Title: ESTABLISHING PRACTICE BASED COMMISSIONING ACROSS REDBRIDGE PRIMARY CARE TRUST
1ESTABLISHING PRACTICE BASED COMMISSIONING ACROSS
REDBRIDGE PRIMARY CARE TRUST
.. Progress so far
2THE PROCESS
Launched early September 2005 Expressions of
interest 100 practices 3
clusters Preparatory LES (pLES) 100
take-up Standards for Better Health
workbooks 100 return rate Framework
Agreement November 2005 Business Cases 3
clusters to assessment panels November
2005 Approved by Board November 2005
3FUTURE PROCESS
- Memorandum of Agreement
- Between the PCT and the cluster (as an advisory
committee of the PCT) - Between the practices within a cluster (term of
engagement) - Commissioning Intentions
- Service redesign business proposals
4CLINICAL ENGAGEMENT the PCTs view
Building upon Locality commissioning Partnership
Working the umbilical cord Monthly joint
PEC/PbC Management Team facilitated sessions pLES
Development Programme for all practices PCT
Officers / PbC Leads meetings
5CLINICAL ENGAGEMENT the clinicians view
- Why GPs should become involved - Dr Henry Akpabio
- How will the clusters ensure active
- practice engagement - Dr Narinder Sharma
- What its really been like working
- with the PCT - Dr Richard Price
- How PbC will build on what has
- gone before - Redesigning the front
- door of A E - Dr Hector Spiteri
-
6CLINICAL ENGAGEMENT the clinicians view
- Why GPs should become involved - Dr Henry
Akpabio - How will the clusters ensure active practice
- engagement - Dr Narinder Sharma
- What its really been like working with the PCT
- Dr Richard Price - How PbC will build on what has gone before
- - Redesigning the front door of A E - Jane
Mehta - Dr Hector Spiteri
-
7Dr Henry AkpabioWhy should GPs become involved?
- GPs spend most NHS cash so best placed to manage
demand - We are providers and commissioners
- gt Influence what, where and how services
should be delivered - gt Ensure patients have choice
- We are best placed to redesign pathways
- gt What should be done outside of hospital
- gt Bring services closer to patients
- gt Freedom to innovate
- gt Match service provision to
local needs - Failure to participate
- gt Will happen without you so be in the driving
seat - gt Missed opportunity to make real service
change
8Dr Narinder SharmaHow will the clusters ensure
active practice engagement?
- Clusters organically evolved
- Principles of engagement agreed with practices
- gt Openess transparency and inclusion
- gt Principles will inform future
governance arrangements - Ensuring practical engagement
- gt Cluster Steering Group meetings open to all
practices - gt Practical engagement through working groups
- gt Regular meetings of the whole cluster
- Ensuring support and development at practice
level - gt pLES PbC Local Enhanced Service
- gt Participation in programme modules
9Dr Richard Price What its really been like
working with the PCT
- Historical Relationships
- gtEasy to separate clinicians and management
- Why Change Relationships?
- gt Will PbC work?
- gt Partnerships will turn clinicians ideas to
reality - gt Management puts the nuts and bolts in
place to enable real change - How do clinicians feel in Redbridge?
- gt Encouraged and supported
- gt Professional Management in place
- gt Progress co-ordination across the clusters
- Acquaintance to Engagement to Real
Partnership Working - Service Redesign
- gt A E Activity and Admissions identified as a
priority for clusters - gt Signed up to Redesigning the front door of
AE project
10The front door of King Georges A E the facts
- 110K attendances per year and rising
- Attendance to admission ratio of 19.7 and rising
- 3 entrances to AE adult, children and resusc
- OOH situated in out patients
- 50 Redbridge, 28 BD, 22 other PCTS
- Of Redbridge patients
- 20 arrive by emergency ambulance
- 72 arrive by own car
- 8 arrive by walking, taxi, friends etc
- 18 attendances 65 year plus
- 30 attendances 16 years or under (7.3 admitted)
- 22 of attendances aged 17 plus were admitted
- 494 patients attended 6 or more times in one year
- 94 attended 10 or more times in one year
- Monday is the busiest day
- March is the busiest month
- GP in AE pilot suggests that 50 of AE
attendances were with minor injury or illness
11The future gateway
- Have one gateway (except for blue lights)
- Treat immediately and reduce triage substantially
- Maintain separate child facilities
- View model on a health economy not just on a
hospital basis - Include mental health, OOH and ECPs as part of
gateway eliminate several separate teams and
have one gateway team - Integrate Ilford WiC
- Stream non urgent cases straight back to primary
care - Manage and treat simple cases in fastest way
possible - Manage further assessment and referral on to
specialist intervention if appropriate - Facilitate non registered patients to register
with practice there and then - Provide health promotion advice and self
management and education - Support staff around frequent non urgent users
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13Dr Hector Spiteri
- SHA objective for clinicians to manage risk and
change - Managing admissions and A E waiting times
- Primary Care Clinicians Seeing and Treating
- - Efficiency and effectiveness
- - Impact on admission rates
- Throughput
- Developing a Treat model