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This presentation discusses the role of Responsible Officers in medical management, the challenges they face, and the importance of calibration and networks in ensuring quality assurance. It explores the use of case studies for calibration and seeks input on organizing networks effectively.
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Networks and Calibration Dr David Levy June 2014
Responsible officer • New type of role • Challenging • 20% turnover in 13/14
Hospital Medical Directors Describes the challenges being faced today
Top aspects of their role • Quality • Medical management • Leadership
The RO Has responsibilities to: • Receive a quality-assured yearly appraisal from all your medical staff • Make revalidation recommendations for your doctors • Have appropriate pre-employment checks • Monitor the conduct and performance of medical staff and respond appropriately to concerns
Revalidation The Regional RO • Independent verification of all DBs • Responding to concerns • Relationship with region
What is Quality Assured? How do I link this to organisational goals? The RO How are you going to do all this? Has responsibilities to: • Receive a quality-assured yearly appraisal from all your medical staff • Make revalidation recommendations for your doctors • Have appropriate pre-employment checks • Monitor the conduct and performance of medical staff and respond appropriately to concerns What happens if I don’t recommend a doctor? What is an appropriate response?
What are you? Hawk or Dove? NHS | Presentation to [XXXX Company] | [Type Date]
Getting it right? • What are the thresholds? • What are the levers? • What works well?
Improving your Network James Quinn June 2014
Your network - What works well? - What could be improved? • Size of meeting (0-20,20-50,50+) • Membership (ROs, deputies, revalidation managers) • Frequency of meeting • Networking opportunity • Update presentations – NHS England, GMC, • Written/email updates • Large plenary discussions • Small group working • Professional facilitator
Calibration Colin Pollock June 2014
RO Networks & Calibration Framework of Quality Assurance Calibration, Consistency, Learning and Best Practice In addition to the national policies for medical appraisal and responding to concerns, there are a number of mechanisms in place to drive consistency of decision-making, approach and thresholds for intervention on the part of responsible officers, appraisers and case investigators. The aim is to ensure that every doctor, regardless of sector, grade or location in the country, goes through a process, which is demonstrably aligned with agreed national standards.
RO Networks & Calibration • Framework of Quality Assurance: • Calibration, Consistency, Learning and Best Practice (c’td) • The mechanisms driving a consistent approach include: • mandatory engagement with responsible officer networks at which cases are discussed and responses calibrated. These conform to a nationally agreed structure, as set out in the Responsible Officer Network Blueprint. • regional and national events for responsible officers, appraisers and case investigators designed specifically to calibrate decision-making and thresholds for intervention
RO Networks & Calibration • Using case studies as one means of calibration • Different types of case studies in • Responding to concerns • Revalidation issues • Mixed cases • Real life vs made-up scenarios • Experience from RO Networks so far?
RO Networks & Calibration • From your own experience in RO networks: • How do you find the usefulness or otherwise of case study discussion as a way of calibrating your own day to day decisions? • What factors enable an effective / useful discussion? • What factors hinder such discussion? • How can RO networks be organised so as encourage a wider contribution from ROs on their real life issues?