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Welcome to Celebrating Positive Practice in County Durham and Darlington

Welcome to Celebrating Positive Practice in County Durham and Darlington. 19 September 2013 Mrs. Jo Turnbull, Chairman. PATIENT & CARER INVOLVEMENT. Lucy Prowse – Patient & Carer Involvement Support Officer Anthea Motson - Patient & Carer Involvement Officer Pam Elliot - Carer

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Welcome to Celebrating Positive Practice in County Durham and Darlington

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  1. Welcome to Celebrating Positive Practicein County Durham and Darlington 19 September 2013 Mrs. Jo Turnbull, Chairman

  2. PATIENT & CARER INVOLVEMENT Lucy Prowse – Patient & Carer Involvement Support Officer Anthea Motson - Patient & Carer Involvement Officer Pam Elliot - Carer Paul Wait – Ward Manager, Farnham Ward, Lanchester Road Hospital

  3. What is involvement? Involvement partnership Our relationship Work together to help shape and improve our services and help with people’s recovery

  4. Types of involvement activity • Meetings and consultations • Task and finish groups - reviewing services and providing feedback • Service improvement workshops • Hospital inspections (PLACE visits) • Ward visits (validation visits) • Recruitment and selection • Staff training and induction • Recovery stories – sharing your experience • Trust conferences and events • Readers’ panel – reviewing our leaflets and information

  5. How to get involved Do you have experience of our services and are interested in being involved? Details held on our database Involvement opportunities sent via email or post

  6. What our service users & carers have said about involvement: “My involvement with the Trust has enhanced my recovery since my discharge and I feel the best I’ve been in my life” from a service user. “I have found absolute salvation being involved with various carers groups and being involved helped put my mind at rest from personal problems” from a carer.

  7. Recruitment & Selection ANTHEA MOTSON Patient & Carer Involvement Officer

  8. Recruitment & Selection Background: Historically staff involved service users and carers in recruitment and selection by inviting them to sit on interview panels. Partnership working with HR was undertaken to promote involvement in their documentation and Trust Induction.

  9. Recruitment & Selection Currently: • The Medical Education department hold their own database & train service users and carers in recruitment & selection. • Work is ongoing obtaining 360 degree feedback on the current interview process. • The trust is hoping to arrange a Values Focus Group to involve service users and carers in recruitment of staff on the basis of the Trust Values. • A focus group was set up to look at job descriptions to see if they are sufficiently service user / carer focused.

  10. Recruitment & Selection PAM ELLIOT Carer

  11. Training for Carers PAUL WAIT Ward Manager, Farnham Ward Lanchester Road Hospital

  12. ANY QUESTIONS

  13. Crisis TeamsThe Future

  14. What Does A Crisis Team Do?

  15. Core Provision • Rapid assessment following referral. • A viable alternative to hospital admission. • Intensive home treatment. • Facilitated early discharge from hospital where admission has been unavoidable. • Prevent relapse

  16. Facts • 24 hour service/7 days a week • Referrals for crisis assessment average around 160/month • Geographical area covered is from Consett to Seaham • We aim to see people within 4 hours of referral • Able to work intensively in people’s homes • Home Treatment case load is often between 20-30 people .

  17. What’s next • Change perception service users/professionals • Be more flexible • Creative crisis care planning • Bespoke home treatment-build around individual needs • Integration with other services • User friendly/stop repetition • Accessible • Listen to feedback/constantly evolve.

  18. Benefits • Care can be delivered at home. • Service user has greater individual input into their episode of care. • Increased carer involvement. • Integrated working. • Supporting community teams. • Build on existing coping mechanisms and social networks.

  19. Developments

  20. The Shildon Crisis and Recovery House

  21. Benefits • Purpose built • Intensive home treatment in our home • Help stabilise mental health • Step up • Step down • Can assist in early discharge • Seeing it from the service users perspective.

  22. Why • Give people greater choice –an alternative • Provide supportive care – relapse prevention • Step in earlier to prevent escalation of crisis • Facilitate resolution in crisis situations particularly for those with limited support or felt to be vulnerable • Focus on recovery

  23. Conclusion Crisis Teams have been established for several years within mental health services. The development of the new Crisis and Recovery House is the next step. It will enable people to have more choice with regards to their treatment and care, and allow services to intervene earlier, which ultimately improves outcomes and aids recovery.

  24. A different way of doing things!!!

  25. HOW SERVICE USERS WITH A DRUG PROBLEM ARE SUPPORTED IN SUBSTANCE MISUSE SERVICES JUDITH DURKIN - CLINICAL COORDINATOR. ANGELA SCULLY-SERVICE USER, SMART RECOVERY FACILITATOR.

  26. KEY THEMES • INDEPENDENT/SUPPLEMENTARY NON MEDICAL PRESCRIBING WITHIN SUBSTANCE MISUSE SERVICES • THE DISTRIBUTION OF NALOXONE TO SERVICE USERS/PARENTS/ CARERS AND OTHERS. • WORKING AND SUPPORTING PREGNANT SERVICE USERS. • ROAD TO RECOVERY - ANGELA SCULLY.

  27. INDEPENDENT/SUPPLEMENTARY NON MEDICAL PRESCRIBING • LEGISLATION AND GUIDANCE WHICH HAS SUPPORTED THE DEVELOPMENT OF NON MEDICAL PRESCRIBING - NEIGHBOURHOOD NURSING A FOCUS FOR CARE 1986, FIRST CROWN REPORT 1989. • CHANGING PROFESSIONAL BOUNDARIES. • SUPPORTING THE ETHOS OF THE NHS. • RENEGOTIATION IN HEALTH CARE LABOUR. • INTRODUCTION OF NURSE - LED CLINICS.

  28. THE FIRST NURSES IN THE SUBSTANCE MISUSE SERVICES COMPLETED THEIR TRAINING IN 2005. • AT PRESENT THERE ARE 17 NURSES IN COUNTY DURHAM, A MINIMUM OF 2 WORKING IN EACH CENTRE WHO ARE QUALIFIED AS NON MEDICAL PRESCRIBERS.

  29. BENEFITS OF NON MEDICAL PRESCRIBING TO SERVICE DELIVERY AND CLIENT CARE • TIMELY ACCESS TO SUBSTITUTE PRESCRIBING. • IT IS AN APPROPRIATE, EFFECTIVE AND COST EFFECTIVE INTERVENTION . • IT IS STRUCTURED AROUND CLIENT NEED. • GIVES PATIENT CHOICE AND CONVENIENCE. • AND GIVES CONSIDERATION TO BEST PRACTICE BASED ON EVIDENCE . • LEADING TO CONSISTENCY OF CARE DELIVERY FOR CLIENTS.

  30. NON MEDICAL PRESCRIBING PROVISION WITHIN THE SUBSTANCE MISUSE DIVISION • COMMUNITY SUBSTANCE MISUSE SERVICES – SUBSTITUTE PRESCRIBING, DETOXIFICATION, SYMPTOMATIC RELIEF,OPIATE BLOCKERS. • HARM MINIMISATION SERVICES – ANTIBIOTICS, VACCINATIONS • RECOVERY INJECTABLE OPIOID SERVICE – SUPPORTING THE SMOOTH TRANSITION BETWEEN SERVICES.

  31. RECOVERY ACADEMY – SUBSTITUTE PRESCRIBING AND SYMPTOMATIC RELIEF DURING DETOXIFICATION TO SUPPORT RECOVERY. • COMMUNITY ALCOHOL SERVICES – ALCOHOL DETOXIFICATION TREATMENT REGIMES, PRESCRIBING TO PROMOTE PHYSICAL HEALTH.

  32. FUTURE DEVELOPMENTS • NON MEDICAL PRESCRIBING PROVISION INCREASED TO 75% ACROSS COUNTY DURHAM. • INCREASE ACCESS TO NURSE LED CLINCS. • DEVELOP THE ROLE OF THE INDEPENDENT NURSE PRESCRIBER AND THE PRESCRIBING OF CONTROLLED DRUGS.

  33. NALOXONE DISTRIBUTION • IN 2011 – THERE WAS A TOTAL OF 1,772 MALE AND 880 FEMALE DRUG POISONING DEATHS INVOLVING BOTH LEGAL AND ILLEGAL DRUGS. • HEROIN/MORPHINE DEATHS HAD DECREASED BY 25% TO 596 IN 2011 BUT WAS STILL 596 DEATHS TO MANY. • THE HIGHEST MORTALITY RATE WAS IN THE AGE GROUP 30-39.

  34. OPIOID DEPENDENCY INCLUDING HEROIN AND OTHER OPIOID DERIVITIVES HAS A HIGH MORTALITY RATE DUE TO ACCIDENTAL OVERDOSE. • EVIDENCE SHOWS THAT THESE NUMBERS CAN BE REDUCED IF NALOXONE IS GIVEN TO SERVICE USERS, CARERS AND OTHERS .

  35. NALOXONE IS AN ANTIDOTE THAT RAPIDLY BUT TEMPORARILY REVERSES THE EFFECTS OF HEROIN AND OTHER OPIOIDS. IT IS REQUIRED TO BE ADMINISTERED VIA INJECTION TO THE OVERDOSE VICTIM. • IN 2005 THE LAW WAS AMENDED TO PERMIT EMERGENCY ADMINISTARTION OF NALOXONE BY TRAINED MEMBERS OF THE PUBLIC.

  36. KAIZAN EVENT KEY THEMES • INCREASE AWARENESS OF OVERDOSE PREVENTION AND THE USE OF NALOXONE • DEVELOP AN OVERDOSE PREVENTION TRAINING PACKAGE – TO INCLUDE, BASIC LIFE SUPPORT AND ADMINISTRATION OF NALOXONE • TRAIN STAFF TO DELIVER THE PACKAGE

  37. OUTCOMES OF KAIZAN • PATIENT GROUP DIRECTION. • TRAINING PACKAGE. • PROCEDURE. • STANDARD WORK. • LEAFLETS. • QUESTIONNAIRES. • POSTER.

  38. EVALUATION • OVER 50 TRAINING EPISODES COMPLETED. • A KEY PRIORITY FOR SERVICES. • THREE NALOXONE USED IN OVERDOSE SITUATIONS WHICH ARE 3 LIVES SAVED.

  39. SUPPORTING PREGNANT SERVICE USERS • MULTI AGENCY GROUP ESTABLISHED TO EXPLORE THE DELIVERY OF A ROBUST SERVICE MODEL • REVISITED AND UPDATED IN 2012, LEADING TO - • STANDARDISED WORKING ACROSS COUNTY DURHAM. • THE PROMOTION OF PARTNERSHIP WORKING WITH THE WIDER CARE TEAM ENSURING CONSISTENT SAFE PROACTIVE PRACTICES.

  40. SERVICE USER INVOLVEMENT • SUPPORTING THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE PREGNANCY PATHWAY. • DEVELOPMENT OF SERVICE USER LEAFLETS. • DEVELOPMENT OF THE PREGNANCY CARE PLAN.

  41. 2012 SERVICE USER AUDIT. IDENTIFIED - • GOOD PRACTICE IN SAFEGUARDING THE NEEDS OF THE CHILD • APPROPRIATE REFERRALS TO THE LOCAL AUTHORITY WHEN CONCERNS WERE IDENTIFIED • POSITIVE CLIENT ENGAGEMENT WITH SUBSTANCE MISUSE SERVICES POSTNATALY

  42. ROAD TO RECOVERY ANGELA’S STORY.

  43. Hospital Liaison Service Update Chris Binns, Operational Service Manager

  44. Hospital Liaison Service • Psychiatric liaison services provide mental health care to people being treated for physical health conditions in general hospitals. • Mental health disorders such as depression, anxiety, alcohol and memory problems are very common in general hospital. Research has shown that they are often not recognised or treated • Untreated mental health issues can lead to longer hospital admission and poorer physical health overall in hospital inpatients and increased health care costs. • An effective liaison psychiatry service offers the prospect of saving money as well as improving health .

  45. What did will be different? • Extend location of services and visibility • Better Support to hospital staff • Increased hours of working • Improved Multi disciplinary approach • Post discharge support • Service for High Intensity Users of Hospital Services

  46. Patient stories

  47. Whats next... • Improving follow up for people who self harm • Working with Specialities within the Hospital • Development of MUPS service • Service Evaluation And hopefully long term funding....

  48. Questions?

  49. Refreshment Break • Refreshments served on the mezzanine level and market place

  50. Patient and Carer Feedback How the Trust obtains and acts on feedback from patients and carers, what it tells us and what we do about it. Corinne Aspel Lead Senior Nurse Patient Experience

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