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Developing a Telecare Strategy

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Shift from illness/exclusion/disability to health/independence and abilities ... Cameraphones. Home visits, users/carers, emergency services, clinician response etc ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Developing a Telecare Strategy


1
Developing a Telecare Strategy
  • Greater Manchester
  • November 2006

2
Broad Directionsfor health and social care
  • Personalisation of services
  • Focus on outcomes for people
  • Shift of focus from acute to community
  • Shift from illness/exclusion/disability to
    health/independence and abilities
  • Shift from dependency to empowerment
  • Shift from professional knows best to user led
    approaches
  • Shift from targets to outcomes
  • From separate to integrated systems.

3
  • It can be as simple as the basic community alarm
    service, able to respond in an emergency and
    provide regular contact by telephone
  • It may include detectors and monitors such as
    motion or falls detectors and warnings about fire
    and gas escape that can trigger a warning to a
    response centre
  • Telecare is as much about the philosophy of
    dignity and independence as it is about equipment
    and services
  • Equipment is provided to support the individual
    in their home and tailored to meet their needs

4
What is telecare?
  • Telemedicine - monitoring vital signs, such as
    blood pressure, and transmitting the data to a
    response centre or clinicians computer, where it
    is monitored against parameters set by the
    individuals clinician
  • Evidence that vital signs are outside of normal
    parameters triggers a response
  • Needs to be part of the local health and social
    care pathway for managing long term conditions
  • As a preventative mode - services programmed to
    monitor an individuals health or well-being with
    early warning of deterioration, prompting a
    response from family or professionals
  • Safety and
  • security
  • through
  • bogus caller
  • and burglar
  • alarms


5
Alerts, measurements in the home bells, sirens,
screen readout
Other AT devices
Home Sensors CO, PIR, pressure mat
Alerts to users, carers etc eg pagers
Alerts, info to mobile phones, home PCS etc
Integrated Telecare
Monitoring (including parameters), response/call
handling
Installation, maintenance
Autodiallers, phone line, 3g/GPRS transmission
modules, broadband
Home visits, users/carers, emergency services,
clinician response etc
Cameraphones
Community alarm handset/pendant
Standalone glucose monitors
Autodiallers, phone line, 3g/GPRS transmission
modules, broadband
Cameras
Autodiallers, phone line, 3g/GPRS transmission
modules, broadband
Housing systems, door entry, bogus caller
Sensors worn by users, falls, wristcare,
wandering etc
Telehealth units
Telehealth peripherals glucose, peak flow,
weight etc
Medication monitoring
Environmental controls
6
PTG expected outcomes
  • Support for
  • hospital discharge and intermediate care
  • those who wish to die at home with dignity
  • reduced acute hospital admissions
  • reduced need for residential/nursing home care
  • reduce burden on carers more personal freedom
  • reduction in accidents and falls in the home

  • Contribute to
  • the development of a range of preventative
    services
  • wider health, housing and social care policy
    agendas
  • care and support for people with long term health
    conditions
  • an increased choice and independence for service
    users
  • increased user re-assurance, less risk-averse
    policies, responsive to lifestyles

Help to unlock resources and redirect them
elsewhere
7
Telecare offers choice and flexibility of service
provision from community alarms and sensors to
vital signs monitoring The potential of telecare
is gaining in recognition
  • An estimated 90 of people want to live in their
    own home
  • Approx 500,000 older people live in care homes
  • As many as 35 of these people could be supported
    in their own homes or in extra care housing with
    telecare
  • Over 1.6m emergency admissions were made in
    2003/4 telecare has the potential to reduce
    unnecessary admissions and improve quality of
    life

8
The use of mobile telephones to send a text
message which will alert people when their
hospital/doctors appointments are due

. To send text messages about changes in the
weather, especially helpful for asthma sufferers
16-34 years olds were the most likely to
repeatedly miss appointments
9
Identify some of the common pitfalls from your
own experience
10
Common Pitfalls in developing a telecare strategy
  • Poor preparation
  • Inadequate resource
  • Lack of awareness
  • Working in isolation
  • Poor communication pathways
  • Unskilled staff and carers
  • Trying to fit telecare into existing service
  • No strategy

11
Implementation issues
  • Re-engineering services
  • Response system
  • Cross organisation support/Partnerships
  • Prioritising need
  • Evidence for supporting provision
  • Engaging all parties/communication
  • What intervention

12
Implementation issues contd
  • Eligibility
  • Evaluation inc service user views
  • Resources inc finance
  • Risks how to monitor and manage
  • Response protocols
  • Training and awareness/skills
  • What equipment to procure and how?

13
Key components of a successful telecare strategy
  • Vision
  • Clear ownership and leadership
  • Have a goal (and communicate it)
  • Create awareness
  • Training and Information
  • Identify resources
  • Identify your partners

14
Key components contd
  • Identify a project lead
  • Identify suppliers
  • Eligibility criteria
  • Evaluation/evidence
  • Use existing infrastructure
  • Installation, maintenance, service, removal
  • Charging
  • Ethics

15
Simple Messages
  • Think, bold big and radical,
  • Know the key outcomes being sought.
  • Consider high levels of demand yet personalised
    approaches.
  • Consider the implications of new major providers
    in the market place.
  • Consider solutions for the most vulnerable- get
    it right for the older person with dementia and
    you will get it right for the many
  • Think independence with dignity inc outside the
    home

16
Telecare is a vital key to unlocking the future
  • New demands will need to be managed
  • Health and social care commissioners need
  • to make decisions on investment in
    technology
  • Services will take on new patterns to meet
  • changing care and support needs and to give
    people a choice
  • It is not realistic to plan to deliver care and
    support services in the way we do at present
  • We must embrace new ways of working to meet the
    needs and aspirations of our service users and to
    take advantage of new and developing technologies

17
The National Framework Agreement for Telecare
  • The national framework agreement allows
    organisations involved in telecare implementation
    to simplify procurement arrangements and get best
    value from the Preventative Technology Grant.
  • Organisations can continue to procure from
    outside the framework agreement but they will
    need to take into account EU tendering
    requirements and any local best value audit or
    scrutiny.
  • There will be no charges for using the PASA
    framework. It covers installation, maintenance,
    monitoring and response as well as equipment.

18
National Framework Agreement
  • Organisations are able to mix and match - eg
    equipment may be procured using the framework and
    the response service arranged with a local
    provider under an existing service level
    agreement if that will meet the needs of the
    local community.
  • Service commissioners are able to compare costs
    under the framework with any existing
    arrangements.
  • Details of suppliers and products/services that
    are included within the National Framework
    Agreement are available via NHS E-cat (PASA's
    electronic catalogue).
  • Details on how to access NHS E-cat or receive
    further information regarding the framework
    agreement are available on www.cat.csip.org.uk/tel
    ecare

19
SOME USEFUL WEB SITE ADDRESSES
  • Building Telecare in England, DH (July 2005) and
    Local Authority
  • Circular LAC(2006)5
  • http//www.dh.gov.uk/PublicationsAndStatistics/Pub
    lications/
  • National Framework Agreement for procurement of
    telecare
  • http/www.pasa.nhs.uk/eat/telecare
  • CSIP Telecare implementation guide and
    factsheets/e-newsletter and telecare LINs
  • www.cat.csip.org.uk/telecare
  • CSIP DVD - Telecare living with independence
  • www.changeagentteam.org.uk
  • CSIP information telecare_at_csip.org.uk

20
FURTHER INFORMATION
  • Ian Salt ian.salt_at_cat.csip.org.uk
  • Rachel Denton rachel.denton_at_csip.org.uk
  • Tracey Bond tracey.bond_at_cat.csip.org.uk

21
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