SWBH NHS Trust Heartbeat March 2014

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He rtbeat March 2014

The pulse of community health, Leasowes, Rowley Regis, City and Sandwell Hospitals

Issue 65

First impressions matter

Hundreds of thousands of times a year, we deliver an outpatient appointment. It is by far the most common thing that we do. Usually, the experts, notes, scans, and test results are all in place. An effective discussion takes place, we meet the patient’s expectations and our own. But we want outpatient services to be the very best part of what this Trust provides. Consistently exceeding expectations - that is not the current state. That is why this year will see an overwhelming focus on

outpatient care. Changing some systems to make them more consistent. Talking with patients before their appointment and using new technology to keep in touch with them between clinics. Trying to reduce the amount of expert time in some specialties spent in clinic, if other professionals can step in or we can work differently with GPs, dentists, optometrists and pharmacists. Making sure that what was said in clinic was truly understood by the people we serve. Chief Executive, Toby Lewis, told Heartbeat: “This year must mark a big change in the profile and the esteem of

outpatients at the Trust. Everyone has a part to play. “As we change how we deliver outpatient care, then other teams will need to adapt how they work too. “The key metric is what patients think - do they tell us we did a great job? “We will be investigating and publishing that, at site, directorate and clinic level in the year ahead. “We need to celebrate the very best of what we do, much more widely and loudly. “We want to support teams to change traditional clinic models to suit clinical need.”

Year of Outpatients - Innovations from around SWBH Helping adults who stammer

One stop multidisciplinary allergy clinic

Rapid Hydration Clinic

Since May 2013 the Speech and Language Department has introduced therapy in a small group setting for adult stammers in Sandwell, aimed at maximising potential change, reducing avoidance of speaking/social situations and providing opportunity for peer support Taking this approach increases the breadth of therapy options available to clients but also maximises service capacity, helping to reduce waiting time for therapy.

Children are benefiting from a ‘one stop’ visit to outpatients thanks to the opening of a multidisciplinary allergy/immunology clinic. Children can have their allergy diagnosed, appropriate medications prescribed, training given on how to recognise and treat an allergic reaction and a written management plan given. Clinical Director Dr Chizu Agwu explained: “This is particularly useful if a clear history of food allergy has been obtained on presentation to the GP, enabling the need for specific skin prick to be predicted.”

Pregnant women suffering an extreme form of morning sickness, called ‘hyperemesis gravidarum’, now have access to a rapid hydration clinic at City Hospital, which can help to make the first months of a difficult pregnancy more bearable. One patient, making her third visit to the clinic, which is situated at the rear of D42, was Mrs Samina Akhter of Handsworth. At 10 weeks pregnant Mrs Akhter has suffered almost constant vomiting, which has left her losing weight, dehydrated and feeling very poorly. She said: “Being able to come in here is great as it takes away the hassle of A&E. “I just have to call the unit, explain the situation and they tell me when I can come in.” Most patients stop on the unit for about six hours (reducing previous length of stay from up to 72 hours).

BMEC ensures children are not ‘lost’ The transition from paediatric to adult based hospital care can be a difficult one for both children and young adults with long term clinical conditions. BMEC is both looking into and implementing a number of means of ensuring that young patients don’t get ‘lost’ from consultant based care. Hilary Lemboye, Acting Group Director of Operations for Surgery B, said: “We already have a number of joint clinics at Birmingham Children’s Hospital (BCH) which support successful transition between paediatric and adult care and recently, we started a new one for young glaucoma patients.”

Rheumatology and long-term conditions Patients are benefiting from innovative work with GPs with a special interest (GPwSI) in musculoskeletal conditions who are based at practices in Handsworth Wood, Lyng and Regis Medical Centres. These GPs are able to triage cases and decide which need consultant input. As well as bringing the service for most patients closer to home or work it also allows prompt GPwSI referral onwards to physiotherapy and other paramedical services. Dr Karl Grindulis, Consultant Rheumatologist, said: “Most patients nowadays don’t need beds or special equipment but time and the correct medical and paramedical services, in other words do not require a hospital building but the right expertise in the right place.”

Outpatient Staff Nurse Kathryn Spittle with 11 year old Ahsaan Kumar doing an allergy prick test.

The Smethwick Pathfinder Specialist Diabetes Team The Smethwick Pathfinder Specialist Diabetes Team was runner-up in the Transformation category of last year’s Staff Awards for good reason. This community diabetes innovation devolves care for diabetes patients into the community where it is needed, increasing hospital capacity and as well as saving costs, improving patient care and satisfaction. Dr Parijat De, one of the leading members of this project, said: “There is good audit data from all these practices that diabetes control (HbA1c) has significantly improved over the years.”

Lynne Saunders and pregnant patient Mrs Samina Akhter.

Helping gastroenterology patients By purchasing a new device called a Fibroscan, we can now test the liver’s ‘stiffness’ and determine whether regular blood tests and biopsies are necessary for patients with fatty liver disease. Group Director for Medicine and Emergency Care, Dr Matthew Lewis, explained: “When we see a normal looking liver, it will mean that patients don’t need to come back to clinic for tests so often.” and much much more!

Across our Trust we want to deliver eight Outpatient Standards. To find out more visit: http://goo.gl/7Q3g4l


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