Title: Performance management of contracts and contractors
1 Performance management ofcontracts and
contractors
Bev Norton
2 Why performance manage?
- Public and patient safety
-
- Advance learning
3What we believe
- the vast majority of healthcare professionals are
already seeking to give high-quality care to
their patients for them, clinical governance
arrangements are intended to provide support,
encouragement and time for reflection on their
clinical practice - the best way of protecting patients is to build
on and strengthen the existing arrangements for
promoting the quality of clinical care,
collectively known as clinical governance -
4But..
- a small minority exhibit behaviour or clinical
performance which puts patients at risk.
Clinical governance needs to be sufficiently
robust to maximise the chance of identifying
these clinicians so that prompt action can be
taken to protect patients. But no system can
give an absolute guarantee of safety, especially
(as the Shipman Inquiry fully recognised) when
faced with an individual as devious and malign as
Shipman.
5Performers List Management
- How robust is your system?
- Who monitors the inclusions?
6The National Health Service (General Medical
Services) Amendment (No. 4) Regulations 2001 (the
2001 Amendment Regulations) (1)
- obligatory for a PCO (then the HA) to carry out
certain checks before admitting a doctor to its
list. HAs were required to check, as far as
practicable - references provided by the applicant
- information given by the applicant relating to
his/her medical qualifications and his/her
registration
7The National Health Service (General Medical
Services) Amendment (No. 4) Regulations 2001 (the
2001 Amendment Regulations) (2)
- contents of his/her declaration about any past
criminal or disciplinary record. - This declaration was now required to be
significantly fuller than previously whether
there was any past or ongoing fraud investigation
involving the doctor.
8The Health and Social Care Act 2001 powers (and
obligations) on HAs to remove a doctor from their
list on the grounds that
- the doctors continued presence on the list would
be prejudicial to the efficiency of the medical
services which doctors on the list undertook to
provide (an efficiency case) - the doctor had been involved in an incident of
fraud or attempted fraud (a fraud case) - the doctor was unsuitable to remain on the list
(an unsuitability case).
9National Clinical Assessment Service
- the model recommended by NCAS involves
investigation by a multi-PCT resource (the
Performance Advisory Group) to establish the
facts and decision by a senior PCT committee (the
Decision Making Group) typically chaired by the
medical director. Options include imposing
restrictions on the practice, removal from the
PCT list, application to the FHSAA for national
disqualification as a GP, and referral to the
GMC for possible erasure from the register. - Shipman 5 has also recommended giving PCTs powers
for some lesser actions e.g. warnings and
requiring remedial action
10 PCTs do have a range of mechanisms
- for identifying individual GPs whose performance
is of concern. These include - Monitoring of routine data including QOF scores
- Annual clinical governance reviews
- Analysis of complaints
- Concerns from other professionals
- Patient surveys
- Appraisal ? Revalidation?
11 Where are the measures?
- It is possible to construct objective measures,
with indicators that cover - Clinical quality
- Organisational performance
- Patient experience
- Compliance with regulatory requirements
- Resource utilisation
12Clinical Governance reviews
- How do the practice approach their own clinical
? - Protected time for regular team meetings
- Learning from significant events
- eg premature deaths, cancer cases, patient
complaints - Clinical audit
- Practice protocols
- What does the Clinical Governance Team do with
the reports?
13Significant events learning
- Focus on the facts
- No blame
- Look at the system v individual
- What went well
- What was OK
- What could have gone better
- What should we do next time?
14One approach
15Essential Ingredients
- Clear evidence and clear focus
- Examples From the field
- Time to consider solutions
- Reality of working at street level
- Systematic recording of information
- Rapid feedback
- Appropriate resources
- Skilled management
16 Data Used For Prescribing Analysis
- Name of prescriber
- Drug name, formulation and strength
- Quantity prescribed
- Number of items prescribed
- Cost of prescribing
17 Method
- Analyse prescribing by practice for Morphine,
Diamorphine and Pethidine injections only. - Compare Cost and Items per 1000 Patient unit
between practices and the PCT average. - Identify practices above the norm (PCT average).
- For these practices identify the injections that
are above average. - Produce a detailed report itemising all
prescriptions prescribed. - Produce a trend graph for the injection(s)
detailing the number of ampoules prescribed in
the past 24 months.
18QOF and Assessment
Match indicators against other hard data
sources, such as PACT. Eg. Do cholesterol
indicator reports from QMAS match the extent of
prescribing for cholesterol lowering
drugs? diabetes matching appropriateness of
diagnosis against date of diagnosis, laboratory
test results looking at glycosylated Hb and
blood glucose results.
19Practice List Size
Spearmans Rho 0.33 Sig at 99
level Association particularly strong with
Organisational Achievement Confounding variables?
20Prevalence by Condition
21Prevalence Map Diabetes Mellitus
- Deprivation
- Ethnicity
- Age profiles
- Identification
22Indicator DM7
- Indicator DM7 - The percentage of patients with
diabetes in whom the last HbA1C is 10 or less (or
equivalent test/reference range depending
on local laboratory) in last 15 months.
23Indicator - DM7
24Potential to develop hypertension
25Areas to develop hypertension
- More blood pressure recording
- ?staffing, ?coding
- Increased use of guidelines and protocols for BP
control - Primary prevention strategy
- Diet, exercise, smoking cessation
26Contract monitoring An approach form some BBC
PCTs
- Review of NSF work
- QOF
- Contractual obligations framework
- Practice specific information
- Previous reports
2715 target areas
- A full review of all the contract clauses with
details and evidence
28Issues for the future
- To some extent, the provider is also an
individual, the GP. Clearly this is the case for
all single-handed GPs but more generally reflects
the fact that most providers in primary care
are small independent partnerships. - determining a practice is failing will
sometimes be equivalent to asserting the
clinician is failing as well (with the
implications this has for their employment in the
NHS).
29The old story, new twists
- variations in the quality of primary care
providers. - introduction of a wider set of providers
competing for patients (along with increased
incentives on existing providers) increases the
need to provide assurance that performance
standards are high. - market led approaches to primary care are also
likely to increase the number of business
failures and voluntary exits (e.g. retirement)
that will require handling.
30strong need for a clear accreditation process
- These could include
- A new peer review process building on the RCGPs
existing practice accreditation scheme - Assessment by PCTs operating under license from
the RCGP or Healthcare Commission - More robust quality measures added to APMS
contracts
31Subtle ways patient empowerment
- the importance of information to enable patients
to make informed choices in dialogue with
clinicians and to take better control of their
own health - Better information, better choices,
better health - Expert patient programmes for patients with
longer-term conditions - use of information from patient satisfaction
surveys, involving all hospital trusts and
administered by the Healthcare Commission, to
assess and improve services - use of patient surveys to assess DES for Choice
and Access - a specific duty on all organisations to involve
patients and the general public in the planning
and development of services
32Subtle ways patient empowerment
- Patient Liaison Services (PALS) and the
Independent Complaints Advocacy Service (ICAS).
Both these services act as a powerful lever for
change by providing feedback and highlighting
best practice - the provision of direct mechanisms to enable
patients to report patient safety episodes
directly to the NPSA and adverse drug reactions
to the Medicines and Healthcare Products
Regulatory Agency (MHRA) - the proposed provisions in the NHS Redress Bill
for financial recompense to those who suffer as a
result of avoidable errors in the NHSiv. This
places the emphasis on putting things right for
patients as a matter of course, provides an
alternative to litigation, and will contribute to
the culture of learning in the NHS.
33 Performance management ofcontracts and
contractors
Bev Norton