
- Improve how it feels to come to work every day.
- Continuous Improvement: They say, “Improving the work is the work.”
- Respect for People in everything they do.
Their Friday morning "Team Report Out and Celebration" made a big impression on me. Every week, a few teams of front-line staff spend 3 or 4 full days to work on improving some process in their department. At the end of that week, in front of a couple of hundred people, the teams report on what they did.
Last Friday there were 3 teams reporting out:
- A PCA (ER Tech), a Respiratory Therapist, and an RN from the ED spent the week re-designing several patient rooms for higher acuity patients. By stocking more supplies in the room, staff now have to leave the room an average of twice per patient, instead of the average of 9 times they were going in and out to get supplies before the re-design. Clearly this is good for the staff and the patient. They improved respect for people, both staff and patients, further by setting up the room so that staff don’t have their back to the patient when looking at the computer, and by improving the room’s ergonomics to decrease staff injuries.
I really like that front-line staff do the improvement work because they know their work best, and that they have time away from their regular duties for it.
- RNs from the maternity units on two campuses worked together for the week to figure out why their number of CLABSIs (central line associated blood stream infections) were increasing. They figured out better processes (or “standard work” as they call it), and trained each other. They emphasized "respect for people" in respecting different levels of experience among the staff – with no blame – and giving people the tools and training they need to do their jobs.
I love it: fix a bad process, don't shame and blame an employee.
- The Root Cause Analysis (RCA) team re-designed their process to make it faster. These process improvement coaches (like the CITC coaches at UMass Memorial) are on-call for an adverse event. We heard the story of a patient having an assisted fall off an OR table. Right after it happened, a staff person was posted on either side of all OR tables to make sure it couldn’t happen again until they figured out what went wrong. The RCA team would arrive immediately to talk to people about what happened before everyone forgot. Then the RCA team leads a root cause analysis to change how the work is done to make sure that a fall like that can’t happen again.
They see a problem is an opportunity for improvement -- that's a positive outlook that I'd love to see more of at UMass Memorial.
Dr. Dickson leads trips to ThedaCare as an example of the direction he wants our hospitals to go. I agree – they have some very good ideas and it was impressive to see those ideas in action.
Looking Back: An Earlier Trip to ThedaCare
Five-Tidbit Friday: October 16, 2015
See you here next Friday! Don't forget to wash your hands. Hope you have a great weekend.
Five-Tidbit Friday: October 9, 2015
See you here next Friday! Hope you have a great weekend.
Do You Know Your Department's Severe Weather Policy?
Weather is coming |
Five-Tidbit Friday: October 2, 2015
- CANCER WALK Congratulations to participants of this year’s cancer walk! The roughly thirteen thousand participants this year have raised nearly $400,000 for cancer research and care.
- OTHER UNIONS, OTHER HOSPITALS The Kaiser Permanente Union Coalition has recently ratified a new contract agreement. The coalition represents over 100,000 healthcare employees, primarily in states along the west coast. This group of unions coordinates the largest Labor Management Partnership in the country. SHARE has been watching Kaiser Permanente closely, and in particular their “Unit-Based Teams” approach, which is designed to put employees directly in charge of important work-design decisions. Among other things, the new KP agreement includes:
- Increased funds for employee training programs and for members’ tuition reimbursement,
- Increased training and accountability for frontline managers, and
- New tools and support to increase the effectiveness of the Unit Based Teams
- INNOVATIONS in HEALTHCARE The Legal Services Corporation recently announced that Community Legal Aid in Worcester, Massachusetts will receive a 24-month $209,524 Pro Bono Innovation Fund grant to develop a partnership with UMass Memorial Medical Center. The model will address legal needs that can negatively impact the health of low-income and minority communities and interfere with healthcare providers’ ability to improve the health of these patients.
- FREE SPEECH at WORK In national news, an NLRB complaint against Quicken Loans could redefine the rules of free speech in the workplace, reports the Detroit Free Press. The case is likely to have implications for social media. The ruling is expected to uphold current standards, including that "employees have a ... right to discuss wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment with fellow employees, as well as with non-employees, such as union representatives." Meanwhile, the US Department of Labor has continued its emphasis on employee rights with a Worker Voice Summit, which will underscore the value of worker organizing and collective bargaining, as a new #starttheconvo initiative invites frontline voices from around the country into that conversation.
MOOSE! SHARE members are now using ICD-10 coding guidelines in our hospital. The new codes allow for far greater precision, including for those patients receiving care as a result of “Burn due to water-skis on fire, initial encounter (V91.07XA),” or even less-likely conditions. At the time of this publication, our research team has not yet uncovered a code for “Incident with urban moose in Worcester County,” although we hear that a moose has been recently seen on our local streets. Drive safe.
Raise Reminder (and a Correction)
ICD-10 Goes Live
Five-Tidbit Friday: September 25, 2015
- This week, UMMHC and UMMS have been screening The Connection, a film about the science of mindfulness. UMass Medical School’s Center for Mindfulness has long been at the forefront of this research. The CFM provides an eight week stress-reduction program, which several SHARE members have attended. SHARE-UMMS Treasurer Kathy Bateman says she loved the program, and would attend again. “I learned ways to relieve stress right at my desk. I’d recommend it to anyone,” she says.
- Employers are starting to catch up with the value of the research being done at UMMS. Internet-search giant Google (considered by some to be the best employer in the country) has even developed its own in-house emotional intelligence training program called “Search Inside Yourself” (Get it? It’s Google, after all.)
- Any list of Tidbits would be insufficient to tackle an issue as serious as mental health. That said, please know that there are many free and low-cost mental health tools available. We recently came across this useful (if somewhat glib) resource list. The list begins with a series of apps, most of which are designed to help build grit and brain muscles, and moves through to a valuable collection of hotlines and support groups. For more local services, please see this list of mental health providers in Worcester.
- Mindfulness and self-care are only part of the equation toward improving what we do, of course. Right now, the work confronting almost every SHARE member is unnecessarily complicated, difficult, and frustrating. We want to eliminate needless headaches. We know that frontline employees need to be the ones to design work-systems. Too often our work requires heroic effort to do a good job, and there are too many pitfalls along the way. Our union is working to enable SHARE members to develop structures that minimize the likelihood of error, and make it easier at the end of the day to see more good outcomes coming from our hard work. One way you can improve work processes in your own area is to submit an idea to your department’s Idea Board. If you have questions about how to do this, or concerns about the effectiveness of your area’s Idea Board system, please contact Will Erickson in the SHARE office.
- On a lighter note, you might, given its popularity, have already seen this related talk by researcher Shawn Achor. But in case you’ve missed it, here’s a link to “The Happy Secret to Better Work.” It’s funny and smart, and only a little over twelve minutes long.
Raise Time Is the Time to Evaluate Your Retirement Strategy
Free Film Screening: The Connection
- Learn more about the practice of mindfulness and the numerous resources available at our academic medical center.
- After viewing the 70- minute video, participate in an interactive discussion and learn about mindfulness programming and new resources to continue or adopt a mindfulness practice.
- We encourage you to take the time to learn about the benefits of mindfulness for yourself and our patients.
- Monday, September 21, 12:00 pm (Lazare Auditorium)
- Friday, September 25, 12:00 pm (Lazare Auditorium)
- Monday, September 21, 3:00 pm (Amphitheater)
- Tuesday, September 22, 3:00 pm (Amphitheater)
- Monday, September 21, 3pm (Amphitheater)
- Wednesday, September 23, 3pm (Amphitheater)
- Monday, September 21, 11:00am (Ann Nemitz Room)
- Monday, September 21, 12:30 pm (Ann Nemitz Room)
- Wednesday, September 30, 6:30 pm (Simonds-Hurd Complementary Care Center)