Title: HEPP
1HEPP
2What is a systems-based approach to managing
quality and safety in healthcare?
- Recognises that all humans make errors
- Most errors result from the system--inadequate
training, long hours, ampoules that look the
same, lack of checks, etc - Swiss cheese model - when errors line up you
get an adverse outcome
3What is a systems-based approach?
- Active errors the errors that directly lead to
an adverse event - Latent errors failures built into the system (eg
understaffing, error-tolerant culture, team
conflict, poor management, value on status rather
than knowledge)
4Systems-based approaches
- Learn from other high risk, low error industries
(e.g. aviation) - Have organisational cultures that discourage
latent errors - Have reporting systems that promote no-blame
learning
5National Service Frameworks
- NSFs are part of the new means of managing
quality in the NHS, where standards are set
nationally, implemented locally, and monitored. - Based on
- Evidence of clinical and cost effectiveness
- Views of users
6National service frameworks
- For each specific service or care group
- set explicit, evidence-based national standards
- define explicit, evidence-based service models
- put in place programmes to support implementation
- attempt to address service variations across the
country
7National Service Frameworks
- establish performance measures and use them to
assess performance - specify timescales for delivery
- put in place supporting initiatives e.g.
workforce training
8Example Coronary Heart Diseasehttp//www.doh.gov
.uk/nsf/coronary.htm
- The CHD NSF set 12 standards for the prevention,
diagnosis and treatment of CHD. - The standards are to be implemented over a
10-year period. - They are underpinned by a number of fundamental
values and guiding principles relating to
access, efficiency, equity and quality. - The NSF fixed immediate priorities and milestones
against which progress would be measured.
9National Service Frameworks
- The Commission for Healthcare Audit and
Inspection ensures NSF standards are met and
fulfils the monitoring function. - Services with an NSF are likely to receive
prioritisation for funding because PCTs and
trusts are required to implement them.
10Star ratings
- NHS Trusts are awarded stars based on how well
they are doing, measured by performance
indicators. - Those that get 3 stars get more autonomy.
- Those that get no stars face tighter controls and
will have to account to the NHS Modernisation
Agency and be inspected more frequently by CHI.
11What does clinical governance aim to do?
- Effective clinical governance should ensure
- continuous improvement of patient services and
care - a patient-centred approach that includes treating
patients courteously, involving them in decisions
about their care and keeping them informed - a commitment to quality health professionals
must be up to date in their practices and
properly supervised where necessary - the prevention of clinical errors wherever
possible and the commitment to learn from
mistakes and share that learning with others
12Clinical governance covers
- NHS organisations systems and processes for
monitoring and improving services, including - consultation and patient involvement
- clinical risk management
- clinical audit
- research and effectiveness
- staffing and staff management
- education, training and continuing personal and
professional development - the use of information about the patients
experience, outcomes and processes
13Key components
- Clear lines of accountability
- Comprehensive programme of quality improvement
activity - Clear policies to manage risk
- Procedures for identifying and remedying poor
performance
14How to interpret a meta-analysis
- Meta-analysis involves combining the results of
multiple studies to obtain more precise estimates
of treatment effects. - The "blob" in the middle of each line on the
FOREST PLOT is the POINT ESTIMATE - The width of the line represents the confidence
interval of this estimate
15Odds ratios
- An odds ratio is calculated by dividing the odds
in the treated or exposed group by the odds in
the control group - When there is no difference between the two
groups the odds ratio 1
16Odds
- Odds are the ratio of the number of people in a
group with an exposure to the number without an
exposure. In a group of 100 people, if 20 people
had the exposure and 80 did not, the odds would
be 20/80 or 0.25. - For undesirable outcomes an OR that is less than
1 indicates that the intervention was effective
in reducing the risk of that outcome.
17Funnel plots
- Simple scatter plots of the odds ratios of trials
against their sample size - Used to detect publication bias
- Typically results from small studies scatter
widely at the bottom of the graph - The spread will narrow as the precision of the
results increases with bigger studies - When there is no bias it will look like a funnel
18Heterogeneity
- Heterogeneity dissimilarity (from a statistical
point of view) - Fixed effects model sees variability as due to
random variation ie if all the studies were big
enough they would achieve the same results - Random effects considers each study to be from
a different pop, differences due to experimental
error and pop diffs
19Meta-analysis
- If the confidence interval of the result (the
horizontal line) crosses the line of no effect
(the vertical line), that can mean either - there is no significant difference between the
treatments OR - the sample size was too small to be confident
where the true result lies
20Dimensions of quality of life
21Dimensions of quality of life
22Types of Instruments
- Disease specific Asthma Quality of Life
Questionnaire, Arthritis Impact Measurement Scale - Site Specific Oxford Hip Score, Shoulder
Disability Questionnaire - Dimension specific Beck Depression Inventory,
McGill Pain Questionnaire - Utility (seek to attach values to different
health states) Euroqol
23Types of Instruments
- Individualised (patient selects dimensions
himself) SEIQoL - Generic SF-36
24Specific Instruments
- Advantages
- Very relevant content
- Sensitive to change
- Acceptable to patients
25Specific Instruments
- Disadvantages
- Cant use them with people who dont have the
disease so comparison is limited - May not detect unexpected effects
26Generic Instruments
- Try to capture broad range of aspects of
health status - Try to be relevant to wide range of patient
groups
27Generic Instruments advantages
- Can be used for broad range of health problems
- Can be used if no disease-specific instrument
- Enable comparisons across treatments for groups
of patients
28Generic instruments advantages
- Can be used to assess health of populations
- Can be used to detect unexpected positive or
negative effects of an intervention
29Generic Instruments disadvantages
- Loss of detail
- Loss of relevance
- May be less sensitive to changes that occur as a
result of an intervention - May be less acceptable
30Properties any instrument must have
- VALIDITY
- Does it truly measure QoL? (and not anxiety
instead, for example) - RELIABILITY
- Does it measure QoL consistently and dependably?
31Things you need to think about in selecting an
instrument
- Published work showing that the reliability and
validity of this instrument have been
established? - Have there been other published studies that have
used this instrument successfully? - Is there anything about the way the instrument
was developed that might affect its
appropriateness for use by you?
32Things you need to think about in selecting an
instrument
- Is it suitable for the area of interest?
- Does it adequately reflect patients concerns in
this area? - Is the instrument acceptable to patients?
- Is it sensitive to change?
- Is it easy to administer and analyse?
33The Short-Form 36-item Questionnaire (SF-36)
34SF-36
- Developed from instruments used in two
large-scale studies conducted in USA - RAND Health Insurance Experiment
- Medical Outcomes Study
- Short-forms (SF-36,SF-20,SF-12,SF-6) have been
derived from longer (108 item) questionnaires of
patient-assessed outcome
35Two versions of SF-36
- Standard version uses 4 week recall period (can
be used every 4 weeks) - Acute version uses 1 week recall period
36SF-36
- Now very widely used in research
- Growing number of publications
- Adapted and tested for British populations
- Reliability
- Validity
37Suggested uses for SF-36
- Measure of general health
- Population surveys
- Patient management
- Resource allocation
- Audit tool
- Clinical trials
38Description
- SF-36 contains 36 items which can be grouped
into 8 dimensions. These are - Physical functioning
- Social functioning
- Role functioning (physical)
- Role functioning (emotional)
- Bodily pain
- Vitality
- General health
- Mental health
39SF-36 Scoring
- Responses to questions are scored
- Scores for items within each dimension are added
together - This score is transformed to give each
respondents score for each dimension - Scale from 0 (poor health) to 100 (good health)
40SF-36 scoring
- You are NOT allowed to add up the dimensions
to give an overall score - Lots of arguments about whether overall scores
are good or bad thing - Limits usefulness of SF-36 in determining utility
of different health states - Makes it more difficult to interpret results in
trials
41Performance
- Acceptable
- 5-10 minutes completion
- Internal consistency good
- Test retest high
- Responsive to change
- Population data available
42Problems with SF-36
- In (sick) elderly
- Sensitivity to change in very ill people
- Lack of single index
43Specific vs Generic instruments
Specific
Generic
- Relevant
- Sensitive
- acceptable/understandable
- learn a lot about the effects of disease
- BUT
- No use if you dont have the disease
- cant compare effects of different diseases
- May not detect unanticipated effects
- Summarise effects of disease
- Can use for comparison
- Available if no specific instrument developed
- Can be used for whole populations
- May detect unanticipated effects
- BUT
- Not as sensitive or relevant as specific
- no detail
- acceptability problems
44Patient satisfaction The policy background
- The NHS Plan (2000) emphasis on organising care
around the patient and on accountability to
patients - National Service Frameworks - Use of patients
views to make decisions about organisation and
delivery of health care - Important element of clinical governance.
45The policy background
- Commission for Healthcare Audit and Inspection
takes patients views very seriously - Financial rewards for trusts linked to the
results of the annual National Patients Survey - Used in determining organisations star ratings
46The policy background
- Involving patients and the public in healthcare
published in Dept of Health in Sept 2001 - Set of proposals building on the NHS plan and the
Kennedy principles a formal response to the
Bristol inquiry
47Proposals from Involving Patients and the Public
- Establishment of the Commission for Patient and
Public Involvement in Health - an overseeing body
which will set national standards and monitor
local services, helping to ensure communities
have an effective say in their local NHS. - Locally based independent Complaints Advocacy
Service (ICAS) in England, operating to core
standards. http//www.doh.gov.uk/complaints/advoca
cyservicelists.htm
48Proposals from Involving Patients
- To introduce Patients Forums in every Trust, to
bring the patients perspective in Trust
management decision-making. - Made up of local people, main role will be to
provide input from patients on how local NHS
services are run and could be improved. Each
patients forum will have a representative on the
trust board.
49Proposals from Involving Patients
- Trust-based Patient Advice and Liaison Services
to deal with patients concerns. - Patients can use PALS to resolve or air concerns
about treatment, care or support. - PALS have direct access to the trust's chief
executive and the power to negotiate an immediate
solution. - PALS will feed patients complaints back to
ensure that lessons are learned and steps taken
to ensure problems are tackled.
50Proposals from Involving Patients
- Statutory local bodies, to be called Voice, will
report patients' concerns and facilitate public
involvement in the NHS.
51Information for Informed Choice
- Information is seen as one of the key
requirements of partnership - Information for Health Strategy
- NHS Direct provides free information to
patients and professionals
52Information for Health Strategy
- Establishment of a national gateway site to
health information for the public on the
Internet. - Strengthening the role of the Centre for Health
Information Quality in accrediting patient and
public information material.
53Performance Indicators examples of patient
satisfaction at work
- National Cancer Performance Indicators
- Requires cancer centres to have an organised
system for conducting patient satisfaction
surveys - Measures of trusts complying with this
54Who measures patient satisfaction in the NHS?
- Department of Health through the national users
survey - Trusts, PCTs and other NHS organisations an
obligation under the Performance Assessment
Framework and under clinical governance
55What is patient satisfaction?
- If we are going to measure it, it would help
if we knew what it was! - View of patient as consumer has been criticised
is medical care a product? - Definitions borrowed from world of commerce are
clearly inappropriate
56What is patient satisfaction?
- Lack of clarity in definitions of patient
satisfaction. - Probably better to think about patients
evaluations or patients views rather than
patient satisfaction. - New NHS/DoH documents refer to patients views.
57Hall and Dornans meta-analysis dimensions of
satisfaction
- Overall satisfaction
- access
- cost
- overall quality
- humaneness
- competence
- amount of information
- bureaucracy
- physical facilities
- providers of attention to psychosocial problems
- continuity of care
- outcome of care
58Hall and Dornans meta-analysis dimensions of
satisfaction
- Understanding the significance of different
dimensions has developed at different rates. - Problems in interpreting some dimensions.
- It is particularly hard to conceptualise
communication
59Measuring patient satisfaction indirectly
- By looking at complaints and at patients who
change doctor. - http//www.nhs.uk/patientsvoice/how_to_complain.as
p - Performance indicators look at complaints (in
addition to direct data). - Health Service Commissioners report.
http//www.ombudsman.org.uk/
60Qualitative approaches to patient satisfaction
- Uses methods such as interviews, focus groups,
observation - Many qualitative studies have been very
successful at identifying how patients evaluate
care and what their priorities are.
61Why use quantitative survey methods?
- Considered relatively cheap and easy to conduct
- Distrust of qualitative research
- Less researcher bias than interviews
- Less staff training required
- Anonymity more easily guaranteed
- Facilitates monitoring of performance
62DIY instruments
- Local DIY instruments are developed by interested
health professionals/ managers/researchers - Can have advantages. However
- Many local instruments do not comply with basic
standards for questionnaire design - Many do not have proven reliability and validity
- Find higher levels of satisfaction than published
instruments - Lack of comparability
63NHS National Survey
- CHAI runs national patient surveys to
- Provide feedback from patients which can be used
for local improvement - Provide information for star ratings and
inspections - Provide national data
- http//www.chi.nhs.uk/eng/surveys/index.shtml
64What have studies of patient satisfaction found ?
- Patients tend to express satisfaction with health
care. - Lack of variation thought to be caused by
patients reluctance to criticise NHS or health
professionals. - Greater dissatisfaction is expressed with
specific aspects of care.
65What have studies of patient satisfaction found ?
- Common causes of dissatisfaction
- delays in appointments or admissions,
- waiting around,
- receiving inadequate information,
- impersonal or unfriendly care.
66Responding to patient satisfaction findings
- Are statements such as the following acceptable?
- Put simply, care cannot be of a high quality
unless the patient is satisfied (Vuori, 1987) - Should some aspects of the service be improved at
the expense of others? - How do we balance need to seek and act on
patients views with other priorities?
67Problems with responding to patient satisfaction
findings
- Some dissatisfaction may be unreasonable or
unavoidable. - Do we discount incompetent or distasteful
views? - Dissatisfaction may be less important than other
outcomes in the long term.
68Why change doesnt occur
- There are some things about which very little
can be done because of - the limitations of modern medicine
- the constraints imposed by limited resources
- institutional limitation
- conflict of priorities
69Patient partnership
- Patient partnership underpins many recent policy
initiatives - Patient partnership is about more than
satisfaction - A model of patient care where patients are
recognised as full partners - Patients are offered full information and the
opportunity to be involved in decision-making
70Lots of unresolved problems about partnership
- People who dont want to be involved in
decision-making - Unknown consequences of involvement
- Do patients always know best?
- Under what circumstances should the power of
patients be limited?
71StBOP
- Abolition of
- 8 Regional offices
- 99 Health authorities
- Creation of
- 28 Strategic Health Authorities
- 304 Primary Care Trusts
- 4 departmental Directors of Health Social Care
- Alignment with 9 government regional offices
72Local Structures
- Leicestershire, Northamptonshire Rutland (LNR)
StHA - 9 PCTs (6 in old LHA, 3 in old NHA)
- Leicestershire NHS Trusts
- Leicestershire Partnership Trust
- University Hospitals of Leicester
73(No Transcript)
74Primary Care Groups/Trusts
- All GPs are now members of a PCT
- Replaces fund-holding and take on many previous
functions of Health Authorities - Aim to involve primary care professionals (inc
nurses etc) in the planning and commissioning of
services
75Key Responsibilities of PCTs
- Improving health and reducing inequalities
- Improving service provision
- Integrating health and social care
76Improving health
- Assessing health needs of local communities
- Community development
- Health promotion and education
- Lead NHS organisations for partnership working
- Local strategic partnerships
- Sure Start, Quality Protects, Regeneration
77Improving service provision
- As provider and commissioner
- Responsibility for all family health service
practitioners - Engagement of frontline staff and local
communities - Collaboration with other PCTs for commissioning
some services - E.g. tertiary care services
78Integrating Health Social Care
- Work with Local Authorities to maximise
opportunities for patients and users - Potential for full integration through creation
of Care Trusts
79Eastern Leicester PCT
- Population of 180,000
- Younger than Leicestershire
- High proportion of ethnic minorities
- Diversity of languages, culture and religious
observance - High levels of deprivation and health needs
- 33 General practices
- High proportion of sole practitioners
- Lowest level of WTE GPs per 100,000 population in
LNR - Low levels of nurses and therapists
- Large number of Community pharmacists and General
Dental practitioners
80Resource allocation
- Necessary because of the growing pressures on
health budgets - A worldwide problem, not just a UK one
- Doctors are increasingly involved in making
resource allocation decisions explicitly rather
than implicitly
81Possible criteria for allocating resources
- equality - everyone gets the same. Not useful as
doesnt address different needs - equity - equal treatment for equal need (need
definition of need) - need - ability to benefit from a health care
intervention (difficult to define and measure) - Still left with the problem of choosing
between different treatments and different groups
of treatments.
82Cost effectiveness analysis
- Involves the measurement of benefits in a single
natural or disease specific outcome such as
number of strokes prevented - You are interested in the least costly way of
achieving a given outcome eg a reduction of 50
strokes per annum
83Cost minimisation analysis
- Here you are interested in which intervention
costs the least, assuming the outcomes are the
same (eg all drugs are equally effective at
reducing blood pressure)
84Cost benefit analysis
- Used when you can put a monetary value on the
outcomes as well as the costs (valuing life and
limb!) - Benefits often defined as the costs avoided by
the intervention (eg how many days in hospital
you avoid by having a drug)
85Cost utility analysis
- Involves comparing interventions according to
their yields in terms of extended life and
quality of life (often expressed as QALYs)
86Quality Adjusted Life Years
- QALYs adjust life expectancy for quality of life.
- Try to combine quality and quantity of life into
a single index. - 1 year of perfect health 1 Quality Adjusted
Life Year
87QALY approach assumes that
- 1 year in perfect health
- is the same as
- 10 years with a quality of life 0.10 of perfect
health
88Use of qalys in priority setting
- Requires information on qalys for different
procedures plus costs of these procedures - These can then be ranked into a QALY league table
89QALY league table
- Present value of
- extra cost per
- QALY gained ()
- Cholesterol advice and diet therapy 220
- Hip replacement 1,180
- Kidney transplantation (cadaver) 4,710
- Breast cancer screening 5,780
- Neurosurgery for malignant brain tumours 107,780
90Using qaly league tables in priority setting
- An explicit, not implicit form of rationing.
- Does acknowledge population needs.
- Allows explicit comparisons between
interventions. - Allows prioritisation of interventions.
- May be useful at individual patient level.
91Problems with QALY league tables
- Do not distribute resources according to need,
but according to the benefits gained per unit of
cost. - Discriminate against elderly
- Discriminate against the already disadvantaged
- More appropriate for acute than chronic conditions
92Problems with QALY league tables
- Dont distinguish between interventions that are
life-enhancing vs life-saving - Technical problems with their calculations
- QALYs may not embrace all dimensions of benefit
Values expressed by experimental subjects may not
be representative
93Problems with QALY league tables
- May not be an acceptable form of rationing
- Evidence on costs is not good
- Assume that everyone perceives value of health in
the same way
94Sensitivity
95Specificity
96Positive predictive value (PPV)
- PPV - is the proportion of the people who are
test positive who actually have the disease
97Positive predictive value (PPV)
98PPV the influence of the prevalence of the
disease
- The PPV is strongly influenced by the prevalence
of the condition - A low prevalence condition will have a lower PPV
than a high prevalence condition, even if the
sensitivity specificity of the tests are the
same
99Prevalence of the disease
- Prevalence __a c___
- a b c d
100PPV the influence of prevalence for a high
prevalence disease
- Assume the following scenario
- Screening in a diabetic clinic for diabetic eye
disease - Diabetic eye disease (diabetic retinopathy)
occurs commonly in diabetics and thus is a high
prevalence condition in diabetic clinic
populations - Assume the prevalence of diabetic retinopathy is
30.
101PPV for a high prevalence disease
- Prevalence 30
- (Sensitivity 87 Specificity 96)
102PPV for a high prevalence disease
- Prevalence 30 PPV 260 / 290 90
- (Sensitivity 87 Specificity 96)
103PPV the influence of prevalence for a low
prevalence disease
- Assume the following scenario
- Now we are going to take the same test (same
sensitivity and specificity) for diabetic eye
disease and screen the general population where
of course the condition is much less common (low
prevalence) - Assume the prevalence is 1
104PPV for a low prevalence disease
- Prevalence 1
- (Sensitivity 87 Specificity 96)
105PPV for a low prevalence disease
- Prevalence 1 PPV 9 / 49 18
- (Sensitivity 87 Specificity 96)
106Impact on PPV of the same test for the same
disease when the prevalence is different
-
- High prevalence
- Sensitivity 87
- Specificity 96
- Prevalence 30
- PPV 90
-
- Low prevalence
- Sensitivity 87
- Specificity 96
- Prevalence 1
- PPV 18
107Management roles for doctors
- Medical director (overall responsibility for
medical quality) - Clinical director (overall responsibility for
directorate) - Consultant (responsibility for team)
- General practitioner PCT/practice principal
- Any level
108Current model of NHS management (acute trusts)
- Trust Board involved in strategy setting
- Chairman
- Chief Executive
- Executive Directors (inc Medical Director)
- Non-executive Directors
- http//www.uhl-tr.nhs.uk/about_uhl/thetrust.htmlC
hairman
109The Trust Board
- Involved in strategy setting
- Responsible for operational management
- Respond both to local needs and national
requirements
110Medical directors
- The Medical Director is separate from the
Clinical Director - Medical directors is responsible for quality of
medical care - Sits on the Board of the Trust and communicates
between the board and the medical staff
111Medical directors
- Expected to show leadership for medical staff
- Demonstrate appropriate values
- Have partnership with human resources functions
112Role of Medical Director some tasks and
activities
- Approves job descriptions
- Disciplinary
- Induction training
- Interview panels equal opps
- Discretionary points
- Conducting strategic overview
113Current model of NHS management (acute trusts)
- CLINICAL DIRECTORATES
- The trust is organised into clinical directorates
(a bit like faculties in a university) - Directorates are based on a speciality or group
of specialities eg Radiology, Womens Health,
Cardiology - Headed up by a Clinical Director
- Usually a nurse manager and a business manager
too
114Role of Clinical Director - heads up a directorate
- Managerial
- e.g. Select staff Assign work and
resources Appraise performance - Co-ordinating and Liaising
- e.g. Propose actions Communicate to
group Overcome problems
115Role of Clinical Director
- Representative
- e.g. Present views advocate position
- Monitoring
- e.g. Standards of quality Expenditure Outputs
- Developing Service Relationships
- e.g. with PCTs and other directorates
116The Clinical Directors role
- Provision of continuing medical education and
other training. - Directorate policies on junior doctors' hours of
work, supervision, tasks and responsibilities. - Implementation of medical and clinical audit.
- Development of management guidelines and
protocols for clinical procedures. - Induction for new doctors.
117GMC guidance on managing teams
- Problems can arise when communication is poor or
responsibilities are unclear. - Each member of the team should know where
responsibility lies for clinical and managerial
issues and who is leading the team. - Systems should be in place to facilitate
collaboration and communication between team
members. - Systems should be in place to monitor, review
and, if appropriate, improve the quality of the
team's work. - Teams should be appropriately supported and
developed, and be clear about their objectives.
118Problems of managing people
- Managing doctors has often been compared with
herding cats. - Doctors are highly intelligent, highly skilled
people and high status people. - Non-medical managers have great difficulty in
asserting control over doctors.
119Collegial Relations
- Culture can be hostile to clinical managers
- Evidence of hostile and difficult collegial
relationships - Positive evidence of performance management
- May be great difficulties in managing change