Nordocs Magazine Summer 20/21

Page 33

What’s your QI? by North Coast Primary Health Network

In the front line of general practice, Quality Improvement (QI) can be hard to get to. The needs and challenges presented by patient care, service demand, human resources and business viability fill every day to capacity (and that’s before you add a global pandemic into the mix). That’s why Healthy North Coast (HNC) launched new online resources in late May via the “Primary Care Impact (PCI)” website, to make it quicker and easier to plan and initiate quality improvement. PCI offers pre-populated quality improvement topics with links to key resources as well as a few basic improvement ideas to get the ball rolling. It also provides a PDSA (Plan-Do-StudyAct) template embedded with simple strategies to help ensure success. These include canvassing staff on what difference they believe the quality improvement will make, how important it is to them to do it and how confident they are that the team will succeed. Monika Wheeler, Executive Director Wellness at Healthy North Coast said, “everything that goes into a PCI QI page is designed to quickly get to the core of that particular QI activity and support general practice owners, principles, managers and nurses to move forward easily”. Achieving real change through QI is something to be celebrated and peer sharing is a great way to inspire others to take things on. On PCI, practices can elect to share a PDSA or video about their activity. This becomes easily available to their peers across the footprint, making QI in general practice a social space where

practices can be aware of and learn from and encourage one another. The initial response to PCI has been positive with many practices initially engaging on the COVID-19 pages for flu vaccination clinics and increasing patient and staff safety (infection control). Forseeing the challenges for practices delivering flu vaccination to vulnerable groups during the first wave of the pandemic, a pre-launch QI (pilot) page was published directing practices to a set of resources and promoting flu clinic modification as a quality improvement. General practices on the North Coast certainly rose to the challenges posed by COVID-19 and shared many innovative and ingenious modifications to normal practice. Aggregated data from data sharing practices was used to show vaccination progress over the period from March to June and Healthwise and Durri Aboriginal Medical Service shared videos on how they tackled vaccination during COVID-19. Since then Central Pottsville Medical Centre has shared their PDSA for increasing vaccination to vulnerable groups. These PDSAs have been picked up by the National Centre for Immunisation Research and Surveillance (NCIRS) who ran a newsletter article to their readership about Central Pottsville Medical Centre’s QI and invited HNC and the practice to be part of a national PHN showcase on improving immunisation rates next year. Five months on, 69 practices across the region have engaged with PCI including

13 who have shared PDSAs either with everyone or with HNC. The PDSAs are a great tool for learning and growth and everyone in general practice is encouraged, no matter how complex or humble, to share their PDSA. “The positive reaction from practices and our own Primary Health Coordinator staff has surpassed our expectations and we are looking to improve and develop PCI further” said Monika Wheeler. The introduction of the PIP QI incentive payment in August 2019 has also been at the forefront of thinking in PCI and the topics page includes templated activity pages with resources and ideas for each of the ten PIP QI measures. QI activities on the topics page are coded orange or green to denote the level of involvement required to complete them. PIP QI activities focusing on recording key health data and other activities that are less involved or intrusive to the practice as a whole are coded orange. In addition to orange level activities, PCI also includes more complex QI activities around recalls and reminders and health coaching – these are coded green to denote the fact that they will involve more staff and require more time and change to current practice. HNC has contracted Medicoach to provide personalised practical inpractice facilitation for practices working on green level activities to help principals and managers get on top of more involved activities more easily and get the team working towards their QI goals. HNC’s Primary Health Coordinators and Aboriginal Health Coordinators are also available to assist practices and Aboriginal

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Articles inside

UCRH team wins $1M grant

1min
page 38

Royal Commission highlights disability horror show

3min
page 37

What’s your QI?

6min
pages 33-34

The breakout that never was

8min
pages 39-40

No silver bullet when treating shoulder injuries

6min
pages 35-36

Book Reviews

10min
pages 30-32

Falls Risk in Older Patients

3min
page 29

NSW Health program for new fathers

3min
pages 27-28

Child vax figures highest on record – Minister

4min
page 24

Ridding Papua New Guinea of smoking

5min
page 23

Every picture tells a story

6min
pages 21-22

Self-management can help reduce men’s PMD

3min
page 19

No news wouldn’t be good news

4min
page 20

Humans, Animals and Covid19

3min
page 18

The ancient ‘didge’ helps with modern challenges

2min
page 17

Here today - gone today for joint surgery patients

3min
page 16

Year of the e-Rat

4min
page 10

Psychological issues still our commonest concern

2min
page 14

Book Review - Untethered

3min
pages 11-12

Telehealth ‘revolution’ to continue into 2021

4min
page 13

A lifetime in psychiatry

7min
pages 8-9

Whither the PHN?

4min
page 7

Summer 2020 -2021, Editorial

9min
pages 3-4

Has a superfood become an enviro-vandal?

3min
page 15
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