Title: Primary and Community Care
1- Primary and Community Care
- Services Strategy
- Stakeholder Event
- 14 May 2009
2Agenda
- 6.30 - Welcome and Introductions Jackie Forshaw
- 6.50 Thoughts and Pointers on Primary and
Community Services Jeff Anderson and Pat
Gartside - 7.10 Questions
- 7.15 Working Groups
- 8.15 Next steps and future events
- 8.30 Close
3Welcome and Introduction
- Setting the Context and Outlining the scope of
the Strategy - Where are we now?
- Engagement - How we will develop the Strategy
- World Class Commissioning and Transforming
Community Services - Timescales for developing the Strategy
- Challenges
4Context
- High Quality Care for all NHS NSR June 08
- Vision for NHS Clear national vision to make
quality the organising principle of the NHS - DH Our Vision for Primary and Community Care
July 08 sets vision for how services will
continue to grow in next 10 years - Key messages
- Access at times which are convenient make
appointments easily booking in advance - Choice - ability to make more choices including
ability to choose their GP practice - More services delivered in community settings and
in patients own homes - Support in taking greater control over how they
manage their care, particularly for those with
LTCs. - Fairer Payment change to current payment system
to one based on needs of the population served by
practices - Quality development of QOF to reflect
objectives of promoting healthy lives and
accreditation of practices to include peer
validation - Development further development of PBC
5Context
- World Class Commissioning
- Adding Life to Years and Years to Life
- Key Messages from Mark Britnell, NHS Director
General - Will be excellence
- Will address poor performance through failure
regime organisations will be held to account - Primary Medical Care continue with improving
access, GP led health centres etc.. - NHS Dentistry make sure people get access
needs to be off the agenda by 2011 - Transforming Community Services
- Community Services pivotal to the delivery of
high quality closer to home, helping people stay
healthy, supporting patients with LTCs at home to
prevent hospital admission, providing end of life
care in community setting. - Work programme focuses on level of reform and
innovation required to transform community
services.
6Context
- Vision achieving continuous improvements in the
quality of services - Delivered through whole system re-design and
spanning primary, community and secondary care - Final Product A Strategy which describes the
vision of primary and community healthcare in ALW
in next 5 years which will also identify the
development programmes needed to deliver the
vision
7Scope of Strategy
- Includes
- Primary medical
- Dental
- Pharmaceutical
- Optometry
- Community Services
- Closely linked/aligned to the TCS work
programme
8Where are we now?
- ALW still one of most under-doctored PCTs in
England (PCT in lowest quarter on GPs per 100,000
population) 50.36 p. 100,000 recently
published by DH (ALW record 53.31 p 100,000 - National average 57.89 Have increased actual
numbers of GPs by 7 since Oct 06 would still
need 14 to meet national average - 62 GP practices
- 39 dental practices (including 3 ortho only)
- Access to NHS dentistry to be off governments
agenda by 2011 - Procurement of 2 new dental practices in
Pemberton and Atherton to open in next few
months
9Where are we now?
- Optometrists
- 33 practices plus 8 domiciliary only contracts
- Average waiting time for optometrist 1 x day
- Most offer Saturday service
- Potential for utilising this resource
- Pharmaceutical Services
- 67 pharmacies
- Community Pharmacy Strategy developed in
September 2008 in response to Pharmacy White
Paper (April 08) - Vision builds on core competencies of
pharmacists
10Where are we now?
- Community Services
- pivotal to the delivery of high quality closer to
home, helping people stay healthy, supporting
patients with LTCs at home to prevent hospital
admission, providing end of life care in
community setting. - Work programme focuses on level of reform and
innovation required to transform community
services
11Where are we now?
12Challenges
- Economic downturn impact on NHS
- Variations in Quality of primary care
- QOF only 16 achieve scores of lt950 but changes
in 2009/10 in prevalence may have impact - Significant variations in non elective admissions
- Significant variations in actual v expected
prevalence of chronic diseases - Managing the market
- Secondary care services review
- Public expectations increasing
- Reducing Health Inequalities
- Increasing Life expectancy
- How we will measure and demonstrate success
13Making it fit together
- Steering Board Meets fortnightly
- Engaging with stakeholders events in May and
June - Communicating progress
- Patient Engagement
- Governance
- Next Steps
14Governance
Provider Boards
-
Wrightington
,
Wigan
and Leigh
Ashton Leigh and Wigan PCT Board
Ashton Leigh and
NHS Trust
Wigan
PCT Board
-
Ashton Leigh and
Wigan
Community Healthcare
PCT SMT
Transforming Commissioning
Saving Lives
Programme
Board
Primary and Community Care Strategy Steering
Board Hilary Heywood, Programme Director
Transforming Commissioning, Transforming Lives,
PCT Jackie Forshaw, AD Primary Care Julie
Southworth, Transforming Community Services,
PCT Kate Fallon, Director ALW Community
Healthcare PBC Clinical Lead GP
Representation David Valentine, Medical Director,
PCT
Acute Services Review Project
Steering Boards for
Steering Board
other workstreams
Service
-
specific
Working Groups
Steering Board Composition
-
Mick Dolan (Sponsor and Executive Lead within
Ashton Leigh and
Wigan
PCT)
-
Tony Chambers (Sponsor and Executive Lead within
Wrightington
,
Wigan
and Leigh NHS Trust)
-
Hilary Heywood (
Programme
Director)
-
Representatives from PCT and WWL Directorates
-
PEC Representative
Task and Finish Groups
-
PBC Commissioners
-
Ashton Leigh and
Wigan
Community Healthcare
-
Representative from
Wigan
MBC.
.
15International perspectives Developing Roles in
Primary Care
Care Coordination
Expanded Provision
Gatekeeper
Integration
Case Management
Curative and Preventative
16Key features for the future
- ? Variation
- ? Quality in everything we do
- Patient choices and more in control
- A customer focus
- Individualised care AND population care
- Clinicians leading the change
- Competition for patients funding following
patient - New and expanding providers
- Primary care commissioners AND Primary care
providers - Financial environment
17What will success look like in 5 years?
- Culture shift - better relationships, highly
valued - Patients empowered, expectations managed
- Fair and equitable system of care
- Evidence based, preventative and
- outcome focused
- Integrated clinical teams with leaders,
- with earned autonomy
- Maximised and controlled resources
- Highest quality (100 QOF performance, optimal
patient experience, KPIs aligned to needs of
local people) - Quality incentives as a lever for change
18Where are the opportunities?
- Workforce
- Integration
- Contracts
- Provider market
- Investment and Incentives
- Facilities
- Information
- Technologies
- Local people
19Initial Thoughts on Community Services
- International picture
- National practice
- Policy
20International Picture
- Most research and academic papers relate to
primary care, which may include aspects of
community provision, but rarely relates directly
to what we consider as community services - Keleher et al 2008 conducted a systematic review
covering Australia, the UK, the US, the
Netherlands, Canada, Sweden, New Zealand and Hong
Kong. - Modest international evidence that nurses in
primary care settings - Can provide effective care and achieve positive
health outcomes for patients similar to that
provided by doctors. - Nurses are effective in care management and
achieve good patient compliance. - Nurses are also effective in a more diverse range
of roles including chronic disease management,
illness prevention and health promotion. - Nevertheless, there is insufficient evidence
about primary care nurses roles and impact on
patient health outcomes.
21International Picture
- The Australian Primary Health Care Research
Institute at The Australian National University
review of evidence in primary health care. This
project reviews innovative models for
comprehensive primary health care delivery - It looks at primary health care in five
countries, the UK, the US, Canada, New Zealand
and the Netherlands. - They identify commonalities in the aims of
primary health care reform including - Improving the cost-effectiveness and efficiency
of services - Improving service access and equity
- Improving the quality of services.
22National Practice
- Recent Review by Kings Fund Shaping PCT
Provider Services The future for community
health, published in April 2009. Main findings - Need to address performance issues
- The evidence suggests that community health
services, particularly community nursing
services, urgently need to address a number of
performance issues. There are opportunities to
enhance the quality of services if they - clarify roles and responsibilities
- introduce more systematic approaches to caseload
management - move towards a service that is driven by needs
not demand. - If some community services are to provide a
genuine alternative to hospital care they need to
be able to provide 24/7 support, with close
working between all those offering support in the
out-of-hours period.
.
23National Practice
- Recent Review by Kings Fund Shaping PCT
Provider Services The future for community
health, published in April 2009. Main findings - Successful reconfiguration
- The report suggests possible reasons why
previous attempts to locate community health
service provision better within the health care
system have failed - each reorganisation has focused on structural
change and not challenged the way in which
services are delivered or staff work - services have remained separate from primary care
despite the importance of close working
relationships - aside from the attempts to reorganise, community
health services have not been the focus of
national or local attention and have struggled to
attract investment effective leadership.
24National Practice
- Recent Review by Kings Fund Shaping PCT
Provider Services The future for community
health, published in April 2009. Main findings - .Better integrated care
- The experience of integrated care models
reinforces a number of these messages and
suggests that if primary care trusts wish to
deliver more patient-focused and integrated care
through their new community services structures,
they need to - focus on process as much as on structure
- take account of the dynamics of new ways of
working - focus on the patients
- actively engage GPs to ensure strong
co-ordination of primary and community services.
25National Practice
- Tribals own exposure to provider service review
is extensive, via the Partnerships UK Provider
Development Programme. - Key findings
- General intention to move away from describing
services as individual service lines ( ie DN,
HV, Sch Nursing, Physiotherapy) and towards
Programmes of Care ( eg LTC, Urgent Care) - Recognition that
- Performance monitoring is weak, due to data
collection and lack of focus - Quality measures are lacking
- Block contracts are mainly in situ, often without
detailed SLAs/specs - Community tariff offers opportunities to achieve
- Improved productivity
- Movement of services from acute setting
26Policy
- Numerous national policy each building up a
describe clear direction of travel for community
services - Our Health, Our Care, Our Say set out the
original vision for community services - The Next Stage Review built on this and presented
an approach and some principles for the future of
community services - Transforming Community Services Programme
- Transforming Community Services provides a
programme for the redevelopment of community
services. it has been developed to improve
service provision and drive up quality and
overall performance in the services delivered to
local communities
27Policy
- Transforming Community Services Programme
- Work streams are developing which focus on
- Currencies
- Pricing
- Organisational form
- Clinical pathways or Programmes
- These are all underpinned by the new community
services contract.
28Policy
- Practice Based Commissioning (PBC)
- PBC provides the clinical leadership at the heart
of World Class Commissioning - it is about
engaging practices and other primary care
professionals in the commissioning of services - PBC enables primary care professionals, working
across boundaries with secondary care clinicians
and others, to redesign services that better meet
the needs of their patients.
29Key Messages
- Clinically led change
- The strength of integrated services
- Quality at the heart of good primary and
community care
30List of delegates
- Jackie Forshaw (PCT)
- Rose Pealing (PCT)
- Clare Thomason (PCT)
- Deirdre OBrien (PCT)
- Chris Tunes (LOC)
- Derek Scholar (LCD)
- Paul Carrol (PCT)
- Sally Forshaw (PCT)
- Adil Khan (GP)
- Jo Culshaw (Practise Manager)
- Linda Woodgate (LDC)
- S. Mughal (GP)
- Kate Fallon (ALW CH)
- Sheila Shaw (GP)
- Umesh Patel (PCT)
- Linda Scott (PCT)
- Joe Chattin
31Group Task and Delegate Feedback
- The delegates were split into 3
multi-professional groups and were asked to
consider 4 strategic questions which are relevant
to developing a vision for Primary and Community
Care Services in NHS ALW. - The Questions were
- What are the key principles of good primary and
community care services? - How can we work together to assure high quality
primary and community care improvements for the
benefit of the people of NHS ALW? - How do we ensure access and choice of services
are delivered and maintained? - What opportunities and innovations are available
to NHS ALW?
32Strategic Questions
- Key principles of good primary and community care
services? The following list was generated by
delegates
33Strategic Questions
- Summary
- Primary and community care services in ALW should
be consistently high quality and equitable and
should meet the high expectations of patients and
the public. To enable services to become
integrated and seamless they need to also be
innovative. Services should also be educational,
allowing professionals to share knowledge and
supporting patients to take responsibility for
their health and well being. Services should be
safe, responsive and be both accountable to, and
supported by NHS ALW, patients and the community.
34Strategic Questions
- How can we work together to assure high quality
primary and community care improvements for the
benefit of the people of NHS ALW? - Clear benchmarking tools, agreed performance
measures and disciplined contract monitoring that
is consistent across all professions. - Communication is key. NHS ALW needs to share the
vision with stakeholders and with public. - Need to understand what high quality means for
ALW and communicate this to patients, so they
expect high quality services.
35Strategic Questions
- Need to ensure adequacy of supply do we have
enough GPs, dentists, pharmacists, opticians,
community staff to deliver the improvements in
quality we need - Need to ensure adequacy of funding and adequacy
of our estates are buildings fit for purpose
and being fully utilised. - Integrated primary and community services is key,
GPs should work in teams with community staff. - Choice should not affect quality. Need to drive
forward quality even where there is no
competition by working in partnership.
36Strategic Questions
- How do we ensure access and choice of services
are delivered and maintained? - Make sure access is as wide as possible and
looking at alternative health promotion sites
including hairdressers, leisure centres, schools. - Better understand what people need to access 24/7
and if there is a need and demand for that
service. - Commission a better range of availability from
providers, including offering incentives to
stimulate the market. - Be clear about what must be commissioned, what
should be commissioned and what can be
commissioned.
37Strategic Questions
- Patients need to be sign posted to facilitate
choice and message needs to be consistent and
high quality information. - Ensuring teams are integrated and professional
knowledge is shared across teams will facilitate
choice. - Ensuring patients take responsibility and
reducing waste such as Did Not Attends.
38Strategic Questions
- What opportunities and innovations are available
to NHS ALW?
39Strategic Questions
- Other key burning issues
- Need to find cost effective ways of doing things
- Need to shorten patient journey and reduce
inappropriate visits - Giving community services opportunities to expand
and develop (shifting services from secondary
care) - Ensuring sing handed practises are not
marginalised - Risk averse culture needs to be addressed not
just PCT but other providers/ contractors - Federation
40Next Steps in developing a Primary
Community Care Strategy
- How do you want be involved, own and drive
forward primary and community care change? - Feedback from event circulated swiftly
- We will be developing a clear understanding of
the current service provision and reviewing best
practice and opportunities - We will be drafting the strategy and offering
comment - Date of next event 16th June 2009, Leigh Sports
Village