Title: New Initiatives in Primary Health Care Health
1New Initiatives in Primary Health Care Health
- Now More Than Ever
- An International
- Perspective
- Professor
- Barbara Parfitt CBE PhD MSc
- MCommH RGN RM FNP
2Current Shortcomings of Health Care delivery
(World Health Report 2008 PHC now more than
ever)
- Inverse Care
- Impoverishing Care
- Fragmented Care
- Unsafe care
- Misdirected care
3Four sets of PHC reforms
Universal coverage Reforms
Public Policy Reforms
4Multi-disciplinary and multi-agency team working
Integrated care approach
Public health approaches to protecting the public
Family Physician Family Health Nurses / Midwives
Community participation
Supporting self care
Meeting the health needs of communities
Working directly with individuals and their carers
Supporting anticipatory care
Co-ordinating services
5Family Health Nurse Role
- Guided by
- WHO Europe definition
- NHS Education Scotland Competency framework
- learning from all pilot countries
- Characteristics
- based on a generalist model
- Advanced nursing practice
- combines clinical care with health improvement
- works at 3 levels individual, family community
6Different Cultures Scotland Tajikistan
- Family Health Nurse (WHO Euro model
- Scotland Tajikistan)
- Community Health Nurse (RoNIC model Scotland)
- Different
- Geographies
- Health needs
- Different support systems
7Scotland FHN Site Locations (Phases 1 and 2)
8Tajikistan site locations
Varsob
Medical College Post graduate Institute
Kulob
Qurghon teppe
9The National Project Scotland
- To test the FHN model as a way of delivering
community nursing services to remote rural
areas (phase1) and urban areas (phase 2) - To develop and test the educational preparation
of FHN
- Scottish Executive (2006) The WHO Europe Family
Health Nursing Pilot in Scotland, Final Report.
Edinburgh Scottish Executive. http//www.scotland
.gov.uk/Publications/2006/10/31141146/0
10The National Project Tajikistan
- To evaluate the contribution of Family Health
Nurses towards the National Health Reform
Programme - To review the learning outcomes achieved by
community nurses following completion of the four
year curriculum and the six month re training
programme.
11Indicative OutcomesScotland
- Improved patient and family experience
- Identification of problems at an early stage
- Reduced need for hospitalisation
- Improving outcomes of care
- Increasing organisational efficiency
- Larger pilot required, implementation of
development sites and full evaluation to test a
generic advanced community nursing role
12 Tajikistan Outcomes
-
- Community based curriculum for all nurse
education pre-qualifying programmes (4 Med
colleges 9 Schools) - Reduction in infant deaths and childhood malaria
cases - Timely interventions
- Improved access to health services
- 1000 new Family Health Nurses
- 300 community nursing bags supplied
- Raised self esteem of nurses
13Outcomes Shared in Both Countries
- Benefits
- Intervention for those who might fall through
the cracks - First point of contact and accessibility
- Early detection and prevention of high risk
health threats - Integrated team approach at community level
- Empowerment and role modeling
14Risks of the model
- Community Dependency
- Possible time issues / 24 hour on call
- Financial un-sustainability
- Change of status and position for nurses (HVs,
DN,s) - Non engagement by the team
- Focus on acute intervention rather than public
health
15Issues
- Interface with other services
- Workforce modelling
- Change management
- Generic vs specialist model
16Family-centred health care modelKey Components
INPUTS
CARE CONTEXT
OUTPUTS
Education, training culture
Family centred health care Measurable outcomes
- Country specific Primary Health Care Model
- Accessibility
- Tackling MDGs
- Cost effective
Integrated team network
Advanced nursing Expertise
17WHO Multi-country EvaluationFamily Health Nursing
- Data from 8 countries using questionnaires
- Similar concepts in role across Europe
- Improved communication in team when shared focus
- Move towards clinical disease public health
- Further work on role clarity and sustainability
- Education programmes differed due to in-country
system resources
WHO Europe (2006) Report on the Evaluation of the
WHO Multi-country Family Health Nurse Pilot
Study, Copenhagen WHO Europe http//www.euro.who
.int/document/e88841.pdf
18 Scottish Government Visible, Accessible
and Integrated Care Review of Nursing in the
Community (RoNIC)
19Main drivers
- Patient and carer needs
- Scotlands population profile and health care
needs - Health and social policy
- Nursing, health and social care workforce issues
20Scotlands population profile and health care
needs
- Increasing numbers of older people
- Health is worse than either the rest of Great
Britain or Europe on a range of indicators, from
premature deaths to dental health among children - Within this, substantial inequalities between
different parts of Scotland and between different
groups within the population
21Nursing, health and social care workforce issues
- Diminishing number of work-age adults
- The age profile of community nurses different
from nurses in the acute sector - Increasing demand on health care services
- Modernisation agenda with increased delivery of
health care in primary care. - Maintenance of current levels of service in the
face of recruitment and retention problems
22 Nursing Service Model
Individuals, carers, families and communities
Clinical Team Leader/Advanced Practitioner
Nurse Consultant
Primary Health Care Team, including GP. practice
nurses, pharmacists, maternity services etc
Community Health Nurse (CHN)
Acute Sector Community Hospitals Local
Authority Teams
Community staff nurse Health care support worker
Individuals, carers, families and communities
23CHN Practice Framework (RONIC model)
Working directly with people
Meeting health needs
Public health / Protecting the public
Nurses working in the community
Supporting Anticipatory care
Co-ordinating services
Multi disciplinary Team working
Supporting self care
24Current Status of the roNIC Project
- Four development sites identified
- Project Director appointed
- Four Project leads in each development site
appointed - Competencies identified for the new Role
- Educational programmes developed
25- Educational transition taking place
-
- Base Line Study Completed
- New teams in place
- Full evaluation commencing July 2009
26RoNIC base line studyMain findings (79/09)
- Experienced workforce
- Community Nursing teams with varied organisation
- Engagement confidence
- The invisible nurse
- Mid range levels of satisfaction
- Mixed views about proposed changes
- Rural areas seen to fit the new model
27Key areas for investigation
- Staff, patient, client, carers perceptions and
satisfaction levels - Time and cost of the implementation (value for
money) - Team working / roles responsibilities
- Patient outcomes
- Impact measures
28Limitations
- Short time span for implementation prior to
evaluation. Possible distortion of results - Variance between different development sites
- Difficulty in separating net versus gross
outcomes - Number of variables within each situation
29Evaluation Questions
- Does everyone understand what we are trying to
do? - Did we manage the implementation effectively?
- Have we achieved our objectives?
- Have we made any impact on the problems that gave
rise to the implementation of the project in the
first place? - Do we understand the contribution that Community
Health Nurses and the RoNIC model can make
towards improving the health of our communities?
30Some final points
- Health systems that maximise the skills and
expertise of nurses are more likely to achieve
the Millennium Development Goals. - Nurses are key players in providing an effective
primary health service for our communities. - Appropriate community based education and
advanced levels of competence are necessary for
nurses to undertake this role.
31Thank you