1 / 11

Urgent Care Planning in South Tyneside

Urgent Care Planning in South Tyneside. David Hambleton . Urgent Care Everyone’s problem. Urgent Care Plans. Urgent Care – Everyone’s problem so nobody’s problem Why is it a problem High A&E attendances but Low admission rates Lots of people in A&E who needn’t be.

jemma
Télécharger la présentation

Urgent Care Planning in South Tyneside

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Urgent Care Planning in South Tyneside David Hambleton Urgent Care Everyone’s problem

  2. Urgent Care Plans • Urgent Care – • Everyone’s problem so nobody’s problem • Why is it a problem • High A&E attendances but • Low admission rates • Lots of people in A&E who needn’t be

  3. Percentage of A&E Attendances converting to Admissions

  4. Over-crowding in A&E Why it’s a very bad thing • After admission through a crowded A&E 43% increased chance of dying at 10 days • A&E stay of 4-8 hours increases inpatient length of stay by 1.3 days • A&E stay >12 hours increases inpatient length of stay by 2.35 days

  5. What can be done prior to A&E • GP Access • Quality Premium (GP QOF) • Ambulatory Care Conditions • A&E usage • Anticipating urgent care demand • Improved care in nursing homes • STICS - better management of LTC • RAID - rapid, effective and safe access to mental health services

  6. What can be done in hospital • Ambulatory Care Conditions pathway • GP in A&E? • White board system to track patients • Review spilt of beds between medical and surgical specialties • Rapid response clinics • Psychological liaison service within an Urgent Care hub

  7. Discharge & out of hospital care • Hospital discharge process and communication • ‘Time to think’ beds • Single point of contact for social care • Reviewing current provision of self management education and support

  8. NHS 111 update • National free-to-call memorable number • Single point of contact for urgent care • ‘Talk before you walk’ • NE system is working (unlike others) • Teething problem being ironed out • Opportunities still to be realised

  9. NHS 111 update Patients directed to right services, first time Directly booking appointments into services – including GPs Better use of community services Indentify where gaps in service are

  10. DRAFT URGENT CARE SYSTEM MAP – South Tyneside Urgent Care Delivery Group • STICS (COPD) • STICS (COPD) • Nursing home SLA/ LES • Community matron as care coordinator (evaluation) • Telehealth/ wound sense • DNs/ flu vaccines • Zoning of Urgent Care nursing teams • ACS Pathway review • Single point of contact social care • IRT • Discharge process • Discharge Communication • PPP patients • STICS (COPD) • Nursing Home SLA/ Spec • Pulmonary Rehab • Cardiac Rehab • Pulmonary Rehab • Cardiac rehab • Time To Think beds • Dementia Step up facilities • Perth Green Programme for implement Shared Care Plans Teams involved *A&E *Local Authority *Community nurses (map teams) *Primary Care *Community Nurses (map which teams) *Primary Care *Community nurses (map which teams) *Primary care * Hospital staff * SW team * LA * FT *Rehab teams Tools Risk stratification - (in use in a fragmented way, i.e. separately in FT and Primary Care); not yet in use in LA = opportunity to streamline, agree consistent cohort? e.g. at risk of admission Standard Care Plan – opportunity Standard work – across the pathway for this group involving teams and shared understanding, + time based standards = opportunity (see Nottinghamshire work in progress on frail elderly pathway care standards)

  11. Round Table Discussion • On your tables you will be asked to consider: • Are we on the right lines with our plans? • What else should we be thinking about doing?

More Related