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Page 1: Dr Ian Sturgess: Optimising patient journeys

'Understanding the admitted flow streams and how to optimise patient journeys’

Dr Ian Sturgess

Director, IMP Healthcare Consultancy Ltd

Page 2: Dr Ian Sturgess: Optimising patient journeys

What are we trying to achieve? Getting patients better faster and safer

Safety

Reliability Flow

Ideal Care

Improving outcomes • No avoidable deaths • No harm • No unnecessary pain • No waste • No delays • No feelings of helplessness • No inequality • Getting everyone on the

‘same page’ • NOT - ‘Hitting the target but

missing point’

Page 3: Dr Ian Sturgess: Optimising patient journeys

The Patient’s Perspective in Admitted Emergency care

I expect what to know and know what to expect from day 0: • What is wrong with me?

= Competent assessment • What is going to happen today and tomorrow?

= End to end case management plan • What needs to be achieved to get me home?

= Clinical criteria for discharge • When is this going to happen?

= Expected date of discharge

‘No decisions about me without me’

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Occupied Beds = Work in Progress or Inventory Patients Waiting for the next useful thing to happen

Do you use average LOS to ‘measure’ improvement?

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What is the Goal for Admitted Emergency care?

To maximise PbR Tariff ? - No To treat patients safely? - Yes but what else? To get patients back home having achieved an improvement in their acute condition without causing any harm? - Yes but a bit long Deliver EDD and CCD? - Yes – the ‘Goal’

Page 6: Dr Ian Sturgess: Optimising patient journeys

Short Stay Unit

Home

Social care

D+T - OPA

IC Specialist units

MAU - Decision to admit

Churn

Handover

Handover

Handover

Handover

Traditional Model for Acute Care

GP referrals

A+E Referrals

Handover

Page 7: Dr Ian Sturgess: Optimising patient journeys

Expected Date of Discharge (EDD) and Clinical Criteria for Discharge (CCD)

• Use EDD and CCD to support Care Coordination = the Goal. – When setting an EDD do not build in the delays that exist

within the system (clinical length of stay only) – Set the clinical (incl functional) criteria for discharge – EDD can be changed for (real) clinical reasons only – EDD + CCD are the (case management) goal

• Communicate Plan, EDD and Criteria for discharge

– Creating the expectation • Clinical Team • Patient and family

– Identify the constraints to delivery of the EDD and CCD • Focus on the key one (TOC) of each of: • Internal • External

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Pareto Analysis

20%

20

80 60% of demand

\

19%

1% of demand: Red stream: Rare Strangers

Sick Specialty 25% OBD

0

100%

Cumulative Demand

LOS

Sick General/frail 55% OBD

Short Stay 10% OBD

Complex

Page 9: Dr Ian Sturgess: Optimising patient journeys

Managing the Streams – Short stay Sick specialty Sick Frail Complex – Allocate early to teams skilled in that stream

0

50

100

150

200

250

1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 27 29 31 33 35 37 39 41 43 45 47 49 51 53 55 57 59

Length of stay (days)

Num

ber o

f pat

ient

s

Clarity of specialty criteria Specialty case management plan at

Handover – no delays Green bed days vs red bed days

Short stay – manage to the hour Maximise ambulatory care

Complex needs – how much is decompensation? Detect early and design

simple rules for discharge

Minimise handover Decompensation risk

Early assertive management Green bed days vs red bed days

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Segmentation by LOS – 1 – Short Stay Short Stay – Requires decision makers

• Locus of control = Internal: • 65-70% of Medical take with LOS < 3 days • Big impact on within day and day to day variation in demand

– hourly drum beat • Needs - Generalist skills + standardisation (decision making

and case management) • Common Constraints

• Senior decision making and diagnostics available 8 a.m. to 10 p.m.

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Segmentation by LOS – 2 – Sick Specialty Sick Specialty: Need specialist skills

• Locus of control = Internal: • Needs - Specialty specific standardisation • Variation in diagnoses and treatment – specialty

specific – pull from point of access • Common Constraints

• Specialist decision maker availability – attending model • Specialist diagnostic/intervention

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Segmentation by LOS – 3 – Sick Frail + general

Sick frail/general • Require planners and decision makers

• Loci of control = Internal and External: • Frequently frail older people • Needs - Identify early (at admission), CGA on

admission and assertive case management • Main constraints

– Early de-compensation – minimise handovers/moves – ‘Over working’ through multiple in-hospital assessments – Frequently externalised to Social Services Delays

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Integrated Flow – Frailty – Stranded Patient

Page 14: Dr Ian Sturgess: Optimising patient journeys

Daily Board Rounds Key principle - focus on the processes and outcome not structure 1. Nursing and Medical Director:

– Set the principle – ‘drum beat and constraints’

2. Clinical Director – Describe and standardise the process - inclusivity – Consider ‘Attending Model’ – but focus on behaviours – Ensure peer review – with supportive challenge

3. Ward senior clinicians – Consultants, Ward Manager and AHP leads – Deliver the process – create ‘safe competition’ between wards – Identify the constraints

4. Trust Exec and Non Execs – Walk the floor – go and watch daily board rounds! – Embed within safety walk rounds

5. Management of ‘disruptive behaviours’ – Make it a ‘red rule’ – Are you prepared to have those difficult conversations?

Page 15: Dr Ian Sturgess: Optimising patient journeys

What are we trying to achieve? Getting patients better faster and safer

Safety

Reliability Flow

Ideal Care

Improving outcomes • No avoidable deaths • No harm • No unnecessary pain • No waste • No delays • No feelings of helplessness • No inequality • Getting everyone on the

‘same page’ • NOT - ‘Hitting the target but

missing point’