Spring 2015 - NHS Dartford, Gravesham and Swanley CCG
Transcription
Spring 2015 - NHS Dartford, Gravesham and Swanley CCG
Spring 2015 PatientNews Leading the way in A&E Bank holidays always add pressure on hospital Accident and Emergency units, as many GP surgeries close over this period. We saw the result at Christmas and the New Year, and there are more holidays coming up during Easter and May. But the A&E unit at Darent Valley Hospital serving the Dartford area, has been performing better than most. One of the reasons is that NHS Dartford, Gravesham and Swanley Clinical Commissioning Group, which plans and pays for most of the area’s healthcare, has been working hard behind the scenes with hospital staff, GPs, community medical teams, voluntary organisations and social care professionals from the county council. As a result, an Integrated Discharge Team now works within the hospital to assess patients, often the elderly and frail, as they enter A&E. Staff decide if patients need to be admitted to hospital or if they can recover better at home or elsewhere in the community with the right kind of support. It is estimated the team prevents up to ten emergency admissions a day which means A&E and the hospital’s beds are only used by those who really need them. The team arranges support, from community nurse visits to special equipment, so patients can be safely sent home, or to another appropriate place, as soon as they are well enough. The pioneering project has been so successful it has been featured on BBC Radio Four’s World At One programme. Among those interviewed was the CCG’s accountable officer, Patricia Davies. She said: “Darent Valley Hospital was under extreme pressure, like many hospitals in the country, over Christmas and the New Year. But unlike some, it did not need to declare a major incident. The Integrated Discharge Team is not a silver bullet but if we did not have coordinated working between primary and secondary care, the local authorities and the hospital trust, then we would have been in a much worse position. It is the type of scheme which can make all the difference between a hospital going into crisis or not.” The programme featured Victor Bishop, 89, a former RAF Second World War rear gunner in a bomber crew, who had been admitted the previous evening after falling at his home in Gravesend. Listeners heard Sister Amanda Fry asking Mr Bishop what help he needed at home. Sister Fry told reporter Andrew Bomford: “It used to be that patients were admitted and could sometimes wait days for their assessment to Joined-up working: Sister Amanda Fry of the Darent Valley Hospital’s Integrated Discharge Team speaks to patient Victor Bishop, 89, from Gravesend as Radio 4 reporter Andrew Bomford listens in. get them home safely. Now we act quickly to prevent inappropriate hospital admissions and also help with safe discharges.” This project is one of the priorities of the CCG’s five-year plan, which was devised following a series of Better Care Together events involving patients, the public and other stakeholders. How can YOU help make A&E better? – turn to page 2 How make it be One of simplest ways to cut down queues at A&E is to only use it when you really need it. This means being aware of the alternatives. If your GP surgery is closed in the evening, at the weekend or during a bank holiday, there are still plenty of other options. GP Dr Elizabeth Lunt, who chairs NHS Dartford, Gravesham and Swanley Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG), said: "If you know a bank holiday is coming up and you are on medication, you should request a repeat prescription in plenty of time. But make sure you only order what you need. Stockpiling medicine can be risky and also wastes NHS resources.” She added: "Take time to restock your medicine cabinets while shopping. It is much better to have painkillers or plasters in the house rather than to have a last-minute dash to the shops.” Those with smartphones or a computer should download the Health Help Now web app – www. healthhelpnow-nhs.net – or get the Health Help Now app from Google Play or the App Store. Health Help Now can help you find the right treatment, day or night, wherever you are in Kent. It can identify the nearest open chemist and give you directions there. It has already been used more than 47,000 times. The downloadable version features a ‘health wallet’ to make notes about symptoms, jot down questions to ask a GP, keep a list of health appointments and contacts, and save favourite pages from Health Help Now. If you don’t have internet access or a smartphone, call NHS 111 for urgent health advice, 24 hours a day. MEDICINE CABINET A well-stocked medicine cabinet should include: • Thermometer • Rehydration salts • Plasters, bandages and sticking tape • Antiseptic cream • Sunscreen • Indigestion treatments • Painkillers (paracetamol and ibuprofen – including child versions if you have children under 12) • Antihistamines (such as hay fever tablets and insect bite creams). w to etter in A&E MENTAL HEALTH DENTIST Free confidential emotional advice and guidance is available 24 hours a day, every day, from the Mental Health Matters helpline on 0800 107 0160 from landlines and 03003 305486 from mobiles. The Samaritans are on 08457 909090. For emergency dental care, contact your own dentist first. At evenings, weekends and bank holidays (8.30am to 1.25pm) you can call DentaLine on 01634 890300. PHARMACIES Some pharmacies are open on bank holidays. Pharmacists can provide advice on many common illnesses and advice on medication. See Help Health Now, your local newspaper or the CCG’s website for opening hours. MINOR INJURIES AND WALK IN CENTRES Trained nurses at minor injury units (MIUs) can assess and treat cuts, sprains, minor burns, minor dislocations of the fingers and toes, minor eye injuries and remove foreign bodies from, for example, ears and noses. Minor injury units cannot treat babies under a year old. Walk-in centres are staffed by GPs. MIUs and walk-in centres are open every day of the year. • Minor Injury Unit, Erith Hospital, Park Crescent, Erith, DA8 3EE. 01322 356116. 8am – 10pm • Minor Injury Unit, Gravesham Community Hospital, Bath Street, Gravesend, DA11 0DG. 01474 360500. 8am – 8pm • White Horse GP-led walk-in centre, Vale Road, Gravesend, DA11 8BZ. 0300 030 0000. 8am – 6.30pm Free P NHSWEBASPITE AND The Francis Report: Who Cares? After ‘appalling care’ was uncovered at the Mid Staffordshire General Hospital NHS Trust, barrister Sir Robert Francis QC published a damning dossier in February 2013 demanding a return to a caring and safer culture in the NHS. He made 292 recommendations. At the end of his report he wrote: “It is respectfully suggested that the subject matter of this Inquiry is too important for it to be allowed to be forgotten.” Geoffrey Wheat, the Chief Medical Officer at NHS Dartford, Gravesham and Swanley Clinical Commissioning Group, took up the challenge and this year staged what he dubbed a Francis Day to keep the recommendations alive in the minds of all NHS organisations in north Kent. He teamed up with NHS Medway CCG and NHS Swale CCG and invited providers to tell each other what they were doing to ensure the safety of patients. He said: “It is vital the health service continues to take notice of, and react to those recommendations. The clear message is that more of the same is not good enough.” He added: "Our providers have been very responsive. We have been monitoring their action plans. The day was about celebrating some of those successes.” His team also staged an awards ceremony with special guest Sam Sherrington, the head of Stakeholder and Cultural Transformation at NHS England. She said: “Patient experience must be at the heart of everything we do. Events like this help to remind us of why we are here. We must focus on value for money and ways to make the health service work. “What I saw was the tremendous commitment and passion of individuals who are working very hard in our different organisations Judges at the Francis Day event, from the left, GP Bhaskar Bora, Principal Clinical Lead for quality at NHS Dartford, Gravesham and Swanley Clinical Commissioning Group (DGS CCG); Sam Sherrington from NHS England; Deputy Chief Nurse Gail Locock and Chief Nurse Geoffrey Wheat from DGS, Medway and Swale CCGs; and Dr Fiona Armstrong, who chairs Swale CCG. to make Francis part of everyday business. We must learn and share best practices from across the health economies, not just in Kent but across England as well.” GP Dr Bhaskar Bora, Principal Clinical Lead for quality at NHS DGS CCG, said: “It is important to celebrate the good things happening within the health service. It felt like these projects were just the tip of the iceberg. It makes sense to reflect on the Francis Report which reminded us of the standards patients expect.” There were presentations from: • Dartford and Gravesham NHS Trust • Medway NHS Foundation Trust • Kent Community Health NHS Trust • Kent and Medway NHS and Social Care Partnership Trust (KMPT) • South East Coast Ambulance Service NHS Trust (SECAmb) • The Will Adams NHS Treatment Centre in Gillingham and • Medway Community Healthcare To see highlights, watch this twoand-a-half minute Mainstreaming The Francis Report video at www.youtube.com/ watch?v=Q4FZB8mjDpQ How working together gives better care Find a dentist Enter postcode or town... Members of the public have been helping shape the area’s health services. They took part in a Better Care Together forum at the Princes Stadium, Dartford to discuss commissioners’ plans for improving community care, urgent care and mental health. Dr Bhaskar Bora, the CCG’s Principal Clinical Lead for quality, said: “We are investing in community services to keep people living healthier at home for longer. We asked patients and public groups what is important to them and they told us they want choice and to be more in control of their care. They want their care to be planned; with health and social care staff working together. These principles are at the heart of this new way of working.” The half-day event included a question-and-answer session hosted by Dr Bora and Debbie Stock, the Chief Operating Officer, plus table-top discussions on urgent care, community services, sharing of computer health records and mental health and dementia services. Delegates discussed: Integrated Primary Care Teams: Multi-disciplinary hubs working with GPs to coordinate patients’ care with joined-up support, especially for those with long-term conditions and complex needs. The number of people dying of heart attacks in the Canterbury and coastal area has fallen by more than 70 per cent over the.. 30 May 2012 Integrated Discharge Teams: Health and care staff and voluntary organisations working together to assess patients on their first day in hospital to ensure a safe and timely discharge back home or to another appropriate setting. • Better explanation is needed for the public of when and when not, to go to an Accident and Emergency unit; more services should be at walk-in centres; Help shape the future NHS Dartford, Gravesham and Swanley CCG has been working with Kent County Council and other NHS organisations to encourage local health and social care teams work more closely together. services with good IT systems to capture and share information. C4G is inviting local residents to join a patient panel. It is vital we find out what you think of your local health services so we... 30 May 2012 These could be extended to include hospice staff, outreach hospital staff, paramedics and pharmacists who will plan care together and share their expertise to avoid duplication. ? Search More than 70 members of the public, carers, voluntary organisations, statutory organisations and members of patient participation groups based at GP surgeries took part. • Seven-day access to services is essential, as speed is needed when people are unwell; • Community Multi-Disciplinary Integrated Dementia Care: Teams should include everything There are 14 mental health except acute hospital services; nurses supporting GPs in the Integrated Primary Care Teams. The • Mental health and dementia services should work together Alzheimer’s and Dementia Support more; early diagnosis of dementia is Service (ADSS) is working with needed so its effects can be better patients at Darent Valley Hospital. managed; better awareness of the Kent County Council is reviewing mental health and dementia rapid the crisis services. response teams, intensive support Integrated IT records: teams and 24/7 crisis teams. It is vital hospital doctors can • To add your own comments and access selected medical notes held keep up to date with our plans visit by a patient’s GP in appropriate www.dartfordgravesham circumstances to assist in rapid swanleyccg.nhs.uk/get-involved/ diagnosis. But there should be an better-care-together or follow ‘opt out.’ Twitter #BetterCareTogether They agreed: • Publicity about new services is important so the public and all team members are aware of what is available. A printed directory of voluntary organisations and their services is needed. • Telling their story once is important to patients who ‘just want to access the right service’. That needs communication between Better e car together Would you like to help? Do you know someone who would enjoy helping NHS Dartford, Gravesham and Swanley improve the area’s healthcare? TheDGS Health Network is a virtual group of patients, voluntary groups and individuals who are interested in getting more involved in how services are planned and designed. n i t Ge h c u o t By becoming a member you can: • Take part as much, or as little, as you like • Receive regular e-newsletters like this one • Share ideas and views about our health services • Stay up-to-date with the health topics that interest you • Take part in focus groups, consultations and surveys about healthcare Find out more by looking at our website www.dartfordgraveshamswanleyccg.nhs.uk or fill in the form on the next page. Our next governing body meetings are on: Tuesday 31 March, 1-4pm Riverside Community Centre, Dickens Road, Gravesend, DA12 2JY Tuesday 26 May, 1-4pm Council Chamber or Committee Room B2, Dartford Borough Council Offices, Home Gardens, Dartford, DA1 1DZ Tuesday 28 July, 1-4pm The Clock Tower Pavilion, Alexandra Suite, St Mary's Road, Swanley, Kent, BR8 7BU Tuesday 29 September, 10am-1pm Annual meeting follows 1.30-2.30pm Thistle Hotel, Brands Hatch, West Kingsdown, Kent, DA3 8PE Tuesday 24 November, 1-4pm Dickens Room, Riverside Community Centre, Dickens Road, Gravesend, Kent, DA12 2JY The public can ask questions at the start of each meeting based on the agenda. The agenda and papers will be available to download from the CCG’s website www.dartfordgraveshamswanleyccg.nhs.uk five working days before each meeting. NHS Dartford, Gravesham and Swanley CCG Floor 2 Gravesham Civic Centre Windmill Street Gravesend DA12 1AU 03000 424903 [email protected] www.dartfordgravesham swanleyccg.nhs.uk @NHS DGS CCG Join now! Make a difference. NHS Dartford, Gravesham and Swanley CCG is committed to hearing the public voice. In our area we need local people to join our ‘listening’ group called the ‘Health Network’. Benefits of joining the Health Network: • Take part in discussions about health issues that interest you • Share your personal experiences • Tell us what’s important to you, to help set priorities • Receive a regular newsletter about what is going on in your area If you want to join us then simply complete the form below, scan and email to: [email protected] Thank you Details Title: ……………………….. Name: …………………………………………............................... Address: ……………………………………………………………………………………………............................. Email: ………………………………… Telephone: ………………................ Mobile: …………………............ GP practice: ……………………………………………………………………......................................... (Optional) ……………………………………………………………………………………………............................................. Are you a carer? Yes No What is your general area of interest? (Tick as many as you need) Children’s services Speech and language therapy, early support, complex needs Community services Provided within community settings (for example GPs, Community Hospitals) Mental health Short and long-term mental health care Planned care Booked care (for example accessed through referral from a GP) Urgent care Non-planned and immediate care (for example A&E, 999, minor injury units) Primary care (General practice, providing more care in a local setting) Long-term conditions Non life threatening (for example diabete and COPD) Integrated Care Whole system approach (for example health and social care working together) Are there any specific areas of interest, please list: (for example diabetes, end of life care, carers, stroke, pain management) Age: 16-24 25-34 35-44 45-54 55-64 65-74 75+ Prefer not to say Please indicate your ethnic group? Choose one option that best describes your ethnic group or background. Asian or Asian British White English / Welsh / Scottish / Northern Irish / British Indian Irish Pakistani Gypsy or Irish Traveller Bangladeshi Chinese Any other White background, please describe: Any other Asian background, please describe Mixed White and Black Caribbean Black / African / Caribbean / Black British White and Black African African White and Asian Caribbean Other, please describe: Any other mixed / multiple ethnic background, please describe: Other ethnic group Arab Prefer not to say