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Dr Jillann FarmerPeter Last

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Dr Jillann Farmer Peter Last. Medical Director Assistant Director ... From the behemoth to the Minnow! Almost a cottage industry. Attached to Albany medical School ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Dr Jillann FarmerPeter Last


1
Around the World in 18 days The Birth of
  • Dr Jillann Farmer Peter Last
  • Medical Director Assistant Director
  • (With acknowledgement to Dr Craig Margetts the
    Safe Doctors Project)

2
Where did CliPSS come from?
  • Queensland Health Action Plan
  • We willdevelop a state-wide approach to
    clinician individual performance assessment and
    the management of concerns about individual
    clinicians performance
  • Queensland Health Systems Review (Forster)
  • Queensland Public Hospitals Commission of Inquiry
    (Davies)

3
Where did CliPSS come from?
  • Safe Doctors Fair System Project
  • Developed consensus that a new system for
    management of performance concerns was needed.
  • Queensland Clinical Assessment Service
  • Initial name of the service when I was recruited
    derived from NCAS
  • Clinician Performance Support Service

4
What we inherited
  • QCAS model very closely aligned with NCAS, but
    not well developed
  • First impression NCAS model not best choice
  • Culturally
  • and complexity (bureaucracy)
  • Implementation support

5
Help!
  • Initial approach to NSWMB
  • Discovered that they had been completely ignored
    in the initial environmental scan
  • Backpeddle-
  • Stakeholders
  • Funders
  • NCAS

6
The Decision to Travel
  • New to field
  • Needed to be able to argue for changed model
    authoritatively
  • Stakeholders a bit spooked by the change
  • Seek Peer review of proposed hybrid model
  • QH PDL and PDA, combined with a very short
    opportunity in run-up
  • Picked 6 places to visit, and GO!

7
First Stop - Sydney
  • NSWMB Program
  • Since 2001
  • Legislative
  • Simple Lean
  • Reliable
  • Acceptable refereed with NSW stakeholders
  • Cultural fit
  • Familiar model for some stakeholders

8
First Stop - Sydney
  • Strengths
  • Experience
  • Forged through adversity lots of opportunities
    to learn
  • Weaknesses
  • Regulator vs employer
  • Design and recommend remediation but dont have
    responsibility for implementing

9
Second Stop - Berlin
  • Not actually visiting a program
  • This made me think about why
  • ?? Is there knowledge in this field in the
    non-English-speaking world?
  • Kings College review (Published by NCAS) only
    included anglophone countries.
  • ?Future opportunity for learning and growth.

10
Third Stop London - HCAT
  • HCAT is the leading builder of 360 degree
    feedback tools for doctors in Europe, possibly
    the world
  • Validated, discipline-specific tools
  • Shefpat and SPRAT are the core tools used by NCAS
  • Can design and administer 360 feedback (including
    patient perspective) in web-interface or
    telephone based format.

11
4th Stop London - NCAS
  • NCAS is the behemoth of PA programs.
  • 2006/2007 reporting year
  • 691 new requests for advice
  • 55 resolved with provision of advice only
  • 7 of referrals made in the first six years of
    NCAS operation had become assessment cases by
    mid-2007/08
  • Average 40 45 assessments per year
  • Takes average of more than a year before commence
    assessment

12
4th Stop London - NCAS
  • Strengths
  • Comprehensive
  • High degree of professionalism
  • Specifications for just about everything
  • Defined competencies for assesees and assessors!
  • Weaknesses
  • Slow
  • Expensive - 100K per assessment case
  • Dont re-assess to measure progress
  • Starting to get bogged in litigation

13
5th Stop London - GMC
  • Visited because wanted intell on NCAS from the
    regulators perspective, rather than just
    believing the publicity
  • Common origins NCAS team drawn from GMC team
  • Initially sought to use NCAS assessments
  • Now dont bother litigation too hard
  • Run own assessments, so have 2 programs in one
    jurisdiction, a bit like if NSWMB program
    operated in Qld.

14
6th Stop Albany
  • From the behemoth to the Minnow!
  • Almost a cottage industry.
  • Attached to Albany medical School
  • Part-time activity of faculty
  • Like all the US programs, chart and invterview
    based, not practice based
  • (relatively) heavy use of standardised patients
    6 such patients
  • US Board exams for written
  • Oral exam as well chart based.

15
6th Stop Albany
  • Strengths
  • Efficient- 8000 per case
  • User pays
  • Academic base
  • More observation than other North american
    programs
  • Weaknesses
  • Not core business...more like an interest
  • Additional to usual full-time jobs
  • No attempt to assess health
  • No peer matching just use faculty

16
7th Stop Philadelphia - NBME
  • My contact for setting up all the North American
    visits
  • Co-ordinate the Post-Licensure Assessment System
    (PLAS)
  • PLAS is a joint activity of the NBME and the
    Federation of State Medical Boards (FSMB) and was
    developed to assist medical licensing authorities
    in assessing physicians who have already been
    licensed.
  • The PLAS provides comprehensive objective and
    personalized assessments of physicians for whom
    there is a question regarding clinical
    competence.

17
7th Stop Philadelphia - NBME
  • No specific assessments of PLAS run out of
    Philadelphia could not achieve viable business
    model
  • Design and administer the Board examinations,
    which are used by many of the assessment programs
  • MCQ questions
  • Computer simulation cases
  • SPEX - The Special Purpose Examination,
    administered by computer, is an objective and
    standardized, cognitive examination of current
    knowledge requisite for the general,
    undifferentiated practice of medicine.
  • Target re-entry or ??competence practitioners

18
8th Stop - NYC
  • End of Week 1 time for A break!
  • No performance assessment programs in any of the
    5 boroughs (that I could find)
  • A chance for time out and a rest.

19
9th Stop Denver - CPEP
  • Built out of the Medical Indemnity sector COPIC
  • Underwritten by COPIC initially
  • Now operating as a going concern
  • Run referred PAs for Boards
  • About ½ Colorado, about ½ interstate
  • Started 1990
  • 90 100 assessments per year
  • Charge around US 10K per case
  • Re-assess for discharge

20
10th Stop San Diego- PACE
  • Big!!!
  • 100 to 120 assessments per year
  • Also use microcog, exam questions, simulated
    patients and clinical interviews
  • Main difference to CPEP is that PACE is attached
    to San Diego Medical School
  • If uncertain about PA, put them into 2nd stage
    which is a week of observation in the unit of one
    of the assessors.
  • Have suite of educational products that can be
    purchased

21
11th Stop Sydney again
  • After visiting all those programs, Sydney (NSWMB)
    was looking pretty good.
  • Formal exchange of letters between Qld Government
    and NSWMB
  • Share methodology
  • Train assessors
  • Advice and support
  • IT product development
  • Luxury of expertise in (mostly) the same timezone.

22
CliPSS Purpose
  • Improving Patient Safety by Supporting Clinician
    Performance

23
CliPSS Scope
  • Credentialed practitioners employed by Queensland
    Health where there is a concern about performance
    that is sufficiently severe as to present
    concerns about patient safety

24
Systems analysis (RCA) systems corrections
Gap
Clinician Performance
MBQ, ESU, Investigation
Disciplinary Action
25
A CliPSS Assessment
  • is not focussed on the original concerns, but
    does use them to inform what will be assessed
  • is not an investigation into what has happened
  • does not result in a guilty or innocent
    finding
  • cannot be partially undertaken that is, the
    practitioner cannot choose to have only some of
    the assessments performed it is a total package

26
A CliPSS Assessment
  • is voluntary
  • is a global assessment of performance
  • includes a diverse range of information sources
  • is focussed on determining whether the initial
    concerns have an underlying cause that could
    result in repeat occurrences
  • Is about managing future risk

27
The CliPSS Pathway
28
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29
Deciding on what cases to refer to CliPSS?
  • Consider referral to CliPSS where patient safety
    may be at risk as a consequence of suspected
    clinician performance concerns

30
S31 Quality Assurance Committee
  • ss31 38 of the Health Services Act 1991
  • Qualified Privilege
  • Cannot provide information out unless for
    purposes of Committee Improving Patient Safety
    by Supporting Clinician Performance
  • Cannot be forced to produce documents or give
    evidence
  • Confers indemnity statutory, not IRM.

31
S31 Quality Assurance Committee
  • Members now identified
  • QH staff CliPSS, DM, DOMSAC, CNO, HR
  • Medical Representatives AMA, SDQ, QPSU
  • Consumer Representatives - 2 nominated by
    community groups
  • Application for QAC completed and lodged
  • Awaiting Ministerial approval
  • Once approved, we open for business.

32
CliPSS and the Regulators
  • Collaborative relationship with regulators to
    assist them to discharge their statutory
    functions. E.g. Medical Board, HQCC and Coroner
  • Although confidentiality is paramount, some
    external notifications are consistent with the
    functions of the CliPSS Quality Assurance
    Committee
  • Appropriate reporting arrangements to the extent
    necessary for the protection of the public

33
Information provided to MBQ
  • Referral into CliPSS and when an assessment was
    ceased
  • The outcome of a completed assessment
  • Summary of findings to date of a partially
    completed assessment
  • Concern that there may be Unsatisfactory
    Professional Conduct wilful, unethical,
    criminal behaviour or deliberate patient abuse
  • Impairment as defined in Health Practitioner
    Professional Standards Act 1999
  • Risk to the public (for example, if practitioner
    works in the private sector where CliPSS
    initiated modifications to practice cannot be
    implemented)
  • If practitioner leaves employment of Queensland
    Health before discharged from CliPSS

34
Information provided to Districts
  • Two levels of information
  • Direct line manager relevant person and get all
    information
  • Bound by confidentiality as if were member of QAC
  • Same protections as if were member of QAC
  • EDMS or DM recieves higher level information
    sufficient to inform decision-making to ensure
    safety and quality of health care services
  • Strengths
  • Areas for development
  • Performance Support

35
Planning Performance Support
  • CliPSS purpose is to improve patient safety by
    supporting clinician performance.
  • The only purpose of the Assessment is to form the
    basis of decision-making
  • Are patients being cared for by this practitioner
    safe?
  • Is a Support Plan needed?
  • What type of Support?

36
Planning Performance Support
  • If a CliPSS assessment identifies areas of
    practice where support is required
  • CliPSS will work with the practitioner to develop
    and implement a personalised support plan, which
    can include
  • clinical training,
  • communication skills,
  • technical knowledge
  • workplace conflict resolution.

37
Evaluating Performance Improvement
  • Reviews will be undertaken at intervals that are
    reasonable with reference to the Support Plan.
  • We aim to have these done by the same team who
    formed the PSP until completion, but this may not
    always be possible.

38
Evaluating Performance Improvement
  • When the agreed goals have been achieved as
    evidenced at re-assessment, the process will be
    completed
  • Merely completing tasks will not be sufficient
    there must be a demonstrable change in the
    performance issues that were identified at the
    first performance assessment.

39
Having Realistic Expectations
  • There is not a 100 guarantee of full return to
    work.
  • Outcomes will depend, in part, on the nature of
    the issues (if any) identified, as well as on
    practitioner preparedness to participate in any
    recommended support program.
  • Where the process does not achieve full return to
    work, or if the practitioner does not make
    substantial progress at a re-assessment, CliPSS
    may recommend reverting to the formal
    Investigation or HR Performance management
    pathway.

40
Safe Doctors
Fair System
Improving Patient Safety by Supporting
Clinician Performance
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