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Clinical Governance

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MEL (1999)10. Our aims & objectives. Equity of care ... and Community (Mike Winter) and LUHD (Simon Mackenzie), and agree Action Plans ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Clinical Governance


1
Clinical Governance Managed Clinical and Care
Networks
  • Alison Bramley, MCN Manager
  • Coronary Heart Disease, Stroke, and Respiratory
    MCNs

2
Why do we need MCNs?
  • What are the problems to which an MCN is the
    answer?
  • A. Patients
  • perceive service is not joined up
  • get conflicting messages
  • wait too long
  • travel too far

3
Inequity in patient pathway
  • Services differ in different areas of Lothian
  • Quality improvements in one part of Lothian are
    not spread
  • Service improvement is not maintained
  • Improvements are not built in to become how we
    do things round here.

4
For example
  • Respiratory Healthcare Group has met for several
    years developing a strategy and action plan for
    COPD to move more care into community
  • Work on COPD is still fragmented throughout
    Lothian and progress has stagnated
  • New driver of HEAT target T6 reduction in
    readmissions and number of bed days
  • It now needs leadership and management/admin
    resource to ensure an equitable, evidence-based,
    improved pathway is established
  • The Group will become an MCN with funding from
    ABPI for two years and contributions from CHPs
    LTC funding.

5
Lothian Networks
  • These vary in history and nature
  • Diabetes, CHD Stroke MCNs set up with national
    funding to progress national strategy and
    projects.
  • Palliative Care Network not yet fully supported
    as MCN but making local progress on improving
    care.
  • Ophthalmology unsupported.
  • Respiratory Network becoming an MCN with external
    short term funding.
  • Other local networks of clinicians working
    together informally across boundaries aspire to
    MCN status.
  • Regional National Networks.

6
NHS Lothian MCNs
7
Managed Clinical Network
  • Managed
  • Clear purpose
  • Structured, organised, supported, monitored
  • Clinical
  • Good clinical engagement
  • Effective Patient involvement
  • Evidence-based care
  • Network
  • Resource to service providers planners
  • Role improving whole patient pathway

8
What does an MCN look like?
  • linked groups of health professionals and
    organisations from primary, secondary and
    tertiary care, working in a coordinated manner,
    unconstrained by existing professional and health
    board boundaries, to ensure equitable provision
    of high quality clinically effective services
    throughout Scotland
  • MEL (1999)10

9
Our aims objectives
  • Equity of care
  • Dissemination of information and patient focused
    public involvement
  • Development of protocols and guidelines
  • Improve patient services and patient care
  • Increase quality of care through evidence based
    practice, peer review and audit

10
Guidance on MCNs
  • Designed to Care (1997)
  • Acute Services Review (1998)
  • MEL (1999) 10
  • NHS HDL (2002) 69
  • Building a Health Service Fit for the Future
    (Kerr Report May 2005)
  • HDL (2007)21Strengthening the role of managed
    clinical networks

11
9 Core Principles
  • Clear management arrangements, Lead Clinician is
    responsible for network function Public Annual
    Report to accountable body.
  • Journey of care mapped. MCN related to planning
    function
  • Annual workplan of service improvements and
    patient benefits

4. Evidence based
5. Multi-disciplinary extend roles
12
9 Core Principles (cont)
  • Supported service user (patient) and voluntary
    sector involvement Capture service user views
    improve access improve patient information

7. MCN has Quality Assurance Programme approved
by LHB.(NHS QIS guidance awaited) 8. Utilise
education and trainingpotential of network
9. Generate better value for money
13
How MCNs add value
  • Co-operate to redesign pathways
  • Agree protocols and information for referral and
    discharge
  • across boundaries (primary, secondary, tertiary,
    social care)
  • equitably across Lothian
  • Resolve conflicts of interest across boundaries
  • Address inequalities
  • Involve patients in redesign of pathways and
    design of patient information
  • Monitor service quality against standards
  • and much more see market stalls

14
Key achievements Stroke MCN
  • Stroke Hotline
  • enables a direct phone conversation between GP
    and Consultant for most appropriate referral
    route and immediate booking for neurovascular
    clinic reducing waiting time from over two weeks
    to typically three days.
  • Community-based stroke developments
  • Continuing multidisciplinary outpatient
    management in Edinburgh Day Centres
  • Access to lifestyle self-management programmes
  • Development of Phase 4 physical fitness training
    pathway

15
Key achievements Coronary Heart Disease MCN
  • Rapid Access Chest Pain Clinics
  • reduced waiting times from over 23 weeks totwo
    days or less
  • Cardiac Rehabilitation in the Community
  • seamless home, community and hospital based
    rehabilitation services tailored to needs of
    thepatient
  • Heart Failure nursing service
  • clinical care and support of patients in their
    own home reducing hospital readmissions in
    patients gt 65 years of age by 50

16
Key achievements Diabetes MCN
  • Integrated diabetes register with shared data
  • Roll out of retinopathy screening programme
  • Trained staff in each general practice
  • Foot screening resource
  • Standardised insulin pump training

17
Key achievements Palliative Care MCN
  • consistent DNAR information between care settings
    reducing inappropriate resuscitation attempts
  • 84 of Practices adopt the Gold Standards
    Framework for improving palliative care
  • a single referral form for all palliative care
    services in Lothian.

18
Key achievements Ophthalmology MCCN
  • Lothian Orthoptic Optometrist Partnership (LOOP)
  • Reduced waiting times, early detection and
    treatment, and reduced surgical intervention for
    children with visual problems
  • Vision Support Centre Eye Pavilion
  • A unique joined up service of health and social
    care providing support, advice and education to
    staff and patients across Lothian
  • Lothian/West Lothian Optometry Cataract
    Initiative (LOCI)
  • Successful pilot programme to improve access to
    cataract services, improving quality of referrals
    and waiting times
  • Contact Lens Optometry Partnership (CLOP)
  • Specialised contact lens service in the community
    for complex long term corneal disease

19
Key achievements Respiratory MCN
Pulmonary rehabilitation in 3 community centres
in Edinburgh and 2 in West Lothian and planned
for East and Mid Lothian Met Office warnings
for COPD patients in East Lothian
20
Principles of accountability and clinical
governance for MCNs
  • The general principles of accountability and
    clinical governance will apply to MCNs as they do
    all other work undertaken within the NHS in
    Scotland
  • MEL(1999)10

21
What does a good qualityMCN look like?
  • Clear purpose
  • Leadership and enthusiasm
  • Good clinical engagement
  • Patient involvement
  • Effective management
  • Quality assurance framework

Diabetes MCN Executive team
22
MCNs Clinical Governance Role
  • MCNs are virtual organisations without
    operational responsibility or accountability
  • Clinical Governance remains the responsibility of
    operational staff accountable through the
    management line to the Chief Executive
  • Operational staff and managers are members of
    MCNs
  • MCNs have a role in ensuring safe and effective
    clinical care

23
Current performance mgt of accredited and
supported MCNs
  • Accountable to Director of Planning
  • Clinical Leads appraised annually by Director of
    Planning and Medical Director
  • MCN Workplan signed off by Director of Planning
    and reported to NHSiL Planning Group
  • Annual Report
  • public document
  • for info to HGRM and Service Redesign Committees

24
Performance mgt of redesign and improvement
programmes
  • Scottish standards eg NHS QIS Standards, Scottish
    Gold Standard for palliative care
  • Standards from national/professional bodies eg
    NICE, British Cardiac Intervention Society etc
  • Ensure programme to implement SIGN
    recommendations and is in place for all sectors
  • Monitor eg compliance with SIGN, QIS peer reviews
    and national audits
  • Identify gaps
  • Prioritise Action Plan to meet standards.

25
Monitor and report progress of performance
against standards in new structure
  • MCNs an integral part of Clinical Improvement
    Strategy
  • Report to HGRM Groups in Primary and Community
    (Mike Winter) and LUHD (Simon Mackenzie), and
    agree Action Plans
  • Prioritise work on new SIGN Guideline
    recommendations, NHS QIS reviews and outcomes of
    national audits
  • Locally agreed standards incorporated in MCN
    Quality Assurance Frameworks
  • Annual (public) Reports with workplans to remedy
    gaps to HGRM Committee.

26
Performance and Clinical Governance of MCNs
  • MCNs are accountable to the Board through the
    HGRM Committee for Clinical Governance matters
  • It is up to the Board to make sure MCNs are fit
    for purpose when delegating authority to them
  • The mechanism for reporting to the committee
    should be clear, agreed and formalised
  • NHS QIS advice on local accreditation of MCNs is
    awaited.

27
Examples of good Clinical Governance
  • Diabetes MCN Clinical Governance Subgroup
  • Stroke MCN action plan to meet NHS QIS and QAF
    standards
  • CHD MCN links to Quality Improvement Teams who
    implement SIGN Guidelines

28
Future Developments
  • NHSiL Planning Group will agree a strategy and
    criteria for support of future local MCNs
  • An advisory check list for any budding MCN
  • NHS QIS Guidance on local accreditation will be
    put in place

29
MCNs are the answer
  • Services are better joined up and equitable
    across Lothian
  • Patient information is consistent
  • Pathways are implemented and waiting is reduced
  • Services are redesigned to be nearer to where the
    patient lives
  • Quality improvement principles are used to
    implement and maintain good quality
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