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NHS | Presentation to [XXXX Company] | [Type Date]1
Healthcare Scientists-a call to action
Fiona CarragherDeputy Chief Scientific Officer
East Midlands HCS Summit9th October 2013
Challenges to the NHS
Ageing Population
Chronic Diseases
Many Co-
morbidities
Late diagnoses
Mobility & Greater
expectations of Public
Scientific Discoveries/Technology Advances
Health Inequalities
Challenges for the NHS
The NHS- Reflecting on 65yrs
• If the NHS is to survive another 65yr it must change
• www.england.nhs.uk
• Have your say
Addressing the Challenges Creating CCGs with a ‘new DNA’ with added clinical value
Developing new integrated pathways of care with quality outcomes at its core
Shifting care outside of hospital and closer to home, providing more choice
Taking a patient AND a population focus
Innovative models of provision – at the centre of new NHS thinking
From Everyone Counts – 2013/14 planning guidance from the NHS Commissioning Board
“Our National Medical Director will establish a forum that includes
national and local commissioners, providers and regulators to
identify how there might be better access to routine services
seven days a week and report in the autumn of 2013.
“As a first stage, the review will focus on improving diagnostics
and urgent and emergency care. It will include the consequences
of the non-availability of clinical services across the seven day
week and provide proposals for improvements to any
shortcomings.”
NHS Outcomes Framework
NHS OUTCOMES FRAMEWORKDomain 1
Preventing people from
dying prematurely
Domain 2Enhancing the quality of life for
people with LTCs
Domain 3Recovery
from episodes of ill health /
injury
Domain 4Ensuring a
positive patient
experience
Domain 5Safe
environment free from avoidable
harm
NICE Quality Standards (Building a library of approx 150 over 5 years)
Commissioning Outcomes Framework
Commissioning Guidance
Provider payment mechanisms
Commissioning / ContractingNHS Commissioning Board - Specialist services and primary care
GP Consortia – all other services
1
2
3 4
7
Duty of quality
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ality
Du
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tariffstandard contract
CQUIN QOF
5
6
Duty of quality
NHS OUTCOMES FRAMEWORKDomain 1
Preventing people from
dying prematurely
Domain 2Enhancing the quality of life for
people with LTCs
Domain 3Recovery
from episodes of ill health /
injury
Domain 4Ensuring a
positive patient
experience
Domain 5Safe
environment free from avoidable
harm
NICE Quality Standards (Building a library of approx 150 over 5 years)
Commissioning Outcomes Framework
Commissioning Guidance
Provider payment mechanisms
Commissioning / ContractingNHS Commissioning Board - Specialist services and primary care
GP Consortia – all other services
1
2
3 4
7
Duty of quality
Du
ty o
f qu
ality
Du
ty o
f qu
alit
y
tariffstandard contract
CQUIN QOF
5
6
Duty of quality
Premature mortality-the challenge for HCS
• Britain has worse record for premature death than comparable countries – and the gap is rising 1
• A key issue is the late diagnosis of disease
• Government has identified the need for more and earlier diagnostic activity, particularly in primary care
1 The Lancet, 5 March 2013doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(13)60355-4
Long term conditions-the challenge for HCS
• Around 15 million (28%) people in the UK have a long term condition, and the number is increasing
• People with LTCs account for
• 50% of all GP appointments
• 70% of all bed days
• 70% of budgets
• Co-existing conditions can produce confounding diagnostic results and complicate interpretation
• Remote and other forms of monitoring needs to be developed to support self and directed management approaches
Acute and episodic care-the challenge for HCS
• Preventing admission and readmission – diagnostics supporting risk modelling
• Reducing length of stay and supporting early discharge
• Responsive emergency care with embedded diagnostics
• 24/7 provision of diagnostics with the intervention – eg interventional radiology and cardiology
• 7 day service provision especially linked to areas of higher mortality at weekends
Improving the patient experience – The challenge for HCS
• Providing services at accessible locations
• Further reducing waiting times
• Effective measures that relate to the experience of HCS services ( eg friends and family test)
• Patient Information on which to base choice and quality of provider
• Open and accessible test results and support to understand them
Ensuring safe care – The challenge for HCS
• Global Antibiotic resistance – Highlighted in the CMO report (pub. May 2013)
• Continued focus on HAI and VTE prevention
• Safety and side effect monitoring of drug therapy
• Safety of blood products and tissues
Science will be crucialresearch informing new ways of working
•Genetic profiling•Personalised medicine•Enhanced Point of Care Testing•Portable and home monitoring•Smart homes•Data fusion & bioinformatics•Virtual physiological human•Multi-modality imaging
Think about the changes in your career
Laboratory (life) Sciences• Analytical Toxicology• Anatomical pathology• Blood transfusion
science/transplantation• Clinical biochemistry including
paediatric metabolic biochemistry
• Clinical genetics/Genetic Science
• Clinical embryology & Reproductive Science
• Clinical immunology• Cytopathology including
cervical cytology• Electron microscopy• External quality assurance• Haematology• Haemostasis and thrombosis• Clinical Immunology• Histocompatibility &
immunogenetics• Histopathology• Microbiology• Molecular pathology of
acquired disease• Phlebotomy• Tissue banking
Physiological Sciences • Audiology• Autonomic neurovascular function• Cardiac physiology• Clinical perfusion science• Critical care science• Gastrointestinal physiology• Neurophysiology• Ophthalmic and vision science• Respiratory physiology• Urodynamic science• Vascular science
Physical Sciences and Biomedical Engineering• Biomechanical engineering• Clinical measurement &
Development• Clinical Pharmaceutical Science• Diagnostic radiology & MR physics• Equipment management & clinical
engineering• Medical electronics &
instrumentation• Medical engineering design• Clinical photography• Nuclear medicine• Radiation protection & monitoring• Radiotherapy physics• Reconstructive Science• Rehabilitation engineering• Renal dialysis technology• Ultrasound & non-ionising radiation
50+ scientific professions delivering over 150 different services that cost the NHS approximately £8bn. The workforce of 55,000 informs 80% of all diagnoses and is involved in the delivery of over 1 billion tests and investigations per annum. They have multiple impacts on all patient pathways through the specialist diagnostic, therapeutic and equipment services they provide.
Bioinformatics• Genomics and Clinical Bioinformatics • Health Informatics • Pathology
Healthcare Science Specialisms
Transition from paediatric to adult with long term hearing
loss
Respiratory scientists leading high quality
spirometry within the community for COPD
Monitoring anti-coagulation therapy in the primary care
Engineers supporting Augmentative and
Alternative Communication
Implementing telehealth to support patients with LTC
Biochemical screening for diabetes in Sikh community
Neurophysiology monitoring of treatment in X-ALD
Rehabilitation engineers support for wheelchairs and prosthetics
Challenges for HCS here and now
• Patient and public engagement
• Limited engagement with patients and public
• Lack of quality information for patients particularly to understand test results and support self-care
• Quality and Safety
• Significant variability in quality and access/waits for some services
• Patient safety issues uncovered
• Lack of robust assurance frameworks for all services
• Commissioning and improvement
• Commissioning models not well described or understood with services often ‘hidden’ in block contracts
• Areas for improvement not well recognised and best practise not adopted
• Lack of integration across sectors and limited offer in primary care
• Advice and expertise
• Knowledge and advice provided by HCS is a resource that the NHS still isn't using to the full
CSO team: Key aims
• We aim to drive a whole health system approach to providing high quality, innovative patient centred scientific services integrated across all delivery sectors with influential scientific leaders, aspirational providers and informed commissioners.
High quality care for all, now and for future generations
Healthcare Scientists-call to action
• Break the stereotype
• Always remind yourself why you became a HCS
• Don’t loose your passion and commitment
• Think about how you can play your part in this challenge
‘enthusiasm is contagious…..’
…Be Innovative
• Unleash your entrepreneurial spirit
• Think creatively
• Collaborate and build relationships with;
• Clinical colleagues
• Industry
• Academia
• Other Scientists
….Be a champion of quality
• Understand what quality means in your area
• Be proactive not reactive
• Don’t be complacent, always look to improve
• Use data to target problems and then show improvement
• Think end to end
…Always put the patient first
• How do your actions impact on patient care
• Not just a test result
• Think about patient experience and safety
• Work with patient groups
• Include them in your user survey
…Communicate your science
• Patients, public and professionals understand the value you add
• Think about language- make it accessible
• Opportunities as STEM ambassadors
• www.stemnet.org.uk
• We need to engage the workforce of the future
…Take your place in the team
• Multi-professional networks essential
• Part of clinical decision making
• Bringing expertise and scientific thinking
• Making a real difference to patient care
And be fearless !
• Think about how you can make a difference
• Challenge when things are not right
• Be a leader whatever grade you are
• Others may come with you!
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