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How can care be best co-ordinated around the needs of people with complex chronic ill-health: reflections on Belgian’s strategic plans. Dr Nick Goodwin Co-Founder and CEO , International Foundation for Integrated Care www.integratedcarefoundation.org Paper to;
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How can care be best co-ordinated around the needs of people with complex chronic ill-health: reflections on Belgian’s strategic plans Dr Nick Goodwin Co-Founder and CEO, International Foundation for Integrated Care www.integratedcarefoundation.org Paper to; RIZIV 50th Anniversary Event, Academy Palace, Brussels, 2nd April
The Challenge of Complexity The complexity in the way care systems are designed leads to: • lack of ‘ownership’ of the person’s problem; • lack of involvement of users and carers in their own care; • poor communication between partners in care; • simultaneous duplication of tasks and gaps in care; • treating one condition without recognising others; • poor outcomes to person, carer and the system Frontier Economics (2012) Enablers and barriers to integrated care and implications for Monitor -
Care Systems Need to ChangeThink of the hospital as a cost centre, not a revenue centreHospitals can sustain revenue as aspects of care are shifted to communities Imison et al (2012) Older people and emergency bed use. The King’s Fund, London
Managing Complex Patients – What Works? • Active support for self-management • Primary prevention • Secondary prevention • Managing ACS conditions • Integrating care for people with mental and physical health needs • Care co-ordination - integrated health and social care teams • Primary care management of end-of-life care • Effective medicines management • Managing elective admissions – referral quality • Managing emergency admissions – urgent care
Managing Complex Patients – What Works? • More effective approaches: • Population management • Holistic, not disease-based • Organisational interventions targeted at the management of specific risk factors • Interventions focused on people with functional disabilities • Management of medicines • Less effective approaches: • Poorly targeted or broader programmes of community based care, for example case management • Patient education and support programmes not focused on managing risk factors
Managing Complex Patients – What Works? • Better coordination of care can save money and improve quality, especially: • Disease management programmes • Case management with multi-disciplinary teams • Where use of good data identifies people at risk of deterioration • Active outreach services and self-management support BUT • Lack of robust evaluation • Financial savings not equally shared between providers (funding problem) • Need for regulation and governance to create conducive environment as co-ordination neglected “Those who suffer most from under-coordination are the poor, vulnerable, old and those from ethnic minorities. The avoidable deterioration of their health results In high costs for public systems“
http://www.kingsfund.org.uk/publications/co-ordinated-care-people-complex-chronic-conditionshttp://www.kingsfund.org.uk/publications/co-ordinated-care-people-complex-chronic-conditions
Meeting the Challenge at a Clinical, Service and Personal Level No ‘best approach’, but several key lessons and marker for success that include all the following: • Community awareness, participation and trust • Population health planning- NOT carve-out DMPs or segmentation • Identification of people in need of care – inclusion criteria • Health promotion • Single point of access • Single, holistic, care assessment (including carer & family) • Care planning driven by needs and choices of service user/carer • Dedicated care co-ordinator and/or case manager • Supported self-care • Responsive provider network available 24/7 • Focus on care transitions, e.g. hospital to home • Communication between care professionals, and between care professionals and users • Access to shared care records • Commitment to measuring and responding to people’s experiences and outcomes • Quality improvement process
Meeting the Challenge at a Systems and Organisational Level • Find common cause • Develop shared narrative • Create persuasive vision • Establish shared leadership • Understand new ways of working • Targeting • Bottom-up & top-down • Pool resources • Innovate in finance and contracting • Recognise ‘no one model’ • Empower users • Shared information and ICT • Workforce and skill-mix changes • Specific measurable objectives • Be realistic, especially costs • Coherent change management strategy
Meeting the Challenge of Complexity: Key Lessons Personal Level • Holistic focus that supports users and carers to live well and be resilient • Management in the home environment • Co-producers of care, even at end of life Clinical & Service Level • Early and multiple referral points for care co-ordination • Named care co-ordinators • Continuity of care • Multi-disciplinary teams • Flexible working practices – subsidiarity of role Community Level • Role of community integral to care-giving process • Build awareness, legitimacy and trust • Volunteers Functional Level • Effective communication • Shared electronic health records helpful • High-touch / low tech care – need for face-to-face interaction and conversations Organisational Level • Effective targeting • Localised – work in neighbourhoods • Long-term commitment from local clinical and managerial leaders • Shared vision – challenge silos • Operational autonomy System Level • Integrated purchasing • Long-term strategies • Political narrative • Aligned incentives • Focus on improving quality, not reducing cost
Some Reflections for Belgium – 6 Action Areas Action: Multidisciplinary EHR • Yes, but ICT is a tool, not an end in itself. Give people access. Action: Case management • Yes, but learn the lessons from past successes and failure for success Action: Multi-disciplinary teams • Yes, including pro-active care co-ordination and involvement of the community Action: Education and training • Yes, inter-professional working and new roles and skill mix Action: Quality and assessment of care • Make sure that the process focuses on continuous quality improvement not performance management. Quality-based pay and incentives Action: Implementing, supporting, assessing • Yes, evaluation of outcomes to build evidence and support QI is important • The focus on supporting the change process is welcome Overall: • It is undoubtedly right to go beyond the CCM for complex patients who require a more flexible response • It is right to avoid organisational restructuring – simplification is key • Need to build narratives to create a burning platform for change • Focus on building common vision and strategy from bottom-up and ensure roles and responsibilities clear • Utilise resources differently, not shift money or threaten organisations and professionals • Specific measurable objectives to support Triple Aim objectives • Promote active care co-ordination • More on empowering users/community • Focus on holistic care in the home environment • Think inter-sectoral action and be prepared to challenge medical model (e.g. GPs and hospital sector)
Contact Dr Nick Goodwin CEO, International Foundation for Integrated Care nickgoodwin@integratedcarefoundation.org www.integratedcarefoundation.org @goodwin_nick @IFICinfo