Title:
1Past, Present and Future
- Contributions from
- Sinclair Molloy, Health Care Manager Emergency /
Urgent Care - Dr Bridget Oates, Consultant Paediatrician
- Jean Davies, Senior Paediatric Nurse
- Irene Campbell, Project Manager PFPI Your Health
HEAT 10 Networking Event 12th November 2010
2Analysis
Social Marketing
Acute Paediatric Services
3Observations
- NHS Ayrshire and Arran has amongst the highest
paediatric emergency inpatient admission rate in
Scotland and all paediatric admissions are
triaged in AE. - Attendance is on an upward trend (up 3.1 per yr)
- Even more so in the under 5s (up almost 7 per
yr) - Eight of the last ten months are all time highs
for U5s - Can changes in population explain this?
- Attendance seems to follow the general pattern
- Highest in Sunday/Monday and in the Spring
- There are moves from Mon to Wed/Thus in FY1011
- U5 attendance moving to later in the evening
(6pm-8pm) - Are these changes real? Will need to wait and
see. - A huge proportion of Paediatrics are self
referrals - GP Referral has almost halved proportionally for
U5s - ..but GP referral has increased for A5-16s
Based on AE Data only
Bryan Samuel, Senior Information Analyst
4Gaps in the analysis
- Very little diagnosis data is available.
- Its difficult to identify social groups.
- No information on family relationships.
- No information on family behaviour.
- There is no way of identifying shifts from other
parts of the service. - Paediatric frequent attendance has not been
investigated so far. - Need to consider the relative population change
in paediatric patients. - Will need to wait for completion of FY1011 to be
sure that any change in behaviour is real. - Need to look at other data sources (Out of Hours,
NHS24 etc).
Bryan Samuel, Senior Information Analyst
5Redirections from AE to ADOC
- Redirections are currently taking place from the
Emergency Department at Ayr to NHS ADOC for
children and young people presenting with
suitable minor illness conditions.  - This redirection process has been in
place throughout 2010, with no reported
challenges to date. The redirections to NHS ADOC
on the Ayr site have the added patient
benefit of a co located site. - Redirections for children and young people
from Crosshouse Emergency Department to NHS ADOC
are in the early discussion phase at this time,
attributed in part to the separate locations of
the Emergency Department and NHS ADOC, Lister
street. Progress around the criteria for suitable
redirection is anticipated in early 2011.
6Caring for the children of Ayrshire
- Dr Bridget Oates, Consultant Paediatrician
- NHS Ayrshire Arran
7Huge changes in provision of paediatric services
in 2006
8Goals
- Further improve the already high standard of
acute paediatric care given to the children of
Ayrshire. - Facilitate the rapid assessment and appropriate
management of children presenting to the acute
paediatric services. - Concentrate a pool of paediatric medical and
nursing expertise. - Reduce unnecessary admission to the paediatric
ward. - See and process children for day case
investigation or treatment. - Create a workable interface between primary and
secondary care allowing GPs rapid access to a
senior paediatric opinion. - Increase educational opportunities for both
junior medical and nursing staff to learn about
emergency assessment and the philosophy of
ambulatory care.
9Old System
- 3 wards on 2 separate sites
- General ward in Ayr Hospital 18 beds
- Medical ward in Crosshouse 28 beds
- Surgical ward in Crosshouse 20 beds 6 day case
beds - Total of 72 beds
- Children came directly to the in patient ward
from primary care. - High admission rate was a trade off for safety
10Current Situation
- Inpatient ward in Crosshouse 23 beds (16
cubicles) includes 4 adolescent beds - Ambulatory unit (CAU) with 10 beds
- - 4 bed bay for emergency referrals
- - 4 bed bay for day cases
- - 2 cubicles
- Total 33 beds
11Expected Medical and Surgical Patients referred
to On Call Paediatric Team
GP Referrals or 48 hour open access
patients Chronic Patient with open access or
other referral
Present to Paediatric AE suite for Triage
Other Triage Category
Triage Category Red or Orange
Transfer to CAU
Resuscitation Area in AE and emergency call to
paediatric registrar
Stabilisation
Observe in SSAU for up to 6 hours or until ward
round if after 10 pm
Discharge Home
Admit to Paediatric inpatient ward
Transfer to ITU in Crosshouse
Transfer to ITU in Yorkhill
Note Those patients presenting in extremis or
coming by ambulance and deemed to be Stand by
patients will go directly to Paediatric
resuscitation bay in the main AE area.
12Children Self Presenting to AE
Present to Paediatric AE suite for Triage
Triage category Red or Orange
Other Triage Category
Resuscitation Area in main AE and emergency
call to appropriate medical staff
Discharge Home
Seen and assessed by AE medical and nursing staff
Stabilisation
Referred to and assessed by appropriate surgical
subspecialty
If child for inpatient management clerked in AE
Transfer to CAU for review
Discharge Home
Transfer to ITU in Crosshouse
Transfer to ITU in Yorkhill
Observe for up to 6 hours or until ward round
if after 10 pm
Admit to Paediatric inpatient ward
Note Those patients presenting in extremis or
coming by ambulance and deemed to be stand by
patients will go directly to the paediatric
resuscitation bay in the main AE area
13 Present Service
Child Family Health Event
Childs Journey
14Childrens Assessment Unit Benefits
- Improved Care
- Concentrated a pool of medical and nursing
expertise. - Facilitated rapid assessment and appropriate
management of our children - Reduced unnecessary admissions
15Relationship with ED
- Fluid interface between the CAU and ED.
- We are really one big department looking after
children, not 2 separate ones! - Single entry system.
- Commonality of guidelines with ED
16Hot Clinics
- Available to each Consultant on a daily basis
- Patients do not need to go through ED triage
system - Follow up then arranged as necessary like any
other out patient
17Follow up and Open Access Folder
- 48 hour open access
- Out patient review on assessment unit.
- Out patient follow up in appropriate
geographical area - Open access folder specific patients with
complex health needs
18Audit Data Collection
- 1st January 30th June 2007
- summer / winter divide
- Data collected from
- Record of referrals
- Case notes
- Typed discharge letters
- Data anonymised and stored on database (Microsoft
Access 2003) prior to analysis at the end of the
study
19- 2007 audit data
- 97.3 (n2040) resided within Ayrshire
- 57 children were from out with Ayrshire
- 30 from other parts of Scotland
- 27 from elsewhere
- 2287 children seen
- 88 children per week 2010 data
- Data complete for 2099 (91.8)
- Slight male preponderance (ratio 1.2 1)
Crosshouse Hospital
2028 under 1 year of age
21Time of Day
- 42 arrived during the normal working day
shift - 27 arrived during the evening
shift - 31 arrived during the night
shift
22Referral Source
Primary care 49.5 ED 43.9
23Discharge Destination
- Admitted to Crosshouse 34
- Admitted other hospital 1
- Unknown 2
-
- 63 discharged home
Acute bronchospasm Viral illness Bronchiolitis LRT
I Gastroenteritis
compares favourably with 40-60 reported by
other UK Units1
2448 hour Open Access
- 69 children (5 of those discharged) returned to
the Unit -
- Comparable to other UK Units (0.442 73)
- Most common diagnoses gastroenteritis
- 20 children admitted as a result of a return visit
25Summary
- We have improved the acute hospital care for the
children of Ayrshire. - Access to acute paediatric services should not be
restricted to those requiring hospital
admission. - Children are not being admitted to hospital
unless absolutely necessary.
26Thank you and Questions?
27Targeted Social Marketing
- Irene Campbell, Project Manager PFPI, Your Health
- Project Manager for Public Education Campaign
28Focus Group 2009
- It is a nightmare at times trying to access an
appointment. People are so peeved off and they
are thinking if they phone up and need to give a
whole spiel to someone or wait 3 weeks and I know
people are not willing to go through this and
take their children to AE.
29Public Education Campaign
- Targeted public education campaign
- 2 strand approach - whole population
- Targeted approach postcode analysis
- Targeting 17 35 year old males
- Targeting children
- Range of materials/approaches
30Message to children
- Poster design campaigns at local primary schools
- 4 locations
- Poster winners posters to be displayed locally
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34How have we targeted 17 35 year old males?
- Campaign launch at Kilmarnock v Celtic match 19
September (8645) - Beer mats distributed via local licensing
departments - Publicity shot with Kilmarnock football team
- Radio campaign West FM Westsound
35How have we included children/young people?
- 6th Year Pupils win an i-tunes voucher
competition (77 entries) - Leaflet to be put in all school bags at targeted
schools, secondary and primary - Materials to all local colleges
36In addition
- Booklet in Red Book
- Target student unions
- Focus groups
- Mothers Toddlers groups
37Thank you
Any questions?