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East Lancashire Hospitals NHS Trust : Our improvement plan & our progress

Personal statement from the Chairman of East Lancashire Hospitals NHS Trust:

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East Lancashire Hospitals NHS Trust : Our improvement plan & our progress

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  1. Personal statement from the Chairman of East Lancashire Hospitals NHS Trust: “I am pleased to share with you the latest update on our plans to improve the quality of care the Trust provides to our local community. The Board welcomes the findings of the Keogh review,which was as a result of higher than expected mortality rates at the Trust. We, together with our staff, are wholeheartedly committed to continuing to improve the quality of our services. The Board believes we have made significant progress in addressing the findings of the Review, though we know there is still more to do. Once the actions identified within the Keogh action plan have been completed, we will set out a longer-term plan to maintain our progress and ensure that the actions lead to measurable improvements in the quality and safety of care for patients.These will address the findings from our forthcoming Chief Inspector of Hospitals visit at the end of April 2014. There will be regular updates on NHS Choices and subsequent longer term actions will be included as part of a continuous process of improvement. Our staff were rightly seen by the Keogh review as our biggest asset and we will work together, and support our staff, to ensure we provide compassionate care that places our patients at the heart of everything we do. We are committed to improving as an organisation and our plan is fundamental to helping us on this journey.” Professor Eileen Fairhurst, Chairman East Lancashire Hospitals NHS Trust : Our improvement plan & our progress

  2. East Lancashire Hospitals NHS Trust : Our improvement plan & our progress What are we doing? • The Keogh review made 30 urgent recommendations on the 16th July 2013 which, if implemented, would improve the quality of our services. Specifically, Keogh said that we need to: - Improve the way in which the Board seeks to ensure high quality services are delivered every time, all of the time. This is important because the Board need to be aware of risks to the quality of our services , to promote patient safety and react swiftly to any emerging issues. In our response to the Keogh review we emphasised the need to put sustainable, safe and high quality care for our patients at the heart of everything we do. We simplified our vision to set out a clear ambition : ‘ To be widely recognised for providing safe, personal and effective care’. This is supported by five improvement priorities. One of our key improvement priorities is to reduce mortality. Following the Keogh review we reviewed how we look at mortality in the hospital, particularly how we learn from patient deaths. Now all patient deaths are formally reviewed by a senior clinician and are discussed at weekly departmental meetings attended by all clinical staff. We have a mortality reduction plan, overseen by a steering group of senior clinical staff from a variety of professions. We monitor actual (crude) mortality on a week by week basis so that any unexpected peaks are identified and investigated immediately. We have introduced a number of clinical care bundles, which are best practice packages of care for specific conditions, for example pneumonia and acute kidney injury. There is now clear evidence that our actions have reduced mortality for our patients with specific conditions. Our Summary Hospital Mortality Indicator (SHMI) has been within the ‘expected’ range for the last two months. The SHMI at the weekend has also been within the ‘expected’ range during this period. We are also piloting the use of an electronic clinical Early Warning System on four wards. A group of senior clinicians have developed a set of professional internal standards to support improvements in our emergency pathway e.g. how quickly we initially assess patients, response times for diagnostic procedures. Our performance against the 4 hour maximum wait time in Accident and Emergency services dropped following the Review, whilst actions were being taken to address poor patient experience. Our performance is now improving with the 4 hour standard achieved in February at 95.4%, although performance dipped in March, performance in April is much improved, we achieved over 97% in the week commencing 7th April. We also now escalate into agreed non core clinical capacity on considerably fewer occasions. We have a dedicated email address for our local GPs to feedback any concerns. This information will help us to improve services and provides GPs with a central point to ask questions. - Improve the information that the Board receives about savings plans and their impact on the quality of our services. This is important because, although we have to make savings each year so that we don’t spend more money than we receive, we need to be better at checking that the savings we make will not have a detrimental effect on the care we give our patients. The process by which our savings plans are approved has been strengthened to ensure there is no detrimental impact on the quality of care we provide. Plans are now reviewed and signed off by both our Medical Director and Chief Nurse. We are also sharing our savings plans with our Clinical Commissioning Groups . - Improve the way we use our beds across all of our sites. We will also work more closely with other NHS organisations and the Local Authorities to ensure alternative services can be accessed by patients in a community setting. Both of these points are important because we need to ensure that we can continue to provide high quality care to the increasing number of patients who need to access emergency care. We have developed an ambulatory care service. This is a service where people coming in to hospital as emergency patients can have investigations, exploratory examinations and receive a treatment plan without the need for an overnight stay. We have also introduced an Outpatient Parenteral Antibiotic Therapy service (OPAT). This services allows patients who are medically stable and whose only reason for hospital admission is the requirement for intravenous (IV) antibiotic therapy to go home and be treated in an outpatient or community setting. Our new Urgent Care Centre building on the Burnley General Hospital site opened at the end of January 2014. The building is purpose built, offering much improved privacy for patients. There is also a separate waiting area for children and their parents.

  3. East Lancashire Hospitals NHS Trust : Our improvement plan & our progress What are we doing? - Improve our understanding of the reasons why we have a relatively high number of patients who are readmitted to hospital unnecessarily. This is important because we are now able to move some services into the local community so that they are closer to home which means patients don’t have to go into hospital. This improves the experience for our patients. We have undertaken a comprehensive audit of our readmissions to establish the reasons why they occurred. We are working with our partner organisations to address the issues highlighted. We have doubled the capacity in our virtual ward, which supports 300 patients, 7 days a week to be cared for in their own home rather than having to come into hospital. We have introduced paediatric hot clinics. Our readmission rate for adults is now within the expected range and the rate for paediatrics is 2% lower than this time last year. - Engage more effectively with our patients and their carers and provide an increased opportunity for them to improve our services. We have implemented a more comprehensive walk round programme by our Board members, the focus of which is patient safety and quality. We have held listening events, where members of the public can ask questions or raise concerns directly with members of our Board. We are holding regular events with our members and shadow Governors, for example we held a member event on the 15 January 2014 to share our improvement plans. Governors have been allocated to divisions and are having introductory meetings with key staff and undertaking tours of the areas A new initiative to encourage more feedback from users of our emergency department and urgent care centres through the use of text messaging has begun. There are already signs of significant improvements in response rates and positive feedback. We have launched an extensive public engagement campaign, ‘Tell Ellie’. Changes made as a result of feedback from the campaign will be fed back to the public using a ‘you said, we did’ approach. - We will listen to patients’ concerns and respond compassionately and quickly and we will listen to what our patients are telling us. It is important to learn from things which don’t go well so that they don’t happen again. We need to support our staff to continue to learn and develop in order to provide the best possible care for our patients We have extensively communicated with staff in a variety of ways on the importance of complaints and concerns raised by patients and relatives as a mechanism of learning and improving care. We’ve introduced a new education and training programme on how to respond to and learn from complaints. A new complaints handling process is in place that changes emphasis from investigation and formal response to understanding complaint/concern, offering an early meeting, responding empathetically and learning to improve care. Executive directors review all new complaints and clinical teams are invited to discuss what lessons should be learned focussing on the issues from the patient’s perspective. Patient stories have become a feature of Trust Board. We also use patient stories at a variety of meetings as a learning tool. For example a patient’s relative attended our joint clinical leaders’ forum in early February to share their experience and describe the impact of staff behaviours. Our Chief Nurse and interim Director of HR and OD have also been ‘back to the floor’ where they are working alongside staff across the organisation to learn and understand the issues our staff are facing on a day-to-day basis. A monthly quality report produced by Medical Director / Chief Nurse incorporating ‘lessons learnt’ from engagement activities and complaints is shared with the Board - Constantly review our workforce numbers and work hard to meet the changing needs of patients in our care. This is important to ensure all the needs of our patients are met and that the care that we give is safe and effective. We commissioned an external review of nurse and midwifery staffing levels, which has resulted in range of actions taken including the introduction of a daily staffing template, daily staffing teleconference, roll out of the publication of daily staffing numbers and the introduction of a monthly ward scorecard. We have significantly increased the number of nurses on duty at nights and are continuing to recruit additional trained nurses, health care assistants and midwives. We have improved our recruitment processes and initiated a major innovative recruitment campaign. This has also included the recruitment of nurses from Portugal and Italy. Our sickness absence levels are improving and levels are significantly below the North West average and below the national average.We now employ 12 more consultants, 118 more qualified nurses, 172 more nurse support posts than we did on the 1 April 2013.

  4. East Lancashire Hospitals NHS Trust : Our improvement plan & our progress What are we doing? • Strengthen the leadership and support to our nursing staff. This is important so that our nurses and midwives feel valued and ensures excellent and consistent nursing is provided throughout the Trust. We have reviewed our organisational development strategy and cascaded our leadership development programme to our matrons and specialist nurses. Our Nursing and Midwifery Strategy , which nurses and midwives from across the organisation contributed to, has been published and sets the direction for our nurses focussing on the 6Cs, the nationally recognised nursing values of Care, Compassion, Competence , Communication , Courage and Commitment, with patients firmly at the centre of all that we do. The Customer Care Strategy has also been reviewed. A revised customer care training programme, aligned to providing Safe, Personal, Effective has been developed. The Customer Care training approach includes face to face sessions , using interactive group discussions/use of case studies. In addition an on-line Customer Care programme is now available to all staff. Staff can access the on-line training at any workstation. ‘Hotspot’ areas within Divisions have been identified using complaints information. We have also significantly improved levels of staff attending their required core and safeguarding training This has been achieved through providing additional training sessions, evening sessions being particularly well attended, and on-line facilitated e-learning sessions. • This document shows our plan for making these changes and our progress. It builds on the ‘Key findings and action plan following risk summit’ document which we agreed immediately after the review was published. This can be found at: http://www.nhs.uk/nhsengland/bruce-keogh-review/pages/published-reports.aspx • Whilst we make these changes to address the Keogh recommendations, the Trust is in ‘special measures’. More information about special measures can be found at http://www.ntda.nhs.uk/blog/2013/07/16/nhs-tda-places-five-trusts-in-special-measures. The Trust Development Authority are working with us to ensure we have the right support in place to make these changes as quickly as possible.

  5. East Lancashire Hospitals NHS Trust : Our improvement plan and our progress Who is responsible? Our actions to address the Keogh recommendations have been agreed by the Trust Board. With the Board our Interim Chief Executive, Jim Birrell, is ultimately responsible for implementing actions in this document. Other key staff are our Medical Director, Ian Stanley and our Chief Nurse, Christine Pearson, who are tasked with implementing many of the key actions described, which will help improve the quality of care delivered by our staff and enhance patient experience. Nicky O’Connor from the Trust Development Authority is helping us to implement our actions by supporting and challenging the process by which we will ensure we deliver on our action plan. We will also be assessed by the Chief Inspector of Hospitals, who is due to re-inspect our Trust in April 2014. If you have any questions about how we’re doing, please ring Chris Hughes our Interim Director of Communications on 01254 732160, or if you wish to contact Nicky O’Connor, as an external expert, you can reach her on nicky.oconnor@nhs.net How our progress is being monitored and supported We will update this progress report on the first day of every month while we are in special measures. We will work with our Shadow Council of Governors, members and Healthwatch to ensure that the improvements we are putting in place are effective. We will also hold public meetings and attend listening events, where we will update, face to face, our local community on our progress. We will also produce monthly press briefings which describe how are delivering against our improvement plan. Further details will be announced in updates of this progress report. Marie-Noelle Orzelhas been appointed as the Trust’s Improvement Director by the Trust Development Authority. Improvement Directors are appointed to provide expertise to the Trust Board on how to improve services and to check that we are meeting our promises to deliver our improvement plan   We will access support from partnership working as appropriate with the Academic Health Science Network, NHS Improving Quality and the NHS Leadership Academy. (Timescale: By April 2014; Owner: NHS England). Professor Eileen Fairhurst Chairman of the Trust (on behalf of the Board)

  6. Our improvement plan This table shows the actions we’re taking to address the concerns about the quality of our services which were raised in the Keogh report. It also shows how we are progressing against our actions.

  7. Our improvement plan This table shows the actions we’re taking to address the concerns about the quality of our services which were raised in the Keogh report. It also shows how we are progressing against our actions.

  8. How we’re checking that our improvement plan is workingThis table shows how and when we are checking that the actions we’re taking are making a real difference on our wards, in our operating theatres and in our community services. It also highlights how we will be communicating our progress to our local community.

  9. How we’re checking that our improvement plan is workingThis table shows how and when we are checking that the actions we’re taking are making a real difference on our wards, in our operating theatres and in our community services. It also highlights how we will be communicating our progress to our local community. Key for progress reports Blue -delivered Green – on track to deliver Narrative – disclose delays/risks/plan to recover Red – not on track to deliver

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