Tamekia MizLadi Smith: How to train employees to have difficult conversations
Tamekia MizLadi Smith wants to start new conversations around involving non-clinical staff in healthcare. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
where the collection of data
seven days a week,
what we call a front-desk specialist now.
at your favorite department stores,
at the hospital
your last movie ticket.
"May I please have your zip code?"
your savings card today?"
becomes a little bit more complex
need to be asked.
a woman named Miss Margaret.
a front-desk specialist
and I do mean never,
race or ethnicity.
has the ability to just look at you.
if you are a boy or a girl,
those were the only categories.
to this "change everything" meeting
each and every last one of her patients
eight races and over 100 ethnicities.
to that human-resource department
for an early retirement.
to this "change everything" meeting
to these meetings.
of a healthcare setting,
collect some form of data.
to wire some money.
representative asked me
why I hesitated,
she worked for under the bus.
but they makin' us ask this question."
the other side of me,
speaker-poet side of me.
little Miss Margarets all over the place.
maybe even good employees,
to ask their questions properly
the business look even worse
a woman who was scheduled to do a TED Talk
to answer the questions,
you would use the information
the information.
it costs you money
on the data that we collect,
than we have those issues still.
and underprivileged,
is either outdated,
or we don't have anything at all.
if people like Miss Margaret
representative at the wiring place
with compassionate care?
what I mean by "graced?"
involved and letting them know
as they become
of data while implementing
all encounters by becoming
needed to inform people
something artistically,
that acrostic poem into a full training
being the front-desk specialist,
of equity to start working,
to ask that question?"
and I told people about --
I called them by the wrong race,
because I was not graced.
prepare me to deescalate a situation.
teachable moments when I had questions
"So, what do I do when this happens?"
cannot talk back to you.
of having someone there
and tell you what you do
the "I'm G.R.A.C.E.D" training,
that I had in mind,
that I had in mind.
the instructional design of it
for open dialogue for people.
and the conscious ones,
that when you engage people in the why,
and it changes their attitudes.
that we have at the front desk
disparities and finds cures.
transitional change
of implementing change.
to share information
by knowledgeable staff members.
don't have to be a statistician
and the purpose of data,
with respect and have compassionate care.
to empower somebody else.
"change everything" meeting --
the food, the food.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Tamekia MizLadi Smith - Performer, mentorTamekia MizLadi Smith wants to start new conversations around involving non-clinical staff in healthcare.
Why you should listen
As a spoken-word performer, Tamekia MizLadi Smith educates and empowers her audiences with what she calls EDUtainment, a witty combination of music and storytelling. She has worked as a consultant and mentor for programs such as Girls in Action, Dear Sistah Girlfriend and the Columbus City Schools. Her forthcoming book, True Story, explores how to improve community health through mentoring and creative arts.
Tamekia MizLadi Smith | Speaker | TED.com