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Dr Joanne Watson Clinical Director of the King’s Fund Point of Care Hospital Programme

Re:thinking the Experience. The Path Forward. Dr Joanne Watson Clinical Director of the King’s Fund Point of Care Hospital Programme Clinical Director of Patient Experience & Consultant Physician, Musgrove Park Hospital, Taunton Quality Improvement Fellow (The Health Foundation & IHI).

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Dr Joanne Watson Clinical Director of the King’s Fund Point of Care Hospital Programme

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  1. Re:thinking the Experience. The Path Forward. Dr Joanne Watson Clinical Director of the King’s Fund Point of Care Hospital Programme Clinical Director of Patient Experience & Consultant Physician, Musgrove Park Hospital, Taunton Quality Improvement Fellow (The Health Foundation & IHI)

  2. Thank you so much!

  3. Re:thinking the Experience. The Path Forward. Dr Joanne Watson Clinical Director of the King’s Fund Point of Care Hospital Programme Clinical Director of Patient Experience & Consultant Physician, Musgrove Park Hospital, Taunton Quality Improvement Fellow (The Health Foundation & IHI)

  4. From a World Class Person- Don Berwick July 1st, 2008 Put the patient at the absolute centre of your system of care - In its most authentic form, this rule feels very risky… It means the active presence of patients, families and communities in the design, management and assessment and improvement of care. It means total transparency. It means that patients have their own medical records and that restricted visiting hours are eliminated. It means ‘nothing about me without me’.

  5. “Nice but not necessary”

  6. “Nice but too expensive”

  7. There is nothing more powerful than an idea whose time has come. Victor Hugo

  8. Safety Effectiveness Equity Patient Centred Efficiency Timely What is at the Centre?

  9. Safety Effectiveness Equity Patient Centred Efficiency Timely What is at the Centre? Value in Health Care Patient Experience

  10. Safety Effectiveness Equity Patient Centred Efficiency Timely What is at the Centre? Value in Health Care Value in Health Care

  11. What are we trying to accomplish? How will we know that a change is an improvement? What changes can we make that will result in improvement? Outline of this Talk’s Direction of Travel

  12. What are we trying to accomplish?

  13. One day Alice came to a fork in the road and saw a Cheshire Cat in a tree. “Which road do I take?” she asked. “Where do you want to go?” was his response. “I don’t know” she answered. “Then” said the Cat “it doesn’t matter.” Lewis Carroll ‘Alice in Wonderland’ 1865

  14. What are we trying to accomplish? The health care professional does a job, and for many people this job is pretty mundane. They’re doing the same kind of thing to the same kind of people pretty well every day. So for them that activity becomes completely routine. And some days rather dull. For the individual patient it’s anything but that. Every individual that comes through a hospital is apprehensive. It’s a strange place, you lie in a strange bed, you have strange sheets, you have odd tea in a plastic cup. The whole thing is vibrantly different. Dr Kieran Sweeney, 2009

  15. What are we trying to accomplish? Every patient counts

  16. What are we trying to accomplish? Every patient counts & Compassionate care embedded

  17. Value in Health Care- Porter M and Lee T: 2010,NEJM Dec 23 • How is value defined in health care? • What is important to our customers, the patients? • OUTCOMES, results, consequences, effects, conclusions etc of Health Care

  18. Value = Health Outcomes £ Spent

  19. What are we trying to accomplish? • Delivering health care which adds VALUE through considering what patients need and want • Be accountable for the total care of the medical condition • Develop pride in what we do in health care- working with a sense of achievement and accomplishment

  20. Warning The next question is the really crucial one!

  21. How will we know that a change is an improvement? • Focus on outcomes, as well as process • Meaningful data – a department is too narrow, a whole hospital too broad • Real team work as we cross the silos of medicine’s organisational structure • “If you don’t measure it, you can’t manage it”

  22. Measurement Strategy 1- Outcome Hierarchy

  23. Measurement Strategy 2- Key Drivers

  24. Impact of Relational Coordination on Airline Performance 62% Relational Coordination 28% Hoffer Gittell J 2003, The SW Airlines Way, NY McGraw-Hill 1.32 -1.35 Airline Performance Index

  25. Impact of Relational Coordination on Surgical Performance Hosp 6 4.22 Hosp 4 Hosp 5 Relational Coordination Hosp 8 Hosp 7 Hosp 9 Hosp 3 Hosp 1 Hosp 2 3.84 .48 Surgical Performance Index -.43 Hoffer Gittell J 2009, High Performance Healthcare

  26. How will we know that a change is an improvement?

  27. What changes can we make that will result in improvement?

  28. Vital Sign Care Cards SAFETY I want to feel safe SELF CONFIDENCE I want to feel confident in managing my own health COMFORT I want to feel physically comfortable RESPECT I want to feel treated with respect UNDERSTANDING I want to understand my Treatment and condition REASSURANCE I want to feel reassured EFFECTIVENESS I want my treatment to make me feel better HONESTY I want to feel staff are open and honest with me OPPORTUNITY CARD For patient to express any other care needs

  29. Airedale New Venture Charity Airedale General Hospital

  30. Helping families with Supportive Care

  31. The Year of Care Consultation Skills and Philosophy Toolkit ‘Mind your language’

  32. And so to summarise…. • Patient experience is a complex outcome to focus improvement in • Measurement- strategy to cover the breadth & depth of experience relevant to the pathway • Co-ordinated programme to shift overall experience, not random acts of goodness

  33. Speech to the Young. Speech to the Progress-Toward. Say to them, say to the down-keepers, the sun-slappers, the self-soilers, the harmony hushers, “Even if you are not ready for day it cannot always be night.” You will be right For that is the hard home-run. And remember: Live not for Battles won. Live not for The-End-of-the-Song. Live in the along. Gwendolyn Brooks

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