Title: Community Matrons
1Community Matrons
2Community matrons the aim
- Improve health outcomes for people with long term
conditions - Offer a personalised care plan for vulnerable
people most at risk - Reduce emergency bed days by 5 by 2008 (2003/4
baseline) - Improving care in primary and community settings
3The current situation
People with long term conditions
Account for 80 GP consultations
50 of medicines prescribed for people with LTCs
are not taken
People with LTCs take up 10 of inpatients beds,
but account for 55 of in-patient days
A high proportion of these VHIUs are not on a DN
caseload
4Framework for managing long term conditions
5Referral Criteria
- Three or more active long term conditions
- Three or more AE attendances/ unplanned
admissions - Top 3 of GP users
- PARR score of gt50
6Case Management- what we do
planning
co-ordinating
Supporting people with long term conditions
managing
reviewing
7Benefits of Case Management
- Client-centred
- Improves clients functional abilities
- Effective use of resources
- Brings together primary and social care
- Prevents unnecessary admissions
- Reduces length of stay in hospital
8The Community Matrons role
- Comprehensive assessment
- Innovative case management
- Advanced clinical skills and medicine management
- Marshalling of resources and co-ordinating
primary and social care - Patients empowerment opportunities
9Key Challenges
- Developing a workforce
- Competencies, education and training
- Supervision and mentorship
- Data and information for case finding and risk
management - Systems change and integration with other services
10NHS modernisation and the Case Management
approach (1)
11NHS modernisation and the Case Management
approach (2)
- Intermediate care
- Connecting for health
- Single Assessment Process
- Extended and supplementary prescribing
- AHP role development
- New pharmacy contract
12Community Matrons
Through the unique combination of comprehensive
assessment, proactive clinical intervention,
marshalling of resources, assessment of the
quality of care and co-ordination of acute
primary and social care, enable people with
multiple conditions, affecting all areas of daily
living to remain in control of their own lives
CNO Bulletin, August 2004
13PARR Background
- The Kings fund was commissioned to develop a
software tool for use by Primary Care Trusts to
systematically identify patients who are at high
risk in the future of readmission to hospital via
emergency admissions. - The PARR case finding algorithm tool became
nationally available from September 2005. - The software package was made freely available to
NHS organisations on 1st February 2006. The
current software package, PARR combines PARR 1
and PARR 2
14PARR How does it work? (1)
- Clearly a large share of hospital admissions
cannot be prevented or avoided. The PARR case
finding algorithm does not identify patients
randomly. - PARR uses prior hospital discharge data to
identify patients at high risk for
re-hospitalisation in the 12 months following a
reference hospitalisation. - PARR aims to identify patients in real time who
have a high probability of subsequent emergency
admissions while they are hospitalised for
certain reference conditions for which improved
management may reduce the risk of re-
hospitalisation.
15PARR How does it work? (2)
- PARR focuses on a range of reference conditions
(including congestive heart failure, COPD,
diabetes) where timely and effective case
management can help reduce the risks of
hospitalisation. - An emergency hospital admission for a
reference condition is a triggering event.
This admission creates a risk score for the
probability of another admission in the next 12
months. - PARR 1 and PARR 2 both use Hospital Episode
Statistics (HES) data to produce a risk score
showing a patients likelihood of admission within
the next 12 months. - Risk scores range from 0 100, with 100 being
the highest risk.
16Identifying Patients with PARR
- We identify high risk patients, referred to as
Very High Intensity Users (VHIU), and offer them
care using a case management approach to provide
proactive, co-ordinated and joined-up care in
community settings. - Evidence shows that intensive, on-going and
personalised case management can improve the
quality of life and outcomes for these patients,
reducing emergency admissions and enabling
patients who are admitted to return home more
quickly (DOH 2007). - Community matrons must be targeting resources to
the VHIU in order to help reach the PSA target of
improving care for patients with long term
conditions, and reducing the use of emergency bed
days by 5 by 2008 (DOH 2007).
17HIDAS
- Developed web base information system that acts
as a reporting tool for the PCTs data warehouse - Features include inpatient and outpatient
activity, predictive tool, and long term
conditions
18Outcomes
- Being a new service it is important that we
monitor our outcomes to demonstrate our success
and inform the development of the service - We have carried out a six month audit from 1st
October 2006 to 31st March 2007 - The information represents two caseloads with a
total of 57 patients
19Age and sex of Patients
- We accept patients aged 18 and over, but the
highest number of patients falls between the 75
and 85 age group.
There are slightly more female patients, with a
ratio of 27 male 34 female
20Source of Referral
Most patients are proactively identified by
community matrons, with 30 (18) of patients
identified using PARR/ Hidas.
21Primary Diagnosis at Referral
We often manage patients with several co-existing
conditions, but referral is usually triggered by
a primary diagnosis
22Primary Need for Case Management
The community matron role can be divided into
four key interventions. This graph shows the
distribution of our key intervention.
23Prevention of Admission
- There is currently much debate about how to
define or verify a prevention of admission, i.e.
how does one prove that something has been
prevented? - We have compared admissions and GP usage before
and during case management.
24Hospital admissions compared
- Comparing the figures before and after case
management, a significant reduction in admissions
can be seen - From the 57 patients, there were 142 admissions
recorded in total in the previous 12 months - Since being case managed, patients have had 31
admissions in 6 months - Of those admissions, 28 were seen to be
unavoidable or timely and 3 were preventable
25Number of Hospital Admissions
There is a significant reduction in admissions
for patients during case management compared with
prior to case management Over 90 of admissions
of patients who are being case managed are
unavoidable
26Reduction in GP home visits
Extrapolating figures from the audit to create a
full year effect, case management has reduced the
number of GP home visits by 162 visits a year
27Measuring potential admission avoidance
- Whilst we have gone to lengths to compare
admissions before and during case management, we
are also documenting occasions where we feel that
an admission has been prevented - We have divided these into acute episodes and
extended episodes of care that potentially lead
to admission avoidance
28Reduction to Service Usage following Acceptance
onto Caseload
Community matrons have orchestrated 39 acute
episodes where admission to hospital may have
been avoided. Extended episodes of care have
potentially prevented 76 admissions
29The future
- Community matrons around the country have sent
feedback to the Department of Health asking for
help in qualifying a prevention of admission - A preliminary patient and carer satisfaction
survey will be sent to all patients on the
caseload this summer - A more detailed 12 month audit will be carried
out in November which will include cost saving
information
30Case Study (1) Introduction
- 90 year old gentleman
- Medical History of COPD, AF, and Hypertension
- Discovered via PARR PARR score of 86
- Command of the English language poor
- Extremely hard of hearing
- Lives with his wife, his son, daughter-in-law,
and their three young children in a three bedroom
council house - Daily care worker visit for washing and dressing
- Admissions to hospital in the year prior to Case
Management 6 admissions equalling 39 bed days
from April 2005 to April 2006
31Case Study (1) Assessment Outcome
- Poor understanding of and compliance with
medication - Inability to use inhalers and nebulisers properly
- Lack of follow up after hospital interventions
- Urinary incontinence
- Frequent exacerbations of COPD followed by
hospitalisation
32Case Study (1) Intervention
- Referral to Audiology
- Use of an interpreter for teaching purposes
- Medicines management / Change of medication
- Education re use of inhalers, using volumatic,
and nebulisers - Organising a course of antibiotics and steroids
on repeat prescription - Education re signs and symptoms of exacerbation
- Family support
33Case Study (1) Outcome
- No admissions to hospital in the first 9 months
of case management - Improved communication
- Proper use of medication, inhalers and nebulisers
- Supply of pads for urinary incontinence
- Patient and family feel supported
- 2 hospital admissions and 10 bed days following
case management
34Case Study (2) Introduction
- 80 year old man, lives alone
- Referred by Rapid Assessment Unit
- Fulfilled the criteria because
- Impairment in instrumental ADL
- 3 or more active LTC
- Top 3 of GP users
- High risk triggers falls and living alone
- COPD, IHD, Renal impairment, Chronic anaemia,
Chronic gravitational oedema, L eye blindness,
significant speech impairment, faecal
incontinence.
35Case Study (2) Prior to case management
- In previous 12 months had
- 1 admisssion
- 1 AE attendance
- 2 ICT care episodes
- 13 GP home visits
- 6 GP surgery attendances
- Main focus of case management was improving
social situation, care co-ordination, medicine
management, monitoring health and acting as the
patients advocate.
36Case Study (2) Assessment Outcome
- The patient was sleeping in a low cane chair and
legs were extremely oedematous, affecting
mobility, causing falls and skin breakdown - Breathless and fatigued due to anaemia
- Faecal incontinence secondary to high faecal
impaction - Poor compliance / understanding of medications
- Poor social care due to reduced ability to
express his needs and substandard carer input - Social isolation.
37Case Study (2) Intervention
- Obtained new suitable chair from HES
- Referred to ICT OT for aids for bed
- Referred to DNs for skin care and compression
hosiery - Changed diuretics
- Requested carers ensure assistance to bed was
provided in evenings - Monitoring of Hb and referral back to RAU for
blood transfusion - Introduced medication policy for carers to assist
with meds and inhalers - Monitoring of bowels and laxative regime
- Wheelchair referral
- Referral to day centre, befrienders and good
neighbours - Ongoing monitoring of health bloods, BP, Pulse,
temp, chest auscultation, weight, leg
measurements. - Ongoing social input order meals for weekends,
liaise with good neighbours, feedback to care
agency, act as advocate in complaints to care
agency, follow up repairs and modifications to
council
38Case Study (2) Outcomes
- No admissions or AE attendances in 7 months of
case management - 3 GP home visits, CM acts as first port of call
- Improved mobility, legs less oedematous
- Less patient frustration
- No further faecal incontinence or constipation
- Better compliance with medications
- Improving social situation and care input
- Example of where case management may have averted
a future admission or crisis development of
postural hypotension (increased risk of falls /
injury) when dose of thiazide increased, so dose
changed.
39Case Study (3) Introduction
- 72 year old man
- Lives with wife, who is main carer
- Referred by elderly care consultant
- Fulfilled the criteria because
- 3 or more LTC and 3 or more AE attendances
- Impairment in instrumental ADL
- High risk triggers include exacerbation of LTC
- PMH epilepsy, COPD, aortic stenosis, indwelling
urethral catheter
40Case Study (3) Introduction contd
- 5 admissions
- 2 AE attendances
- 5 GP surgery attendances
- Under care of 5 consultants
- Presenting problems
- Catheter bypassing
- repeated UTIs
- bilateral lower leg pain and oedema,
- fluid overload
- medicine management.
41Case Study (3) Assessment Outcome
- Patient and carer had poor understanding about
his various medical conditions - Community nurses visiting to re-site catheter
(approx every 2-3 weeks), and catheter bypassing
most of the time - Lower leg pain and oedema, not responding to
analgesia - Attending many different OPA
42Case Study (3) Intervention
- Liaised with urology consultant and requested
review of situation and consideration of a
supra-pubic catheter. Also requested review of
medication - Wrote to consultants explaining rationalising of
care and now under the care of Elderly Care
Consultant and CM - Medication review
- Educated patient and carer about pts medical
conditions and put individual care plans in
place. Pt weighs himself daily and reports to CM
if increase/decrease in weight. Pt and carer will
observe urine output and contact CM if infection
suspected. Pt reports any signs/symptoms of
epilepsy promptly - CM is first point of contact and then will liaise
with appropriate member of the MDT. - CM organised a Doppler and prescribed compression
hosiery. - CM liaised with elderly care consultant and
arranged for the RAU to administer IV diuretic
when weight, leg oedema and abdo distension
became a problem
43Case Study (3) Outcomes
- 1 emergency admission (appropriate, but
avoidable) - No GP surgery attendances or home visits.
- 1 ECP visit (no action taken)
- 1 episode with ICT
- Experiences nil bypassing with supra-pubic
catheter and DN changes every 12 weeks. - Under the care of 3 consultants.
- Regular and planned visits by CM to monitor vital
signs, monitor weight, measure abdo, assess pain,
monitor epilepsy and offer carer support.
44Conclusion
The case management approach to LTCs has the
potential to have a great impact on the patient
experience and the effective and efficient use of
resources