1 / 19

South East London NHS Orthopaedic Services

Sharing ideas for improving orthopaedic services in South East London to enhance patient care and access, seeking community feedback for informed decisions.

louiss
Download Presentation

South East London NHS Orthopaedic Services

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. South East London NHS Orthopaedic Services Ideas for making orthopaedic services better

  2. Orthopaedic Orthopaedic means parts of your body like your • Bones • Joints • Ligaments • Tendons • Muscles • Nerves. It is about how your body moves.

  3. Good orthopaedicservices • We want to make orthopaedic services better for everyone in south east London. • We have some ideas about how to do this. • We want to know what you think. • If we decide to make big changes we will ask everyone what they think. This is called a public consultation.

  4. Helping us decide what to do We talked to • Patients and the public • Doctors, nurses, other healthcare staff and health commissioners • Orthopaedic surgeons and other people from south east London hospitals • Social care staff from local authorities • Healthwatch and other groups in the community

  5. Planned operations There are 7 hospitals in south east London that do orthopaedic operations where patients need to stay in hospital overnight. Some surgeons have more experience than others of different types of orthopaedic surgery. • Routine operations – operations like hip and knee replacements. The hospitals do lots of these. All the surgeons in the different hospitals do these operations in a similar way. • Complex operations – these are more difficult operations,like ankle replacements. Surgeons might do complex operations in different ways and are likely to do these less often.

  6. Why we need changes • People are living longer so a lot more people will need orthopaedic surgery. • Some patients are waiting a long time for their appointment. • If there is an emergency (like a car crash), orthopaedic surgery might be cancelled to carry out emergency surgery.

  7. Why we need changes • We need to use the money we have for orthopaedic services in the best way we can. • We want to make sure patients that have orthopaedic surgery heal well and get better as quickly as they can. • We want all patients to get the same standard of care and surgery.

  8. Having 2orthopaediccentres We want to compare how things are now with our idea of having 2 centres for planned orthopaedic operations. We think having 2 centres to do all planned orthopaedic operations will work best. These centres would be a part of hospitals that are already there. We think this will make orthopaedic services better for everyone.

  9. What this means Having 2 planned centres means • More operations so people don’t have to wait so long. • Fewer operations being cancelled because the centres will only do planned operations. • Better infection control so people get well as quickly as they can. • Patients will be well looked after before and after their operation by expert staff • Operations will cost less and make better use of the money.

  10. What might change It is only the operation that would happen at 1 of the centres. Patients will be able to go to the hospital nearest to them for anything they need before and after surgery. For example: • Appointments before surgery. • Surgery that is completed in one day and does not need a patient to stay in over night. • Follow up appointments after surgery. Emergency orthopaedic surgery will still be done in A and E.

  11. There are 4 hospitals who want to provide these services. If we go forward we will need to choose 2 of them, after a consultation. Guy’s Hospital University Hospital Lewisham Orpington Hospital Queen Mary’s, Sidcup

  12. Choices for 2 orthopaedic centres Choice 4 University Hospital Lewisham and Orpington Hospital Choice 5 University Hospital Lewisham and Queen Mary’s, Sidcup Choice 6 Orpington Hospital and Queen Mary’s, Sidcup Choice 1 Guy’s Hospital and University Hospital Lewisham Choice 2 Guy’s Hospital and Orpington Hospital Choice 3 Guy’s Hospital and Queen Mary’s, Sidcup

  13. How we will choose A group will look at all the information. They will decide which choices out of the 6 work well. They will also decide which choices will not work well. The group will be made up of • GPs • NHS commissioners – these are the people who decide what NHS services are needed and how much they will cost • People from patient groups • People who are experts.

  14. Committee in Common The group will look at all the choices. They will tell a committee of senior GPs and managers from the 6 NHS areas in south east Londonand a group of patients. This committee is called the Committee in Common. The Committee in Common then decide which choices to ask the public about in the public consultation.

  15. Asking the public After the Committee in Common make the final choices there will be a public consultation. This is when everyone who lives in south east London has the chance to say • If they think having 2orthopaedic centres are a good idea. • Which 2 hospitals should become the orthopaedic centres.

  16. What happens after the public consultation • If we decide to have 2orthopaedic centres it might take several years to do this. • There will be more information about what happens next after the public consultation.

  17. Telling us what you think Nothing has been decided yet. We want to know what you think of the ideas so far. We also want to know how youwould like to take part in the public consultation. You can tell us what you think in these ways • Online: ourhealthiersel.nhs.uk • In writing: Our Healthier South East London, PO BOX 64529, London SE1P 5LX or email ourhealthiersel@nhs.net • On Twitter: @ourhealthiersel

  18. Some questions for you • Do you think the changes we want to make will make a difference to the people you care for? This might be in a good or a bad way – please tell us more. • If the changes are bad, is there anything that we can do to make things better? • If there changes are good, is there anything we can do to make things even better? • Is there anything else we haven’t thought about that would make orthopaedic surgery better?

  19. Public consultation • How would you like to take part in the public consultation? • Do you or anyone you care for need extra information to take part? • What information and formats would you find most useful and how should we make this information available? • How would you like to feedback to us? • Are there any other questions we should be asking? • Do you understand how the changes we want to make fit into our work called ‘Our Healthier South East London’? • Do you want to tell us anything else?

More Related