Wednesday, November 30, 2016

Applications Open - Developing Patient Safety Leaders Programme

We are currently seeking applications from AQuA members for an exciting programme designed
to develop the essential skills and knowledge to lead improvements to patient safety.

Starting in February, our four-day Developing Patient Safety Leaders programme will give members the opportunity to develop a deeper understanding of patient safety, and learn how they can drive improvements in the quality and safety of care delivered to patients.

Our team of Improvements Advisors will support participants throughout the programme to develop key safety leadership skills, and help them apply this to their individual roles and environments.

Topics covered over the four days will include quality improvement tools, effective patient safety culture, Human Factors, how to measure for sustainable improvements, and safety from a patient perspective.

This opportunity is suitable for a wide range of roles, particularly those looking to have a greater impact on influencing or planning patient safety improvements. However, participants do need to have a basic knowledge and experience of quality improvement.

Participants must also be available to attend all four dates:
  • Thursday 2 February 2017 - Bolton
  • Wednesday 22 February - Bolton
  • Thursday 9 March OR Friday 7 April - AQuA Offices, Sale
  • Thursday 5 May - Salford
Further information can be found in the programme plan. To apply, please download the application form and return to Rose.O'Reilly@srft.nhs.uk.

The deadline for applications is Friday 20 January 2017. Successful applications will be contacted a week after the deadline.

If you would like a further discussion about the course, please contact Rose via the email address above.

Monday, November 28, 2016

Blog - To Flow or Not To Flow

Wendy Lewis is the Whole System Flow Programme Lead for the Advancing Quality Alliance (AQuA), and you can follow her on Twitter @ERPwend. Here she shares her thoughts on the current state of play behind Flow, and some things she has discovered throughout AQuA’s journey in understanding this complex issue.

Wendy Lewis, Whole System Flow
Programme Lead
Our Chief Executive David Fillingham recently led a webinar for the UK Improvement Alliance (UKIA) on the subject of Whole System Flow; a subject that we at AQuA have been working quite intensely on with The Health Foundation over the past 12 months.

Having had the opportunity to work on our Flow discovery programme for the past year, I used the webinar to reflect on some of our learning to date. Some of the discussion and questions generated also really helped me to crystallise some key points that the improvement community may want to consider and contribute to.

Our thinking has led me to these main points:

We Still Rarely Talk About Whole Systems

Language is so important when considering flow. By using the title of whole system flow but then describing a patient pathway or service level improvements as the examples, we are pulling the opportunity for learning and line of sight below the system level. This is perfectly understandable, as this is where our energy, effort and money has been spent in trying to ‘fix flow’ through our NHS services.

Throughout our conversations and local discussions about this work, we’ve used the phrase “from a patient’s front door and back again” to loosely describe the system. However, we developed this definition:

The coordination of all resources across a locality to deliver effective, 
efficient, person-centred care, in the right setting, at the right time.

What we have found really important, is that the participants can describe the system they are applying this thinking to and be clear of its boundaries. If the focus for improvement is on an acute hospital pathway or a community based service - describe it as such. Our role as improvement experts is to then support and also challenge that work, and highlight the opportunities for applying whole system thinking.

We Rarely Talk To Whole Systems

Through AQuA’s programme this year, we’ve had the opportunity to work with both a wide variety of our members, as well as partners across health and social care, and asked them to define the current enablers and barriers to flow. The overwhelming response from our first co-design event was “We need the system in the room to talk about it and improve it!” Quite right too! This is a fair challenge and one that we have made efforts to address, but it does remain an issue.

How do NHS soaked improvement organisations engage with system partners from local authority, community groups and charities? When we have new partners in the room but the examples we describe are health-based (and usually centred on acute hospitals); this really doesn’t foster engagement and shared understanding.

We call it Patient Flow!

ARGGGGHHHHHHHHHHH! If only patients did flow as they would want to, and actually as we frequently promise, then they would flow through our pathways!

I’ve become increasingly aware of the language used about the recipients of our services, our patients, our customers within this work on flow. Bed blockers, delayers, usual suspects, frequent flyers… commonplace in our language as well as in the media. How should we lead the change in language that demonstrates respect and outdated, non-paternalistic, approaches to care provision?

Through our work this year we’ve described four elements that have to be understood alongside each other, in order to understand flow through our systems and how we might improve it:
  • Patients 
  • Workforce 
  • Information 
  • Finances 
And again, like with not having the system in the room to generate the right level of discussion, by not paying attention to these four elements in parallel throughout flow work, we run the risk of re-shaping a problem, rather than clearly defining and understanding it.

Reality check

The systems and services that we hold dear are under extreme pressure, with improvement priorities coming out of their ears. Where does a new improvement offer add value, not distract from mandated priorities, and support real transformation when capacity to even think about it is occupied? Applying new thinking to a highly reactive and defensive system -a challenge or unhelpful task?

In improvement we teach “go where the energy is”. I think in reality we in the NHS are seeking to fix what’s hurting us the most right now: A&E waits, delayed transfers of care, financial compliance, to name a few. Going where the energy is for improving the system is not the same as following the energy currently being spent on these pernicious problems. How do we support both? How do we create the head space for applying different and new thinking?

We also need to acknowledge how colleagues in our own improvement communities feel about flow. A lot of us have been involved in a whole range of these over recent times; some with support and drive from national structures, and others from local or regional initiatives.

Our differing levels of success and/or sustainability create a new issue; there is frustration, scepticism and even cynicism about creating another offer around improving whole system flow within 'Us Improvers.' However, there are sources of energy and support outside the NHS that could really help us refresh and reframe our thinking.

So – how do we respond to these points? How should we act on them? If we focus for another year on whole system flow - where will we get to?

AQuA Chief Executive David Fillingham CBE, alongside colleagues from The Health Foundation, will shortly be publishing a joint report on Whole System Flow. For more information, please visit the AQuA website or follow @AQuA_NHS on Twitter.

Thursday, November 10, 2016

Blog - The Challenge and Potential of Improving Whole System Flow Across Health and Social Care

AQuA Chief Executive,
David Fillingham
In his latest blog, AQuA Chief Executive David Fillingham shares why he thinks a focus on improving Whole System Flow could offer solutions to major challenges currently facing the NHS,

This is ahead of a forthcoming report alongside The Health Foundation, looking at the challenges and potential of flow in the health and social care sector.

What does whole system flow within health care mean?

Anyone who’s been a patient, or had an elderly relative go through the health care system, will know what a lack of flow looks like: frustrating delays and wasted resources. Sometimes patients and families can feel like they are the only people pulling the different parts of the system together. That absence of a smooth effective flow of patients, information, resources and staff has big knock on implications for patient experience, but also for safety, outcomes, and productivity.

There have been many attempts to improve flow, but projects have tended to focus on only one part of the system and usually on hospitals, particularly emergency departments. When we talk about ‘whole system flow’ we mean something broader. We need to start looking at what’s going on in other parts of the health and social care system, and to improve things using all the resources in a community. It’s a much bigger challenge.

How can focusing on whole system flow help with improving care quality and reducing costs?

At the moment people in England are busy working on their Sustainability and Transformation Plans (STPs) and developing new models of care. But none of this will deliver results unless we find a way to move patients and resources around the system in a more effective way. I feel really strongly that tackling whole system flow provides the underlying principles for developing new models of care more effectively.

There are three huge benefits to improving flow:
  1. Patients get a better experience and outcome. If an older person with a number of long-term conditions can’t get to see their GP, they may deteriorate and need to be taken to A&E. Before you know it they've spent hours waiting to be admitted, and then they’re in hospital weeks or months longer than necessary because they can’t get discharged. That’s a very poor experience.
  2. High-quality care is delivered using fewer resources. Had we got the right intervention in place at home much earlier for that person they would never have been in hospital in the first place. This is often called failure demand, which represents a big part of the pressures on our services, as we explore in the report (to be launched soon).
  3. Better flow leads to happier staff. Patients aren't the only ones who feel frustrated by bits of the system not joining up properly, it really impacts on staff as well.

How does change happen in complex systems and how can improving flow help?

We've found there are a number of quite hard-edged things we need to do to get systems to work together effectively, including developing supportive financial incentives, information systems and service design. But there are also ‘softer’ things around leadership, culture and relationships which are absolutely crucial.

Some of the Health Foundation’s work through their Flow Cost Quality programme in Sheffield really helped us learn about how you can engage frontline staff in improving flow, and they got some great results.

The Wigan Deal is also particularly interesting. Wigan Council led a programme to reform care and wellbeing services. Appreciating that they were dealing with a complex system, they invested in training large numbers of staff in the principles of the deal, giving them permission to think differently and work in a different way with local residents. They’ve now developed a number of new care and support packages in the community that are more person-centred, much less expensive, and better meet residents’ needs. This has helped them identify over £8m in permanent revenue savings so far.

Wigan has now created an integrated care partnership organisation, bringing health and social care providers together. It’s definitely an area to watch.

The NHS in Scotland and Wales are also looking at improving whole system flow, so it’s been great to work with colleagues from across the border on this. Find out more in our forthcoming report, which will include case studies on their work, as well as examples from further afield.

Where should people start if they want to improve whole system flow?

People often just think about the patient journey. This is the right place to start, but on its own it doesn’t show a full picture. You also need to think about how the people working in each of the services along that patient journey will be equipped with the skills and support to bring about improvements. And if you want to have a wide and sustained impact you have to work at system level too. That’s about engaging senior leaders, so they understand how parts of the system need to work together and can tackle the big barriers they have the power to influence.

In our report we will set out a model for whole system flow, which shows that we need to be taking action on four different levels:
  • Patient
  • Frontline team
  • Local health and social care economy
  • The national system
Is current national policy supportive of improved whole system flow?

In England, we’re seeing a very healthy direction of travel on this through things like the sustainability and transformation planning framework, and the new single oversight framework from NHS Improvement and CQC. It’s all encouraging a more integrated system.

I have two big worries though. 

Firstly, the basic funding shortfall in the NHS, which is enormous. People are spending so much time firefighting. The second thing is social care funding, because while there is a squeeze on the NHS, it’s been much tighter for longer on local authorities. Social care can’t play their part if the money just isn’t there.

This sort of whole system transformation takes time. Is there enough patience around for this kind of approach, bearing in mind the NHS’s current financial situation and other big challenges?

Changing senior leadership is often seen as the solution in places with large deficits and big performance problems. That makes whole system transformation hard, as it disrupts relationships within the local community, and new leaders will naturally focus on quick fixes.

However, I am a relentless optimist. Places like Wigan, that have been allowed to build a constancy of purpose and consistency of leadership over a longer period of time, are really starting to prove that agencies can work together effectively with impactful results. Their results show that a two year timescale is long enough to start to demonstrate initial results.

What we need to do is drive that forward, and help people demonstrate their success. This will then become a model for work in other parts of the health and social care system.

This blog was originally published on The Health Foundation website. For the latest updates and activity on Whole System Flow, please follow #WholeSystemFlow on Twitter.