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NHS Newcastle & Gateshead Alliance. Wednesday 8 th October 2014. Key Issues. Strategic Plans Five Year BCF Primary Care. The role of Commissioning. Ensure we have safe health care services Ensure that we have health care services that meet the needs of the population: ‘Stay well’
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NHS Newcastle & Gateshead Alliance Wednesday 8th October 2014
Key Issues Strategic Plans Five Year BCF Primary Care
The role of Commissioning • Ensure we have safe health care services • Ensure that we have health care services that meet the needs of the population: • ‘Stay well’ • ‘Get better’ • ‘Cope with long term conditions’ • Efficiently – finite resources • Effectively – best outcomes
Increasing demands – reducing resources Newcastle Gateshead - £655m budget Expected to reduce by c£25m £155m local authority savings Call to Action – national £30bn shortfall c£280m on Newcastle Gateshead Continued austerity measures to 2020
The NHS five year strategic plan Newcastle’s health and social care economy vision: ‘People who live, work or learn in Newcastle equally enjoy positive wellbeing and good health’
In line with 2013-16 Newcastle Wellbeing for Life Strategy Getting a good start in life… laying the foundation for wellbeing and health throughout life Learning and employability across the life course… all people maximising their capabilities and potential Promoting wellbeing and health across the life course… making wellbeing and health promotion a key dimension of all we do Protecting across the life course… reducing the potential harm from environmental hazards Safeguarding across the life course… reducing potential harm from the action (or inaction) of others Maximising the wellbeing of people who have long term conditions… preventing further progression of an illness and ensuring quality of life
2020 – key principles People have the skills & knowledge to make the best decisions for their needs We are working together, with an evidence led approach, to keep as many people ‘well’ as we can We deliver care and support in the community wherever we can Where people require a minor intervention this happens in or near people’s homes as much as possible Where people need to go into hospital they receive high quality, safe services that are promptly delivered When people are coming out of hospital they arrive home with the appropriate support already in place
Our new system vision High quality out of hospital care with the GP responsible and accountable for patient care The patient / citizen at the heart of the system, supported to be “Confident and connected” High quality, sustainable services for patients when they need to have care in hospital Primary care acting as co-ordinator of all parts of the system, that are integrated and aligned Social care integral to care across the system, supporting transformation
Engagement reports Social media My NHS Partnership Forum General public Practice Engagement GP bulletin Local media supplements Intranet Events Involvement Forum Community Forum Focus groups mailbox website Practice participation groups Newcastle West Patient Forum/ACORN Surveys Stakeholder bulletin Interviews Education events
Our proposal for Better Care High quality out of hospital care with the GP responsible and accountable for patient care The patient / citizen at the heart of the system, Supported to manage and adapt, “Confident and connected” High quality, sustainable services for patients when they need to have care in hospital Primary care acting as co-ordinator of all parts of the system, that are integrated and aligned Social care integral to care across the system, supporting transformation
Delivering Out of Hospital Care Delivering better care out of hospital is based on three clusters of schemes which will be implemented over five years: Cluster 1 - Integrated turn around and intensive case management system Cluster 2 - GP led Person centred community integrated care and support system Cluster 3 - Integrated prevention, early intervention and management system
Out of Hospital Integrated working across tertiary, secondary, primary, community and social care New models of care - ‘Healthcare without walls’ Changing the culture Satellite facilities enabling community outreach Strengthening partnerships with primary care providers Enhancing partnerships with the voluntary sector Care closer to / and in people’s homes Bespoke offer, parochial to each neighbourhood Testing new technologies
In hospital care To ensure we continue to make our Vision a reality, our Strategic Plan is underpinned by 3 key strategies: • Quality Strategy – patient safety; clinical effectiveness; patient experience • Clinical Strategy – safe, high quality care; listening and learning; right place and right time; seamless care pathways; convenient and flexible • Business Strategy – targeted growth; building capacity; improving efficiency; comprehensive community outreach; care closer to home; partnership working • Research and Innovation– improving clinical outcomes; maintaining high levels of clinical trial recruitment; academic partnerships; attracting opportunities to the North East
The Hospital Role World class 7 day services National providers of specialist services Consultant led emergency care 24/7 Continuing our approach to increase efficiency Ensuring high quality facilities and environments Enhanced clinical leadership – supporting development of capacity and skills across the system Specialists deployed in community settings Further improving access and responding to choice across Greater Tyneside
Key Issues Mental Health Transformation Urgent Care Children & Young People Early Intervention
Mental Health Transformation From Parity to Priority
Mental Health Programme Board • CCGs committed to co-production • Meets monthly • Membership includes • CCGs • LAs/Public Health/ • Service User and Carers • VCS • NTW
MHPB Principles • Be Bold, Brave and Creative • Right Person, Right Time, Right Place • Improving quality and experience, safety and effectiveness • Carer and user focussed outcomes • Engagement / Involvement • Equality and Diversity • Hope, meaningful choice and control, and recovery orientated
Quality Agenda • Commissioning for Quality and Innovation (CQUIN) • Three thematic CQUINs • Physical health • Carers • Diversity
Workstreams for the CCGs and the MHPB • Primary care and access • Urgent care • Physical health and complex needs • Public Health • Dementia • Learning disabilities including Winterbourne • Children’s emotional wellbeing
Northumberland Tyne and Wear (NTW) Foundation Trust • Review of pathways and bed configuration • How can we develop models of care that improve quality? • How do our principles help?
Work streams & Committees Resilience & Operational Group 1 – Admission Avoidance 2 – 1st Contact 3 – Going Home “Winter surge” GP OOH
1- Admission Avoidance intermediate care model older person’s resource centres discharge pathways emergency social beds Ambulatory Care pathways unscheduled care system is fragmented
1 – 1st Contact Directory of services is fully populated, brought up-to-date Mental Health Emergency Access clinical capacity with general practice Encouraging patients to contact 111 Alternatives to A&E for less serious conditions Inconsistent model across Newcastle Primary care - review home visiting –reduce batching of patients pathways of care and service models for specific patient groups;
2 – 1st Contact appropriate pathways of care - Frequent attenders - Deliberate self-harmers - Mental health conditions - Substance misuse ambulance staff to treat minor injuries and illness at the scene improve LTC management Public Health Campaigns Care Planning Improve active case management and care planning of patients with complex needs
3 – Going Home Agreement is needed about when discharge is appropriate, timely, and safe Transport discharge system is fragmented Formalise discharge protocol Review reablement model Develop the role of the voluntary and community sectors
Winter Short term resource to address surge Annual - 2014 new system NUTH L.A. Primary Care NTW (VCS – other route)
GP OOH Redesign starts soon Multiagency approach with GP at core 7 day working Pilots
Possible developments Prevention processes Mental health support Health champions Peer support Social prescribing Systems lessening the need for urgent care
Joining up for Newcastle Children • Better Start bid • Rising from the ashes • PUP and PIP • Working with schools • Children’s communities
The challenge • Moving to prevention • Inequalities and the Marmot review • Financial catastrophe
Our approach to emotional wellbeing • A single process for the city • A single plan
Significant opportunity to transform • Models of care • Tiered levels of activity and investment • Family approach
Organisational Change – NHS Newcastle Gateshead CCG 1st April 2015
Key questions that have been asked about the merger : What will this mean for the public and patients of Newcastle? How will it be different from the existing ways of working with the three CCGs? Will the public and patients of Newcastle be disadvantaged by the merger, particularly in respect of resources and finance?
Benefits of the merger • Plan in a more “joined up” manner especially in relation to Newcastle as a whole and with respect to the flows of patients between Newcastle and Gateshead • Standardise, as far as possible, pathways and approaches to care to improve outcomes for everybody • Improve the spread and adoption of best practice and approaches that would be beneficial for everybody • Strengthened clinical input and decision making and capacity to make the very best of new partnership working practices with local authorities, the voluntary and community sector and service providers A greater ability to influence • Speed of change required • Health Inequalities • Fragmented services Merger delivers for patients • More positive change • More effective change • Faster delivery • Greater and faster improvements to outcomes