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Dr Peter Fisher Clinical Director Director of Research

The UK experience: The Royal London Hospital for Integrated Medicine. Dr Peter Fisher Clinical Director Director of Research Expert Advisor to National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE). University College London Hospitals. One of largest academic medical centres in UK

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Dr Peter Fisher Clinical Director Director of Research

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  1. The UK experience: The Royal London Hospital for Integrated Medicine Dr Peter Fisher Clinical Director Director of Research Expert Advisor to National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE)

  2. University College London Hospitals • One of largest academic medical centres in UK • Medical school and specialist institutes, linked to University College London • 8 hospitals: • University College Hospital (general/acute) • Cancer Centre • Eastman Dental Hospital • Elizabeth Garret Anderson • (gynaecology, obstetrics, children) • Heart Hospital • Hospital for Tropical Diseases • National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery • Royal London Hospital for Integrated Medicine The Royal London Hospital for Integrated Medicine peter.fisher@uclh.nhs.uk

  3. 10 leading causes of disease burden 2004 & 2030 (WHO) WHO: The global burden of disease: 2004 update (2008)

  4. Prevalence of mental disorder Wittchen HU et al. The size and burden of mental disorders and other disorders of the brain in Europe 2010. EurNeuropsychopharmacol. 2011;21:655-79 • Annual population prevalence in EU 38%: 165m people • anxiety disorders (14%) • insomnia (7%) • major depression (7%) • somatoform (6%) • alcohol and drug dependence (>4%) • ADHD (5%) • Dementia (1-30%, depending on age) • 27% of total disease burden • Undertreated

  5. ...and Medically Unexplained Physical Symptoms (MUPS) Statistics Canada: Canadian Community Health Survey 2010

  6. Multimorbidity is common Highest socio-economic quartile Lowest socio-economic quartile Barnett K et al. Epidemiology of multimorbidity and implications for health care, research, and medical education: a cross-sectional study. Lancet May 2012 DOI:10.1016/S0140-6736(12)60240-2 • 40 morbidities ⅓ population of Scotland • 42% > 1 morbidity • 23% multimorbid • increases with age but absoute number higher in younger • onset earlier in deprived areas particularly including mental health • Challenge single-disease framework • Personalised, continuity of care especially in deprived areas

  7. Adverse drug events (ADEs) • Common • In USA 4.6% of deaths, top 5 causes of death • Hospitalized 6.5% , almost double risk of death • 4,335,990 outpatient attendances • 107,468 hospital admissions in 2005 • 9 17/1000 between 1995-2005 • Expensive • Prolong hospital stays, increased resource utilization

  8. Adverse drug events (ADEs) Bourgeois FT et al. Adverse Drug Events in the Outpatient Setting: An 11-Year National Analysis Pharmacoepidemiol Drug Saf. 2010 19 901–910. • Associated Factors • age • number of medications • female gender

  9. A perfect storm?

  10. Why integrate medicine? • chronic & multimorbid conditions v pandemic of iatrogenic illness • Reduce medication, treat person not disease • fiscal imperatives v expensive diagnostics & treatments • Effective economical whole person treatment • greater duration of life v greater duration of poor quality later life • Safe whole person long term treatments

  11. Why integrate medicine? • high-tech, high impact, high-cost interventions v caring, commitment, compassion • Revive the art of medicine • concordance v efficacy • Patient-friendly, culturally appropriate treatments • dependency on drugs and medical services v disillusionment and medical counterculture • Restore confidence in medicine

  12. The NHS hospital most recommended by its own patients: NHS Choices website

  13. The Royal London Hospital for Integrated Medicine: clinical services Acupuncture including high volume & training clinics mostly western, some TCM Allergy Children Chronic Fatigue Syndrome/ME Complementary Cancer General medicine Including inflammatory and functional bowel Podiatry Royal London Hospital for Integrated Medicine

  14. RLHIM: clinical services 2 Weight loss Insomnia Integrated facial pain Integrated antenatal Musculoskeletal medicine Rheumatology Skin Stress & mood disorder Women's Royal London Hospital for Integrated Medicine

  15. RLHIM: innovation • 1950’s 1st NHS Complementary Cancer Service • 1977 1st NHS Acupuncture Service • 1995 1st NHS Musculoskeletal medicine service • 2005 1st NHS Group acupuncture service • 2005 1st UK course on Integrated Medicine for doctors • 2006 1st NHS Integrated antenatal service • 2007 1st Integrated allergy service • 2008 1st NHS Herbal clinic • 2009 1st Integrated weight loss service • 2010 1st Integrated insomnia service • 2012 Complementary Cancer Care in UK’s largest cancer centre

  16. What problems do GPs face? Effectiveness Gaps • A clinical area where available treatments are not fully effective or satisfactory, for any reason. • Never previously researched Top 5 EGs % GPs reporting Musculoskeletal problems91 Depression45 Eczema36 Chronic pain 32 Irritable bowel syndrome32 Fisher P et al. Effectiveness gaps: A new concept for evaluating health service and research needs applied to complementary and alternative medicine. J Alt Comp Med, 2004;10:627–632.

  17. Why do patients come to Royal London Hospital for Integrated Medicine? (925 responses from 493 patients) Sharples F, Van Haselen R, Fisher P. NHS patients’ perspective on complementary medicine. Comp Ther Med 2003;11:243-248.

  18. The Royal London Hospital for Integrated Medicine: therapies acupuncture mostly western, some TCM aromatherapy autogenic training cognitive behaviour therapy cranio-sacral therapy graded exercise homeopathy nutritional medicine exclusion, supplements, nutraceuticals Royal London Hospital for Integrated Medicine

  19. RLHIM: therapies 2 lifestyle management occupational therapy physiotherapy phytotherapy standardised extracts western mixtures Chinese an aspiration shiatsu spinal manipulation sublingual immunotherapy wet needling Royal London Hospital for Integrated Medicine

  20. Dimensions of integration Royal London Hospital for Integrated Medicine • System • Normal NHS system • Common electronic patient records • Governance and evaluation • professionals trained in CM, subject to discipline • Culture of evaluation • Guidelines • eg National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) guidelines for low back pain recommend acupuncture and manipulation

  21. Dimensions of integration:professionalism

  22. Dimensions of integration: information and education Education and training: integrated and ‘hands-on’ Specialist advice NICE External Expert Panel Complementary and Alternative Medicine Library and Information Service (CAMLIS) Physical and online Royal London Hospital for Integrated Medicine

  23. Dimensions of integration:hands-on training

  24. Complementary and Alternative Medicine Library and Information Service (CAMLIS) www.cam.nhs.uk

  25. Models of integration Royal London Hospital for Integrated Medicine • Fully integrated: • integrated Chronic Pain Service with dental hospital • integrated antenatal service with UCLH midwives • Unique services: Allergy and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome • UCLH’s only services for under-provided conditions: • guideline recommended treatments & CM.

  26. Models of integration 2 Royal London Hospital for Integrated Medicine • Colocated services: in UCLH’s main centres • cancer • children • Cost effective services for ‘effectiveness gap’ conditions: • group acupuncture • knee, low back, headache, facial pain • group Cognitive Behaviour Therapy, Autogenic Training • insomnia, chronic fatigue, fibromyalgia • Informal: Contacts, ad-hoc referrals etc

  27. High volume acupuncture clinic for knee pain

  28. Constraints to Integration • Coordinated hostile media campaign • NHS provision • Regulation • Scepticism • colleagues, particularly academic and older • Financial • but often saves money

  29. The Challenges: • Commissioners ‘Low priority’ treatments • evidence of clinical/cost effectiveness limited • grommets, tonsillectomy… varicocoele, refashioning scars…. • Complementary medicine of all types • ‘Referral management’ • Slow, bureaucratic, often refused

  30. Commissioning challenges:clinical pathways • Category 1 based on authoritative guidelines • Approximately 60% of patient attendances • Category 2 • Complementary cancer care • Category 3 require individual approval

  31. NHS Commissioning‘Category 1’ based on authoritative guidelines

  32. NICE Guideline Low Back Pain 1.4 Manual therapy 1.4.1 Consider offering a course of manual therapy, including spinal manipulation, maximum of 9 sessions over up to 12 weeks 1.5 Other non-pharmacological therapies 1.5.1 Do not offer laser therapy 1.5.2 Do not offer interferential therapy 1.5.3 Do not offer therapeutic ultrasound 1.5.4 Do not offer transcutaneous electrical nerve simulation (TENS) 1.5.5 Do not offer lumbar supports 1.5.6 Do not offer traction 1.6 Invasive procedures 1.6.1 Consider offering a course of acupuncture maximum of 10 sessions over up to 12 weeks 1.6.2 Do not offer injections of therapeutic substances http://guidance.nice.org.uk/CG88

  33. Royal London Hospital for Integrated Medicine Low Back Pain Care Pathway Complies with NICE Guideline CG88 Low Back Pain Revised October 2012

  34. Royal London Hospital for Integrated Medicine Irritable bowel syndrome Care Pathway Based on NICE Guidelines for IBS in Adults (CG61), British Society of Gastroenterology Guidelines for Management of IBS (2007) Revised February 2011

  35. Royal London Hospital for Integrated MedicineComplementary Cancer Care Pathway • category 2: Not requiring prior approval, not guideline based

  36. NHS Commissioning‘Category 3’ require prior approval • Vulnerable • includes some of most popular & innovative services

  37. ‘Musculoskeletal other’approval criteria Commissioners will only fund Integrated Medical treatment for Musculoskeletal and Rheumatology pain and/or disability significantly restricting work, everyday living AND Inadequate response to at least 2 treatments including: physiotherapy and exercise, weight loss, simple analgesic, low dose antidepressant, NSAID, corticosteroid DMARD or biological agent Heavy use of health services >4 primary and secondary care consultations in previous 6 months, >6 in previous 12 months Medically unexplained physical syndrome after extensive medical investigations and causing significant distress

  38. Summary • Responsive to need • services offering range of therapies • Integrated in depth • Dimensions • Service models • Guidelines, evidence, pathways • Patient preference

  39. Keys to success Patient-centredness Patient-centredness Patient-centredness Patient-centredness • Quality & Safety • practitioners, medicinal products, processes • quality assurance: audit, governance • Innovation • responsive to need, guidelines etc • Integration • best of complementary and conventional The Royal London Hospital for Integrated Medicine peter.fisher@uclh.nhs.uk

  40. International Congress for Complementary Medicine Research London 11 - 13 April 2013 www.iccmr2013.com

  41. Global sustainability of healthcare for chronic conditions • Global Pandemic of long term conditions: 35/58 million deaths annually worldwide • 80% of consultations in industrialised countries • Multimorbidity/polypharmacy/iatrogenic illness. • Ecofootprintof pharmaceutical industry • Underexploited resources of traditional/complementary/integrated medicine International Congress for Complementary Medicine Research London 11 - 13 April 2013 www.iccmr2013.com

  42. Thank you for your attentionpeter.fisher@uclh.nhs.uk

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