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URGENT CARE & EMERGENCY CARE

URGENT CARE & EMERGENCY CARE. Alex Berry – Chief Commissioning Officer. CONTENT. What do we mean by urgent and emergency care Pressures on the service What is the position locally What are we doing about it now and in the future. URGENT & EMERGENCY CARE.

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URGENT CARE & EMERGENCY CARE

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  1. URGENT CARE & EMERGENCY CARE Alex Berry – Chief Commissioning Officer

  2. CONTENT • What do we mean by urgent and emergency care • Pressures on the service • What is the position locally • What are we doing about it now and in the future

  3. URGENT & EMERGENCY CARE Terms such as ‘unscheduled care’ unplanned care’ emergency care and urgent care are often used interchangeably Emergency care – is an immediate response to time critical health care need. Unscheduled care/urgent care – involves services available to access without prior arrangement where there is an urgent actual or perceived need for intervention

  4. PATIENT EYE – URGENT CARE – ‘I NEED HELP’ Variety of routes for patients to access urgent and emergency care 111 GP OOHs Ambulance ED (A&E) Walk in centres Specialist nurses

  5. PRESSURES ON URGENT AND EMERGENCY CARE SERVICES • Rising demand – growth in new forms of urgent care have failed to reduce A&E • Changing needs of an ageing population • Changing expectations and experiences of patients as a result of a 24/7 culture • Highly fragmented and generate confusion and how and where to access care • Poor sharing of information

  6. PRESSURES ON URGENT AND EMERGENCY CARE SERVICES • General practice provides the majority of urgent care – 95% or urgent care is accessed in primary care with 5% in secondary care. • Increasing demand in EDs across the country – ‘waiting target missed in major A&Es 'for whole year‘ BBC 18 July 2014. Last three years alone, attendances have increased by 1million • The pressures in emergency care will not be relieved by focusing on a single aspect of the problem in isolation – it requires a co-ordinated response across the whole health system.

  7. WHATS THE LOCAL PERFORMANCE

  8. WHATS THE LOCAL PERFORMANCE – THE CHALLENGE

  9. WHATS HAPPENING LOCALLY • Given current pressures, the following was agreed: • • Working to the CE of Portsmouth Hospital Trust leading a system-wide urgent care working group • • Conduct a rapid diagnostic of the issues around urgent care performance • To identify the blockers to driving change and improvements • • Develop a recovery plan to deliver rapid but sustainable improvements across the system for urgent care

  10. WHAT DID THE DIAGNOSTIC TELL US LOCALLY?

  11. WHAT DID THE DIAGNOSTIC TELL US LOCALLY? • Admissions are lowest at the weekend • A&E admissions are lowest between 4am and 10am • There are a high number of 31-65 year olds attending the department • Patients admitted via MAU have a longer length of stay than those admitted via ED • 18% of beds are occupied by patients ready and awaiting discharge • 95% of patients leaving PHT return to their own home. Of these 15% require care packages established or restarted • Discharges peak at 3pm whereas pressure on beds peaks at 1pm • Breaches relate too bed availability, clinical specialty review and clinical exceptions

  12. SOURCE OF ATTENDANCE

  13. MODE OF ARRIVAL

  14. ATTENDERS BY DAY OF THE WEEK

  15. MAJORS VS MINORS

  16. NEXT STEPS AND IMMEDIATE ACTIONS

  17. FUTURE REQUIREMENTS Emerging principles for national urgent and emergency care in England outline a system that: Provides consistently high quality and safe care, across all seven days of the week; Is simple and guides good choices by patients and clinicians; Provides the right care in the right place, by those with the right skills, the first time; Is efficient in the delivery of care and services

  18. FUTURE REQUIRMENTS FOR URGENT AND EMERGENCY CARE?

  19. SYSTEM DESIGN OBJECTIVES (1): Make it simpler for me or my family/carer to access and navigate urgent and emergency care services and advice. Increase my or my family/carer’s awareness of early detection and options for self-care and support me to manage my acute or long term physical or mental condition. Increase my or my family/carer’s awareness of and publicise the benefits of ‘phone before you go’. If my need is urgent, provide me with guaranteed same day access to a primary care team that is integrated with my GP practice and my hospital specialist team. Improve my care, experience and outcome by ensuring early senior clinical input in the urgent and emergency care pathway. Wherever appropriate, manage me where I present (including at home and over the telephone).

  20. SYSTEM DESIGN OBJECTIVES (2): If it's not appropriate to manage me where I present (including at home and over the telephone), take or direct me to a place of definitive treatment within a safe amount of time; ensure I have rapid access to a highly specialist centre if needed. Ensure all urgent and emergency care facilities are capable of transferring me urgently and that the mode of transport is capable, appropriate and authorised. Information, critical for my care, is available to all those treating me. Where I need wider support for my mental, physical and social needs ensure it is available. Each of my clinical experiences should be part of programme to develop and train the clinical staff and ensure their competence and the future quality of the service are constantly developed. The quality of my care should be measured in a way that reflects the urgency and complexity of my illness.

  21. NEXT STEPS Focus on addressing the short and immediate issues to improve ED BUT Develop a clear vision and approach that simplifies the urgent care pathway and addresses the strategic objective arising from the urgent care review

  22. ANY QUESTIONS?

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