1 / 30

A PRACTICAL EXAMPLE OF DCAQ

A PRACTICAL EXAMPLE OF DCAQ. Dr Gerry Beattie Clinical Lead, NHS Lothian 18 th November, 2009. DCAQ Gynaecology - background. Why is the out-patient waiting time 16-18 weeks ? What are the consultant staff doing ? Why are we losing capacity and how can we stop it ?

fern
Download Presentation

A PRACTICAL EXAMPLE OF DCAQ

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. A PRACTICAL EXAMPLE OF DCAQ Dr Gerry Beattie Clinical Lead, NHS Lothian 18th November, 2009

  2. DCAQ Gynaecology - background • Why is the out-patient waiting time 16-18 weeks ? • What are the consultant staff doing ? • Why are we losing capacity and how can we stop it ? • What are we going to do about the next round of job planning ?

  3. DCAQ Gynaecology • UNDELIVIERED ACTIVITY – the waiting list, service entry points, primary care interface. • DELIVERED ACTIVITY – productivity, rotas, inappropriate activity, templates. • LOST CAPACITY – leave, compensatory rest, short notice cancellations

  4. DCAQ Gynaecology • DEMAND • CAPACITY • ACTIVITY • QUEUES

  5. Two important points to remember • It’s just good housekeeping, it’s not rocket science ! • Just because ‘it’s aye been done this way’ doesn’t mean there isn’t a better way of doing it !

  6. Demand – the problems • Unclear as to what the demand was in terms of numbers • No idea as to the case mix out there • 6 entry points into the system – NRIE, WGH, SJH, LCTC, Roodlands, Liberton. • Little dialogue between primary care and the acute sector

  7. Demand – some solutions • Centralised Booking set up for Lothian – bringing all referrals to one central point in the NRIE and now moving to e referral and e-triage • Outcoming from triage recorded to inform the size and location of service queues and what needs to be in place where • Exploring electronic GP helplines to prevent patients becoming referrals

  8. Another important point - • Demand is not a given, it can be influenced in your favour • The 3 D’s – Driving Down Demand !

  9. A thought - • What if referrals were not referrals and simply requests for advice ?

  10. Capacity – the problems • Difficult to define • Difficult to measure • Lost capacity • Reliant on Consultant job plans

  11. What is capacity ? • Templated capacity (52 weeks) • Adjusted capacity (42 weeks) • Delivered capacity (about 36 weeks)

  12. What is capacity ? • Capacity is a dynamic concept that is constantly changing • It is not a straight line or a box with rigid sides

  13. Capacity Modelling • Real time job plans can help measure capacity • Convert weekly job plans into at least 4 weekly spreadsheets to overview capacity and identify peaks and troughs • A real need for dynamic prospective capacity modelling

  14. Capacity – some solutions • Centralised booking has allowed capacity measurement across Lothian and respond to service pressures • Real time job plan mapping • Sanitisation of clinic templates • Standardisation of clinic templates • Flexibility of consultant workforce

  15. Activity – the problems • Lots of it –but not accurately recorded • Coding issues • Inappropriate activity • Clinic templates – new/return ratios • Outreach clinics • Consultant productivity • Role of senior trainees

  16. Activity – some solutions • Accurate recording and coding, with medical input into coding • Minimum standards for clinic templates • New/return ratios revised in the light of speciality development • The ring pessary challenge • Utilisation of senior trainees • Keep the mavericks in the building

  17. Queues – the problems • There was a big one and lots of little ones • There was no idea of how wide the pathway had to be to accommodate the queues • Chaos reigned !

  18. Queues – some solutions • Centralised booking has streamlined, quantified and reduced the queues • Patients now seen by the most appropriate clinician at the most appropriate site • Waiting time across Lothian now 6 weeks and falling !

  19. Question - DCAQ – where did we start ? • Answer - Job planning

  20. The 2004 Consultant Contract • Full time commitment of 10 programmed activities (PAs) per week – 4 hour sessions • Direct clinical care (DCC), Supporting professional activities (SPA), additional/external duties • 7.5 PAs DCC / 2.5 PAs SPA (Plans for 9+1) • Flexibility depending on commitments eg Clinical Governance leads etc • EPAs – separate contract, no obligation

  21. Job Planning • The process is individual but collectively job plans must reflect the over all needs of the service • Provides the capacity to meet the demand on the service

  22. Job planning – the issues • Plan the service to meet the demand • Consultant productivity – 42 wks – if not, why not ? • Notify, control, monitor and restrict leave – and learn to say NO ! • Get service into PAs and use EPAs for reward – eg cross cover / additional activity

  23. Job planning – the issues • Rota management to reduce impact of compensatory rest – lost capacity • Allow flexibility in the job planning process • Play to individual strengths • Need all consultants look the same ?

  24. Consultant engagement • Protected time gives recognition to the importance of the work • Sell the carrot, not the stick • Get one of their own doing the work

  25. A disease analogy • Symptoms of reluctance to change, reluctance to engage and inefficiency • Syndrome of ‘ we’ve aye done it this way’

  26. The challenge - Physicians of the utmost fame Were called at once, but when they came They muttered as they took their fees There is no cure for this disease Hilaire Belloc

  27. Any questions ?

More Related