1 / 11

Joint Working Project

Alcohol in Safer Hands – A Joint Working case study Integrated Care Service Specification Project Dr Joe McGilligan. Joint Working Project. This project is a joint working initiative between East Surrey CCG and Lundbeck Ltd

brone
Download Presentation

Joint Working Project

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. Alcohol in Safer Hands – A Joint Working case studyIntegrated Care Service Specification ProjectDr Joe McGilligan

  2. Joint Working Project • This project is a joint working initiative between East Surrey CCG and Lundbeck Ltd • It is bound by a Joint Working Agreement and Project Initiation Document (PID) including terms of reference for an assignment role • Project Reporting lines: • Project Executive / Sponsor: Dr Joe McGilligan • Clinical Lead (advisory/support role): Dr Jill Rasmussen • CCG Overseeing Manager: Hayley Bath, Engagement & Delivery Manager • Alcohol Project Manager - Assignment: Allister Upton from Lundbeck • See www.lundbeck.com/uk/our-focus/joint-working

  3. What’s the issue? “...the concentration in England on "binge drinking" youngsters and on the antisocial or criminal consequences of heavy drinking.... has allowed politicians to project the problem onto a small minority of the population, missing the point that there are hundreds of thousands of people - the silent majority - who in their own homes are quietly opening a bottle of wine each evening and over the week are unknowingly drinking well over the recommended limits, storing up problems for the future.” Professor Sir Ian Gilmore – commenting on national alcohol policy, February 2010 http://www.smmgp.org.uk/html/newsletters/net028.php#Debate

  4. Above DoH Guidelines? Risk in context

  5. In East Surrey: 13,011 alcohol related A&E visits Sources: HES A&E data; MORI (2003); National Schedule of Reference Costs 2011-12 for NHS trusts and NHS foundation trusts

  6. 2,912 alcohol related inpatient admissions Sources: HES 2011/12 & NWPHO 2008

  7. Why? Alcohol Impact Model: ES CCG £11.9m

  8. SCN grant to fund gaps in service • Bid to gain funding to pump prime T1 service interventions • Locally commissioned service proposal • Telephone helpline delivering confidential screening & signposting • Practice & Pharmacy based “Healthy Living Clinic” to deal with increasing and high risk drinkers • Bolster Alcohol Liaison Services in Acute Trust • Deliver T1 point of contact for those identified or motivated to seek help • £182k to fund identification, screening and advice to reduce drinking risk

  9. What are main parts of the new pathway? • The 4 work streams have evolved into 4 pathway segments: • Prevention – whole life cycle proposed • Scratch cards, simple screening with all health and social care partners signposting into telephone support/services • Screening and early identification • Telephone line, Alcohol Liaison and HCPs directing people into the HEALTHY LIVING CLINIC • Diagnosis, Support and Risk Management • Diagnosis and treatment in primary care or signposting to specialist services • Specialist Treatment • Awareness and making the most of PH funded services

  10. Interactive Tool

  11. Questions

More Related