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SelfManagement Support for Chronic Conditions The Flinders Model

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Title: SelfManagement Support for Chronic Conditions The Flinders Model


1
Self-Management Support for Chronic
ConditionsThe Flinders Model
  • Flinders Human Behaviour and Health Research Unit
  • Flinders University
  • Malcolm Battersby

2
Aims
  • Background to the Flinders model
  • Understanding the Flinders model
  • Research
  • Training
  • Education
  • Australian Better Health Initiative
  • Evaluation

3
Why is CCSM important? (Adherence)
4
Acute Chronic
  • Ongoing
  • Incurable
  • QOL highly dependent on pts self management and
    decision making
  • QOL highly dependent on ongoing support services
  • Pt often has more knowledge
  • Short term goals to meet long term outcomes
  • Compliance and self reliance expected
  • Episodic
  • Cure expected
  • QOL highly dependent on professional care
  • QOL highly dependent on short term services
  • HP generally the expert
  • Short term goals
  • Compliance expected

5
Sub-optimal PoorCare Outcomes
  • Delays in detection of complications or decline
  • Failures in self-management, or increased risk
    factors as a result of client passivity or
    ignorance.
  • Reduced quality of care
  • Undetected or inadequately managed psychological
    distress
  • Wagner, E., Von Korff, M., et al, Organising Care
    for Patients with Chronic Illness. The Milbank
    Quarterly, Vol. 74, No.4, 1996
  • Irregularor incompleteor inadequate .or
    inconsistent assessment,
  • treatment
  • education, motivation, feedback and /or
    follow up.

6
Patients are (already) the Primary Source of Care
People with chronic conditions are the
principal care-givers. Health care
professionals should be consultants supporting
them in this role. Each day, patients decide
what they are going to eat, whether they will
exercise and to what extent they will consume
prescribed medicines.
Bodenheimer et al, JAMA 2002
Patients are in control. No matter
what professionals say and do, they can and do
veto decisions a health professional makes.
Glasgow Anderson, Diabetes Care, 1999
7
My Background
  • Isaac Marks Inst of Psychiatry, London
    1987-1990
  • Behavioural psychotherapy for anxiety disorders
    training and education of nurses
  • Outcome measurement is integral to motivation for
    both patient and therapist, and provides
    competency, individual and service outcome
    measures
  • Anxiety and Problem Gambling treatment service at
    Flinders Medical Centre (650 referrals annually)

8
Background - SA HealthPlus
  • SA HealthPlus Coordinated Care Trial
  • 1997 1999
  • Patients with chronic and complex illnesses
  • 8 projects in 4 regions of South Australia

  • Hypothesis
  • Coordinated Care would improve health outcomes
    for the same or less cost
  • Battersby et al, BMJ, March 2005

9
Model of Care
  • Patient-centred approach (holistic)
  • Behavioural change towards improved self
    management
  • Evidenced based guidelines
  • Prospective Care Planning
  • Prevention focussed
  • Improved coordination of care
  • System change

10
Training
  • 4,500 patients randomised into Intervention
    (3000) and Control (1500) groups in 8 projects
  • Training unit established to provide training
    for
  • 100 Service Coordinators
  • 295 General Practitioners

11
Components of Training Program
1. Problems and Goals assessment, expressed in
behavioural terms 2. Generic Care Planning
process 3. Competency assessment 4. Regular
clinical supervision 5. Service Coordinator
Appraisal and Accreditation 6. Ongoing
skills training and development
12
Achievement of Goal 1
13
BACKGROUND -Year 1 review
  • Problems and Goals worked well for most patients
  • However the system designed to allocate
    coordination time according to level of severity
    (H/M/L) wasnt being used
  • WHY?
  • Because some people who had severe complicated
    conditions, but were good self-managers, had good
    supports and relationship with their GP, did not
    need coordinated care
  • Service coordination was provided based on
    whether a person was a good self-manager or not
  • Self management was not defined or
    operationalised

14
Learning
  • Self-management capacity is modulated by the
    illness and personal attributes as well as
    attributes of health providers and cultural and
    social factors
  • Self-management ability needs to be assessed
    before the right intervention is offered
  • Not all consumers need self-management
    interventions and those who do will respond to a
    wide range of learning methods, some group, some
    individual
  • (Battersby et al, Milbank Quarterly, Dec 2006)

15
Design a Clinician initiated, Generic, Chronic
Condition Self-management Program
  • Literature search and review
  • Stakeholder involvement/focus groups
  • GP education for their input into program
    material and process
  • Pilot project guidelines and timeframe
  • Training of participants - patient, GP, and
    Service Coordinator.

16
Brainstorm
  • What are the characteristics
  • of people who
  • self manage well?
  • What are the barriers?

17
Definition of Self-Management
  • The Centre for Advancement in Health (1996)
    proposed the following definition
  • Involves the person with the chronic disease
    engaging in activities that protect and promote
    health, monitoring and managing of symptoms and
    signs of illness, managing the impacts of illness
    on functioning, emotions and interpersonal
    relationships and adhering to treatment regimes.
    (p.1)

18
  • Kate Lorig (1993) states that self-management is
    also about enabling
  • Participants to make informed choices, to adapt
    new perspectives and generic skills that can be
    applied to new problems as they arise, to
    practice new health behaviours, and to maintain
    or regain emotional stability.

19
Six Principles of Self-Management
  • 1. Know your condition
  • Have active Involvement in decision making with
    the GP or health workers
  • Follow the Care plan that is agreed upon with
    the GP and other health professionals

20
Six Principles of Self-Management
  • 4. Monitor symptoms associated with the
    condition(s) and Respond to, manage and cope
    with the symptoms.
  • 5. Manage the physical, emotional and
  • social Impact of the condition(s) on your life.
  • 6. Live a healthy Lifestyle

21
Principles of Self-Management
  • K Knowledge
  • I Involvement
  • C Care plan
  • MR Monitor and Respond
  • I Impact
  • L Lifestyle

22
Partners In Health ProgramTools/Interventions
  • PIH (Partners in Health) Scale
  • Cue and Response interview
  • 3. Problem and Goals
  • 4. Care Plan
  • 5. Partners in Health Handbook
  • 6. Symptom Action Plan (SAP)
  • 7 Monitoring Diary
  • 8 . Doctor visit Checklist

23
Further training given to Service Coordinators to
assist in delivering the Program
  • Motivational Interviewing Techniques
  • Problem-Solving/Decision Making Skills
  • Mental health symptom recognition -anxiety and
    depression
  • Coping Strategies techniques
  • Self-Management resources in the community

24
Patient responses
  • I am motivated to look after myself. I now feel
    confident about asking my GP questions. I plan
    ahead and am more thoughtful about my condition.
    I dont sit around feeing sick these days, I look
    for solutions.
  • I dont drink as much as I did before. I
    exercise regularly and take my time - I gauge
    myself. I am more aware that I should live a
    healthy lifestyle.

25
Conclusion
  • Clinicians (and patients) could assess
    self-management knowledge, behaviours, barriers
    and target interventions and education to the
    individual

26
What do Clinicians need to do to become true
Partners in Health?
27
The Key is to integrate a Self Management Care
Plan with the Medical Care Plan and to
systematically Monitor and Measure Health Outcomes
28
How can this be done systematically, in a patient
centred way, measuring progress in behaviour
change, as well as health outcomes, and that
ensures ongoing monitoring?
29
The Flinders Model-Enhancing Self-management
  • Assessment
  • Partners in Health Scale
  • Cue and Response Interview
  • Problems and Goals Assessment
  • Care Plan
  • Identification of Issues and Goal Setting
  • Schedule services
  • Tools
  • Symptom action plan
  • Doctor visit checklist
  • Patient Handbook
  • Monitor and Review

30
Harkness Fellowship 2003-4
  • Ed Wagner, Michael Von Korff, Group Health,
    Seattle, Washington State
  • Self-management of chronic conditions in
    indigenous and mental health populations

31
Evidence for What Works in Chronic Illness
Management
  • Wagner et al Center for Health Studies, Group
    Health, Seattle
  • WHO, 2002
  • 6 elements for achieving best outcomes for
    individuals and populations
  • Self-management support is the most important of
    these elements

32
Chronic Care Model
Health System
Community
Health Care Organization
Resources and Policies
ClinicalInformationSystems
DeliverySystem Design
Self-Management Support
Decision Support
Prepared, Proactive Practice Team
Informed, Activated Patient
Productive Interactions
Improved Outcomes
33
Evidence for Self-Management
  • Warsi et al, 2004, Archives of Int Medicine
  • Newman et al, 2004, Lancet
  • Effective self-management interventions in asthma
    and diabetes, equivocal in arthritis
  • Small to moderate effect sizes and maintenance of
    effect over time varies
  • Generic lay led programs (Lorig et al) Newbould
    et al, Chronic Illness 2006, small to moderate
    effect sizes up to 12 months

34
12 Principles for Self-management Support
(Battersby, Von Korff et al)
  • 1. Assessment clinical severity, function,
    self-management behaviours, goals, barriers
  • 2. Information alone shows negligible effects
  • ie - Education should be skills based
  • 3. Counseling should be non-judgmental e.g,
    motivational interviewing
  • 4. Defining Problems and Goal setting are
    effective

35
Evidence-Based Principles for Self-Management
Support (SMS)
  • 5. Collaborative Problem Solving is effective
  • 6. Diverse professionals and lay persons can
    deliver effective self-management support if
    tasks are defined and evidence based
  • 7. Self-management interventions can be delivered
    by diverse modalities e.g, individual, group,
    telephone, self-instruction
  • 8. Interventions should strengthen self-efficacy

36
Evidence-Based Principles for Self-Management
Support (SMS)
  • 9. Organised follow up improves outcomes
  • 10. Case management is effective only if it is
    goal directed and guideline based
  • 11. SMS should include community based programs
    that are evidence based
  • 12. Multi-faceted interventions are more
    effective than single component interventions

37
Better outcomes
  • Best outcomes for an individual are achieved by a
    combination of
  • evidence based medical management and
  • self-management i.e, a partnership
  • Self-management is what the patient does
  • Self-management support is what the health
    professional, the practice and system provides
  • Von Korff M, Gruman J, Schaefer J,
    Curry SJ, Wagner EH (1997), Collaborative
    Management of Chronic Illness, Annals of Internal
    Medicine, 127(12) 1097-1102

38
Flinders Model
  • Outcomes based
  • Generic
  • Motivational
  • Medical with self-management (Holistic)
  • Patient-centred
  • Communication
  • Coordination

39
Partners In Health Scale
  • Measures self-management capacity
  • Completed by patient (5-10 minutes)
  • Contains 12 questions covering the 6 principles
    of self-management
  • Can be used as a screening tool
  • Can be used to record change over time

40
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41
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42
  • VIDEO INTRO AND CUE AND RESPONSE

43
Cue and Response Interview
  • A tool for GP/health professional
  • Covers the same 12 questions in Partners in
    Health Scale
  • A series of open ended cues allows the questions
    to be explored
  • Answers are scored by the GP/health professional
  • Checks assumptions
  • Motivational

44
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45
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46
VIDEO
  • CUE AND RESPONSE

47
Cue Response Interview
  • AREAS FOR DISCUSSION
  • When both parties have rated the question on the
    high end of the scale
  • When scores differ markedly on any question
  • AGREEMENT ON ISSUES
  • Establish which identified issues the
    patient/client wishes to address and what
    interventions may be appropriate
  • THESE BECOME ISSUES FOR THE SELF-MANAGEMENT PLAN

48
VIDEO
  • VIDEO CUE AND RESPONSE, COMPARE SCORES
    NEGOTIATION AND COLLABORATION

49
Problems and Goals
  • Traditionally
  • We identify the patients problems (implicit or
    explicit)
  • We set the goals
  • Clinical goals
  • Exercise goals
  • Pick from a check list

50
Problems and Goals Approach
  • Adapted from the therapeutic assessment
    intervention used in the behavioural
    psychotherapy field (Isaac Marks)
  • Used with 3115 interventions patients in SA
    Health Plus CCT (1997-99)
  • 60 of patients improved their problem rating
    score
  • Up to 60 made progress with goals
  • Battersby M, Ask A, Markwick M, Collins J.- A
    case Study using the Problems and Goals
    Approach Aus Journal Primary Health 2003 7(3)
    45-48
  • Battersby M et al - Health Reform through
    Coordinated careSA HealthPlus. BMJ
    2005330662-6

51
VIDEO
  • PROBLEM AND GOAL INTRO

52
VIDEO
  • PROBLEM AND GOAL GOAL SETTING

53
Care Plan
  • Identified issues from PIH and CR
  • Identified issues from PG assessment
  • Lists preventative medical, allied health,
    psychological and self management services or
    actions
  • Management Aims
  • Interventions
  • Responsibilities
  • 12 month planned appointments / tests etc
  • Sign off

54
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55
Monitoring and Review
  • Monitoring is an important component of this
    process
  • Provider-initiated follow up
  • Self-monitoring
  • Helps to maintain motivation
  • Enables modelling of problem solving
  • Allows change if circumstances change

56
VIDEO
  • CARE PLAN INTERVENTIONS AND SHARED
    RESPONSIBILITY

57
Unique Features
  • Application of Banduras self efficacy research
    on behaviour change systematically to chronic
    conditions
  • Takes into account the importance of patient
    centered care, motivational interviewing
    (Miller) and relapse prevention (Marlatt)
  • Links chronic conditions with with persons
    priorities and thus addresses physical and mental
    health problems

58
Flinders Stanford
  • Generic
  • Taught by health professionals and peers to
    patients
  • Traditional doctor/patient relationship
  • Generic skills goal setting, problem solving,
    symptom management
  • Based on cognitive and behavioural principles and
    techniques
  • Generic
  • Taught by accredited health professionals to
    health professionals
  • Doctor patient partnership with patient sharing
    decisions and taking responsibility
  • Assessment and care planning, behavioural change
    (goal setting)
  • Based on cognitive and behavioural principles and
    techniques

59
Sharing Health Care Demonstration Projects
ACT Division of General Practice
60
Sharing Health Care Evaluation Report 2004
  • Health outcomes generally improved
  • Sustainability is a problem
  • Financial disincentives for GPs
  • Stanford model effective
  • COACH program effective
  • Flinders model effective 800 health workers
    trained
  • Also worked for indigenous programs

61
Flinders model
  • Aim Enhance and maintain effect of
    self-management interventions through
    reinforcement of behaviour change
  • Eyre Aboriginal diabetes HbA1c 12 months
  • Noarlunga mental health SF-12 12 months
  • Southn respiratory RCT - 6 min walk -12 mths

62
Other Research
  • Aboriginal diabetes
  • Noarlunga mental health
  • Respiratory (COPD) RCT
  • NHMRC Centre for Clinical Research Excellence in
    Aboriginal Health
  • Many research projects, PhDs using PIH
  • Vietnam veterans alcohol and PTSD RCT
  • Arthritis joint replacement waiting list RCT
  • Stroke RCT
  • Lehigh Valley Hospital, Pennsylvania, diabetes RCT

63
TRAINING
64
Training
  • 2 day workshop in the Flinders model
  • Certificate of Competence and licence
  • Follow-up Support from Accredited Trainer and
    FHBHRU
  • 2 day workshop for trainer of Flinders model

65
Sharing Health Care (DOHA)
  • Training in 2 day education program for
    clinicians and 2 day trainer education
  • Over 2000 clinicians trained in all Aus states
    and territories including Aboriginal Health
    Workers

66
EDUCATION
67
CCSM education for Medical Students
  • In 2003, a pilot CCSM curriculum in the graduate
    medical course at Flinders University
  • This has concluded its third year
  • Content
  • Yr 1
  • 2 PBLs to introduce the topic
  • 1 lecture to define CCSM
  • Assessment by exam question

68
Year 2 Medical Course
  • Yr 2
  • 2 x 3 hour seminars to teach collaborative care
    planning and the development of a self management
    care plan
  • Assignment to do one care plan for presentation
    at the second seminar
  • Assessment by OSCE station

69
2nd Yr OSCE pass level 12/24 with 28 (30)
students failing and 2 (2.2) students
exceptional
70
CCSM education for Medical Students
  • Committee of Deans Audit of Medical school
    curricula funded by Cwealth Dept of Health
  • 10 Medical Schools visited and curricula surveyed
  • ANZAME set of core competencies for CCSM presented

71
Training of undergraduate Allied health
Professionals
  • Dept of Health project 1. FHBHRU scoping
    requirements for under grad training in CCSM for
    allied health professionals
  • Dept of Health project 2. FHBHRU developing a
    curriculum framework for all undergraduate health
    professionals in Australia

72
Post Graduate Education
  • Graduate Certificate and Graduate Diploma in CCSM
    at Flinders University
  • Government scholarships
  • Department of Health tender for training needs
    for all primary care clinicians in Australia

73
Australian Better Health Initiative
  • Council of Australian Governments announced joint
    Commonwealth and State initiative to address
    prevention and management of chronic disease
  • 500 million over 4 years
  • Prevention
  • Early detection
  • Integration and coordination
  • Self-management

74
Implementation Challenges
  • Integration of chronic condition self-management
    into primary care and general practice in
    particular
  • Integration between hospitals and primary care of
    chronic care and self-management

75
Implementation of chronic care WHO 2002
  • Support a paradigm shift from acute to chronic
    care
  • Manage the political environment
  • Build integration shared information,
    coordinated financing
  • Align health with other policy areas eg housing,
    transport, education
  • Use teams
  • Centre care on the patient and family
  • Support patients in their communities
  • Emphasise prevention

76
Successful chronic care (Wagner et al 96)
  • Evidence based planned care and guidelines what
    needs to be done at what intervals by whom
  • Practice redesign define roles of the team
  • Patient education
  • Clinical expertise continuing education
  • Information registries, care plans

77
Collaboratives
  • How to translate research into practice (beyond
    the project)
  • Up to 25 teams meet on 4 occasions over 12
    months,
  • 1-2 day learning sessions
  • The Collaborative has clearly stated 12 month,
    clinical and process outcome goals
  • Teams aim to implement the 6 elements of the CCM

78
Collaboratives
  • The core process for the teams is the
  • Plan Do Study Act (PDSA) cycle
  • The Team include non clinicians, innovators
  • There are 2 learning streams
  • Evidence based clinical management eg asthma
  • Practice change
  • Set short term 8 day PDSA cycles
  • Have faculty follow up/support

79
Collaboratives Success Elements
  • Teams that met weekly
  • Successful teams averaged 45 changes
  • Successful teams had a high number of early
    change cycles
  • A culture of teamwork and growth
  • Not dependent on baseline features of CCM
  • Not dependent on wealth of the organisation

80
Collaboratives Success Elements
  • Teams with a higher proportion of doctors
  • Teams with a team champion
  • High organisational commitment to quality
    improvement
  • Contact with other teams during the collaborative
  • Emphasis on collaborative decision making with
    patients

81
Which Elements of the CCM?
  • Not enough sites to test this but
  • Meta analysis of 112 published studies found that
    each element produced improved outcomes but no
    single element was found to be either essential
    or superfluous.

82
Indian Health Service
  • National Diabetes Program
  • National standards, service accreditation
  • Self-management education modules
  • Diabetes educators
  • National registry data base
  • 5 year improvement in HbA1c

83
Indiana Outcome targets
  • Diabetes and cardiac At 12 months
  • 80 of all diabetic patients to have a HbA1c test
    in the last 12 months
  • 30 of all diabetic patients to have HbA1c lt7 by
    12 months
  • 60 of all cardiac patients to have
    self-management goals documented

84
Registry
  • A data base provided to all clinics for each
    doctors patients involved in the collaborative
  • Provides all pathology results from the last 12
    months
  • Evidence based recommended services for each
    condition diabetes, heart disease eg podiatry,
    HbA1c, ophthalmology etc
  • Recall and reminder system for clinic staff and
    patient
  • Provides above information on each patient and
    able to provide report for all clinic patients
    with same characteristics eg diabetes with HbA1c
    gt10

85
Indiana
  • Registry (cont)
  • Able to collect names of patients to organise
    group education, eg disease specific, lifestyle
    etc
  • Able to provide aggregated data on all patients
    involved in the collaborative

86
Call Centre
  • Care coordinators using a software program linked
    to the medicaide data base with each patients
    health status and care planning self-management
    goals
  • Care coordinators have health related
    qualification, not necessarily a clinician
  • Chosen for their telephone ability not clinical
    competence

87
Call Centre
  • Initial assessments conducted by phone
  • 15 allocated to case managers but still
    registered with the call centre
  • Care coordinators followed stepwise algorithm for
    each planned call. a form of coaching based on
    the medical and self-management goals and risk
    factors

88
Call Centre
  • Screening questions eg depression with subsequent
    questions to determine severity and risk.
  • Provide education materials and local programs
  • Summary emailed to GP with agreed follow up
    actions
  • Check back technique for patient satisfaction and
    understanding
  • Back up of case manager/GP if required

89
Indiana Chronic Disease program
  • Target group Medicaide patients low income
    individuals and families (4500 people)
  • The Model
  • Call centre
  • Case managers
  • A registry
  • The Collaborative

90
Case Managers
  • Community health nurses
  • Patients pre selected based on the most complex
    10 with high service use
  • Home visits full assessment of medical, social
    and psychological needs
  • Time limited 6 months
  • Communication with GP

91
Results
  • 60-80 improvement in all measures at 12 months

92
International Implementation
  • New Zealand
  • Care Plus government initiative administered
    through Primary Health Organisations
  • Target is people with chronic conditions or
    terminal illness
  • Aim effective management, improve
    understanding, support and lifestyle changes
  • Mania PHO, Whangerei Practice nurses
    implementing chronic care using Flinders process
    has turned the rhetoric into reality
  • Practice nurse role has now been enhanced
    brings holistic approach to the practice and
    their role is increasingly recognised
  • Singapore

93
International
  • Singapore
  • Polyclinics government funded community centres
    have established the role of care managers
    mainly nurses to assess and provide case
    management and education to chronic care
    patients, referred by clinic GP or specialists
  • Hospitals have in-patient case managers whose
    role is to select complex patients who re-admit,
    provide assessment and care planning and
    community follow up
  • Hospitals have outpatient chronic care planning
    clinics, cardiac clinic, respiratory clinic with
    nurses whose role it is to assess, care plan and
    link chronic care patients with GPs and community
    services

94
Flinders Model
  • Outcomes based
  • Generic
  • Motivational
  • Medical with self-management (Holistic)
  • Patient-centred
  • Communication
  • Coordination

95
The Flinders Model A Systemic Approach
Patient
  • Do PIH
  • Do CR interview
  • Do PG interview
  • Negotiate Care Plan
  • Carry Plan
  • Carry out Action
  • Statements
  • Prevention/Risk Factor
  • Reduction
  • Work on PG

Care Plan is negotiated and signed off
Practice Nurse or Allied Health Worker
General Practitioner
  • EBM Care Plan
  • Negotiate Health
  • Action Statements
  • Follow up and Monitor
  • Provide PIH
  • Do CR interview
  • Do PG interview
  • Prepare Care Plan

96
Flinders Model
  • Provides a focus for change, ie gives you
    somewhere to start, early wins, staged
    implementation
  • Provides outcome measurement as part of routine
    care which enables
  • system
  • individual
  • population outcomes to be measured
  • Is a forcing function for
  • patient centred care,
  • chronic care,
  • self-management support and behaviour change

97
Summary
  • Self-management support is based on an
    operational definition of self-management
  • Outcome measurement is integral to the clinical
    process
  • PIH, CR and PG enables measurement of patient
    self-management and competency assessment of
    clinicians/students.

98
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99
  • Evaluation of Flinders Self-management Care
    Planning

100
Sharing Health Care Evaluation Report 2004
  • Health outcomes generally improved
  • Sustainability is a problem
  • Financial disincentives for GPs
  • Stanford model effective
  • COACH program effective
  • Flinders model effective 500 health workers
    trained
  • Also worked for indigenous programs

101
Sharing Health Care Whyalla
  • Rural remote communities
  • People with complex chronic illness
  • Aboriginal people gt 35 years of age
  • Non-Aboriginal people gt 50 years of age
  • (diabetes, CVD, asthma, osteoporosis, arthritis)

102
Participation in the project will lead to
  • increased access to appropriate use of health
    services
  • improved patient self-management knowledge
    skill
  • improved communication more effective
    collaboration between service providers, patients
    carers
  • improved health related quality of life for
    patients

103
SHC SA Strategies
  • PIH, assessment goal setting
  • Formal care planning
  • Condition specific programmes
  • Self-management courses (6 week Stanford CDSM
    training)
  • Symptom management/action plans
  • Structured reminders, recalls continuing care
    plans

104
PIH
105
PIH
106
PIH
107
PIH
108
PIH
109
PIH conclusions
  • Both patient and provider PIH scores have
    improved from baseline to 18 months
  • These improvements indicate that patient
    self-management skills and abilities have
    improved during the intervention
  • Patients tend to score their improvements more
    cautiously than do providers

110
Health Service Outcomes
GP visits
111
Hospital admission
 
112
Health Outcomes (Stanford 2000)
 
Random effects - unstructured covariance model
for change over time (Stanford 2000)
NB similar results from the national (PWC)
analysis for general health, distress, coping,
social functioning, self efficacy visits to
hospital
 
113
Sharing Health Care National Evaluation
  • 8 projects in non-controlled pre-post design
    showed
  • Improved health outcomes,
  • Improved quality of life and
  • Reduced use of health services
  • for people with a wide range of chronic
    conditions.

114
Eyre Peninsula Aboriginal Diabetes-
demonstration project
  • Aim Develop a CCSM program that is based on
    staff training, is culturally sensitive and
    flexible, to promote self management principles
    through goal setting, encourage lifestyle changes
    and improve access to preventative services
  • 12 months
  • Sustainability through the care planning item
    numbers
  • Community development approach
  • Elders committee

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Eyre CCSM
  • Improved scores on PIH self management at 12
    months
  • Problem improved 6.22 5.28 (p lt0.01)
  • Goal improved 7.26 5.42 (p lt0.001)
  • Improved HbA1c 8.74 -8.09 (plt 0.01 )
  • BP 139/84 -136/83
  • No change in SF-12 (difficulty with questions)

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Noarlunga Mental Health
  • Aim To explore the use of the Flinders tools,
    peer educators and Stanford course in a mental
    health populations with both mental and physical
    illness
  • Reduce risk behaviours and improve health
    outcomes
  • 12 months
  • Noarlunga Mental Health services, Southern
    Division of General Practice, Flinders Mental
    Health, Southern Region Consumer Advisory Group
  • Lawn, Pols, Battersby et al Int J of Soc Psych
    2006

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Results
  • 21 attended 6 week Lorig generic course
  • Improved PIH self management (all scales
    significant)
  • Improved Problem 5.19 3.16 (plt0.001)
  • Goal Achievement 5.35 3.55 (plt0.001)
  • SF-12 improved mental summary score

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Case Study
  • 45 year old single man, living alone. Client of
    mental health service for 20 years with paranoid
    schizophrenia. History of violence ( 2 worker
    home visits), cigarette smoker, benzodiazepine
    dependent doctor shopper, treatment order
  • Problems with planning, concentration, memory and
    problem solving, persistent paranoia
  • Goals Better body image/decrease weight,
    decrease benzos, better financial state, better
    care of self and dog

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Outcomes
  • Cleaning contract for 5 weeks to feel better
    about house so could do weights and to be able to
    invite friends into house boost self esteem and
    challenge view of being dangerous to others
  • Reduced benzodiazepines one doctor more
    disclosure with GP
  • Poor knowledge of condition and treatment
    addressed
  • One worker visit
  • Has begun next goal of cigarette reduction
  • More social interaction, less paranoid

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VIDEO
  • DOES IT MAKE A DIFFERENCE - KELLY

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Sharing Health Care Recommendations
  • Flexible approaches with tailoring of
    interventions to meet client need in terms of
    content and mode of delivery
  • Ability to identify and respond to client need
    through the use of appropriate planning tools at
    the start of the program, reinforced by ongoing
    coaching and follow-up and
  • Ability to provide appropriate and structured
    support to clients, finding the balance between
    over-dependence on the support on offer and being
    isolated from the program.

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Only in Japan
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Contact details
  • Flinders Human Behaviour and Health Research Unit
  • Sharon.lawn_at_fmc.sa.gov.au
  • Malcolm.Battersby_at_fmc.sa.gov.au
  • Ph (08) 8404 2323 Fax (08) 8404 2101
  • http//som.flinders.edu.au/FUSA/CCTU/Home.html
  • http//www.improvingchroniccare.org

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