Diversity, Inclusion, Cultural Competence A Journey... Not a Destination Presented to the Comprehensive Countywide Diversity Partners Initiative Fond du.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
2012 EXAMINER TRAINING Examples of NERD Comment Formatting
Advertisements

Slides have references to related pages in the Guide
Developing Organizational Commitment to Cultural Competence
Reaching New Heights Achieving Cultural Proficiency:
Using Baldrige to Create Organizational Alignment & Integration
Principles & Framework
People In Aid Conference
CUPA-HR Strong – together!
Engaging Patients and Other Stakeholders in Clinical Research
Cultural Competency and Diversity Training. Child & Family Services is committed to: Recruiting a diverse staff that reflects the communities we serve;
Cultural Competency Overview WSU Project CARE Web-Based Instruction Wayne State University in collaboration with the Detroit-Wayne County Community Mental.
April 6, 2011 DRAFT Educator Evaluation Project. Teacher Education and Licensure DRAFT The ultimate goal of all educator evaluation should be… TO IMPROVE.
CULTURAL COMPETENCY Technical Assistance Pre-Application Workshop.
SSM Health Care Category 5: Staff Focus. Our Workforce …
1 Actively Engaging Physicians in the Planetree Philosophy Robert Devermann, M.D. Aurora System Planetree Physician Champion Cindy Pfaff, Director, Employee.
Forming And Sustaining Successful Partnerships Presenter: John M. Mutsambi, Community Liaison/Educator with University of Zimbabwe and University of California.
Part Two: Organizational Domains and Considerations Defining and Applying Cultural Competence for Kansas SPF-SIG Prevention Programs and Services.
Winning in the Marketplace with Diverse Talent
CULTURAL COMPETENCY.
[Hospital Name | Presenter name and title | Date of presentation]
© American Bar Association Effective Strategic Planning Henry F. White, Jr. Executive Director & Chief Operating Officer American Bar Association 10 th.
Diversity and Inclusion at NASA: A Strategic Integrated Approach
Spiritual Care and Cultural Competencies Session 1 Joint Commission and Cultural Competencies: A Roadmap Spiritual Care Champions Catholic Health.
Customer Focus Module Preview
 1 Professional Development Competency—Teamwork and Inclusion.
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES. National Standards for Culturally and Linguistically Appropriate Services in Health Care u Overview of OMH.
Best Practices in Multicultural Advocacy and Treatment Eliminating Disparities: Multicultural Strategic Summit NAMI.
Darci L. Graves MPP, MA, MA Senior Health Education and Policy Specialist Health Determinants & Disparities Practice at SRA international, Inc. Bringing.
Parent Leadership Lisa Brown and Lisa Conlan Family Resource Specialists Technical Assistance Partnership.
Health Systems – Access to Care and Cultural Competency Tonetta Y. Scott, DrPH, MPH Florida Department of Health Office of Minority Health.
Success Principles in Integrated Delivery System.
Achieving Campus Diversity: The University of Central Florida Model
Building Capacity for Better Care Behavioural Support Systems Across Canada Dr. J Kenneth LeClair Sarah Clark.
360 O CARE: REDUCING HEALTH DISPARITIES THROUGH ORGANIZATIONAL CULTURAL COMPETENCE 2012 USPHS Scientific and Training Symposium Wednesday, June 20 th,
EMU Strategic Planning Strategic Planning Material Mission/Vision/Values Goals and Objectives January 10, 2014.
Bridging the Cultural Divide in Health & Mental Health Care Settings: The Essential Role of Cultural Brokering Programs Tawara D. Goode National Center.
Module 3. Session DCST Clinical governance
How to Recruit & Hire a Diverse Workforce Vallerie Maurice, Director Multicultural Diversity & Assistant to the Chancellor LSU AgCenter.
Presented by Linda Martin
Guide to Membership Recruitment, Retention, Diversity and Inclusion.
A Nationally Endorsed Framework for Measuring and Reporting Culturally Competent Care Nicole W. McElveen, MPH Senior Project Manager,
Crosswalk of Public Health Accreditation and the Public Health Code of Ethics Highlighted items relate to the Water Supply case studied discussed in the.
Managing Advanced Illness to Advance Care Executive Briefing - AHA Annual Meeting Tuesday, April 30, :45am – 12:15pm © 2012 American Hospital Association.
Richa Dubey Director, Human Resources Praxair India Pvt Ltd.
© 2011 Partners Harvard Medical International Strategic Plan for Teaching, Learning and Assessment Program Teaching, Learning, and Assessment Center Strategic.
SRM 1/5/08 In Pursuit of Excellence Implementing Across AHA and Beyond Opportunities to Lead.
Chapter 2 Diversity in Healthcare © 2010 Jones and Bartlett Publishers, LLC.
AMCHP Autism Webinar May 7, Building Culturally and Linguistically Competent Programs Suzanne Bronheim & Wendy Jones National Center for Cultural.
Self Assessment Using EFQM Excellence MODEL Down Lisburn Trust’s Experience of Continuous Improvement John Simpson Down Lisburn Trust.
Mountains and Plains Child Welfare Implementation Center Maria Scannapieco, Ph.D. Professor & Director Center for Child Welfare UTA SSW National Resource.
Page 1 of 14 Diversity Program Our Values…The Way We Work Human Resources Department Karmanos Cancer Institute March 1, 2009 Diversity at the Karmanos.
Mountains and Plains Child Welfare Implementation Center Maria Scannapieco, Ph.D. Professor & Director Center for Child Welfare UTA SSW Steven Preister,
CULTURE & COMPETENCY SUMMIT INTERPRETATION SERVICES CRIS KOPECKY, BSN, MBA PRESIDENT/OWNER/NURSE.
Strategies for Achieving Broad-based Diversity ADD Perspectives Jennifer G. Johnson, Ed.D.
State of California Department of Alcohol and Drug Programs Continuum of Services System Re-Engineering Taskforce Phase II Planning Meeting December 6,
Catholic Charities Performance and Quality Improvement (PQI)
Healthcare Organization Employee Experience Michael Mabanglo, PhD, LCSW February 16, 2016.
The Crossnore School New Employee Orientation CULTURAL COMPETENCY.
1 Introduction to Cultural Competence A Training Tool.
2009 Annual Employee Survey U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development December 29,2009 (updated January 8, 2010)
School of Teacher Education Learning and Teaching Committee 2010 – 2011 Presented by: SOTE Learning and Teaching Committee 14 th July, 2010.
PEOPLE STRATEGY People Strategy Developing our People Strategy 27th January 2015.
Managing Talent – Maximizing Your Employee’s Potential 3 rd SACCO LEADERS’ FORUM Monique DunbarLorri Lochrie Communicating Arts Credit UnionCentral 1 Credit.
October 1, 2015 v.1 Organizational Readiness Phase Two Presentation to the Chief Human Resources Officers October 1, 2015 Talent Management Consortium.
External Review Exit Report Campbell County Schools November 15-18, 2015.
MANAGING HUMAN RESOURCES
Crossnore School & Children’s Home
NJCU College of Education
Blueprint Outlines practical, consumer-focused, state and local strategies for improving eating and physical activity that will lead to healthier lives.
February 21-22, 2018.
Presentation transcript:

Diversity, Inclusion, Cultural Competence A Journey... Not a Destination Presented to the Comprehensive Countywide Diversity Partners Initiative Fond du Lac, Wisconsin February 27, 2008 Presenter - Rhonda Taylor Parris Director, Workforce Planning Aurora Health Care

Who Is Aurora Health Care? Established in 1984, community-owned, not-for-profit health care system serving eastern Wisconsin 13 Hospitals 100 plus clinics Visiting Nurse Association 130 Retail Pharmacies Laboratory services – ACL Aurora Family Services 25,000 plus employees 1 million plus people and 75 communities served

Definitions/Terminology Diversity is the full array or individual differences among people –Most often reflected in terms of representation of the external dimensions of diversity (race, gender, age) –The existence of diversity may affect certain organizational processes such as communications, creativity and problem solving, which are closely related to performance –Having representational diversity does not result in leveraging diversity

One of your goals should be to successfully manage diversity in such a way as to get from a heterogeneous work force, the same productivity, commitment, quality and profit that we get from a homogeneous workforce

Inclusion Inclusion means that employees are fully and respectfully involved in the work activities and life of the organization –A culture of inclusion leverages diversity in all of its many dimensions –Leveraging diversity taps into the unique power and potential of each employee, thus unleashing the talent that exists –When an organization leverages diversity in all of its dimensions, it sees things that cannot be seen by working from the basis of sameness

Culturally Competent/Culturally Proficient Culturally Competent/Culturally Proficient can be defined as a set of congruent behaviors, attitudes, and policies that come together in a system, agency or among professionals that enables effective work in cross-cultural situations –Culture refers to the integrated patterns of human behavior that include the language, thoughts, communications, actions, customs, beliefs, values and institutions of racial, ethnic, religious, or social groups –Competence implies having the capacity to function effectively as an individual and an organization within the context of the cultural beliefs, behaviors and needs presented by consumers and their communities

Every employee and every consumer should feel culturally secure when they interact with us Culturally Competent/Culturally Proficient

The Journey–Continuous Improvement Cultural competency is a journey by which an organization must commit itself to a process of continuous improvement Three guiding principles of cultural competency are: –Commitment Recognition that cultural differences exist-between and within groups A commitment that change is necessary and acknowledge that barriers exist in the service delivery systems, in our policies and in our practices –Accessibility There is a purposeful elimination of barriers to service Assurance that at least the same range of choices and level of services are available among all communities of color

Three Guiding Principles - continued Three guiding principles of cultural competency are: –Relevance There is an aggressive plan for recruiting, training and retaining staff and volunteers of color throughout the organization Services are delivered by staff who are culturally competent Services are delivered in a manner relevant to the customer in a way that is meaningful and congruent with the customer’s class, language, culture belief, environment, concept of time and spiritual and religious beliefs The Journey–Continuous Improvement

Why Does This Competence Matter to Aurora? Because we recognize the personal nature of health care services, we are committed to creating environments that meet the diverse physical, emotional, spiritual, social and economic needs of our patients and clients, as well as the people who serve them

Why Do We Do It? Our vision is to continually find better ways to deliver health care services, and to measurably improve the health of the communities we serve Our mission is to promote health, prevent illness, and provide state-of-the art diagnosis and treatment, whenever and wherever we can best meet people’s individual and family needs

Why Do We Do It? We are committed to having a diverse workforce that reflects the people and communities we serve

Our Journey 2000 – System Assessment, consultant engaged 2001 – Senior Management Committee assumed responsibility for developing draft goals/objectives/strategic plan, all level management feedback 2001 – Senior leadership consultation, training, introduction of the plan

Our Journey 2002 – Introduction of the plan to mangers,training, consultation, strategy integration into business planning 2002 – Managers introducing diversity plan to direct reports, explanation of employees role 2003 – Manager development, systems audit

Our Journey 2004 – Employee education implemented (conducted by department leaders), diversity standards and performance expectations added to employees performance review 2004 – Introduction of Cultural Competency Training to physicians and nurses

Our Journey 2004 – Focused on Supplier Diversity in conjunction with Premier, our national purchasing group 2004 – Same gender domestic partner benefits introduced, Work- Life Balance Task Force started 2005 – Continuation of leader, employee and physician education, Adoption Assistance benefit added

Our Journey 2006 – Focused on moving from Inclusion to Cultural Competency by providing more in- depth education and training to caregiver staff 2007 – In depth analysis of employee satisfaction survey responses, conducted focus groups 2008 – Commitment to acceleration of activities and outcomes; system-wide plan and teams to address recruitment and retention, cultural competence education at all levels, health care disparities/clinical outcomes, supplier diversity

Diversity, Inclusion, Cultural Competence Goals Goal 1: Accountable for Diversity Results –Ensure organizational accountability for achieving our diversity commitment Actions – Systems Review, recommendations, action plans

Diversity, Inclusion, Cultural Competence Goals Goal 2: Become More Diverse –Ensure a diverse and highly competent workforce at all levels Actions – Determination of metrics, assessment of recruitment needs, development of recruitment plans, establishment of the Aurora Leadership Academy

Diversity, Inclusion, Cultural Competence Goals Goal 3: Leverage Diversity to Accomplish our Mission and Vision –Ensure wellness and healing environments that meet the diverse needs of the people and communities we serve Actions – Integration of diversity, cultural competence into our patient-centered, Planetree approach to care

Accountable for Diversity Results Diversity expectations and performance standards are on every employee’s performance review Results, as measured by the scores on the Inclusion Index of the annual employee satisfaction survey, factor into the leader’s merit and incentive pay

Accountable for Diversity Results Departments scoring in the bottom quartile of the Inclusion Index have the opportunity for additional skill building and management assistance Patient satisfaction and loyalty scores factor into leader’s merit and incentive pay All leaders are responsible for providing a minimum of two diversity modules per year to their direct reports

Our Structure – How We Do It The Diversity Function is housed in the Organizational Development Area Utilize the resources of 14 OD Consultants, 50 Clinical Nurse Specialists, Medical Education Faculty, and Human Resource Staff Leaders have direct responsibility for staff development and education – resources provided by the OD department

Inclusion Index Results – No movement. We were in the communicating phase – The system-wide index moved 9%, (gap closure) from 3.49 to – The system-wide index moved 1% – The system-wide index moved 7%, from 3.65 to 3.75

Inclusion Index Results Of the four items composing the Index, the results are as follows: Commitment of leaders to having a diverse workforce – 6% gap closure – 3.83 to 3.90 Equal opportunity for all employees – 7% gap closure – 3.77 to 8.5 Evaluation process free from prejudice/favoritism – 4% gap closure – 3.5% to 3.56

Inclusion Index Results Feeling included regardless of individual differences they bring to the workplace – 13% improvement – 3.50 – 3.69 Overall from 2002 – 2005 the percentage of employees feeling favorable about efforts to ensure an inclusive environment for all employees has improved 13% points, from 57% to 70% of all employees

Inclusion Index Results The gap closure percent improvement in the Inclusion index between 2002 and 2005 is 17%, from a mean of 3.49 to 3.75

The Journey Continues – Next Steps Evaluate and continue what’s working Continue the integration to all levels, all plans Determine critical areas and initiate specific actions Continue the overlay of care management, patient-centered care, workforce development Implement senior leadership accountability for results

Questions? Contact: Rhonda Taylor Parris Director, Workforce Planning Aurora Health Care 2920 West Dakota Street P.O. Box Milwaukee, WI