P283 Relationship Between the Ranking of COPD Outcome Measures (Re-Admissions and Emergency Bed Days) and Respiratory Service Provision Across the 13 PCTs in the East of England (EOE)
AG Davison, L Jongepier, L Paddison, K Smith, JR Flowers
2012
Thorax
Poster sessions Thorax 2012;67(Suppl 2):A1-A204 A189 meetings. An audit revealed that 74% of individuals with COPD admitted to hospital made contact with their practise in the month before admissions and 58% had received 3 or more courses of antibiotics in the year prior to admission, indicating the potential to improve care quality and reduce costs. Methods We reviewed current provision against NICE standards and the emerging National COPD Strategy, identified gaps and agreed priorities. In
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... allel a patient and carer consultation was undertaken using focus groups, interviews and questionnaires. This information was used to formulate a model that integrated primary and secondary care and shared clinical pathways. Key was the establishment of a consultant led community based COPD team. To allow individual practises to benchmark themselves against NICE standards and then support them to develop their own improvement plans, a COPD management tool (POINTS) was introduced into most practises. Financial incentives (QP 8 and QP 11) were used to drive key elements, in particular improved recording of exacerbations, the use of rescue packs and self-management plans. Education for Primary Care Nurses was made "user-friendly" and delivered as monthly 'bite size' education sessions, with GP reimbursement for nurse time. Results There has been a high level of support and engagement from primary and secondary care. COPD is now the top local LTC priority. During the first year admissions and re-admissions have reduced by approximately 15%. More than 90% of COPD outpatient activity is now in the community (including post discharge follow up). Patient surveys have shown very high levels of satisfaction. The project has been cost neutral in its first year (including savings from Oxygen Register cleansing but excluding savings from moving outpatient care to the community team) and the CCGs project savings of approximately £300,000 and £600,000 at 24 and 36 months. Discussion This demonstrates that service redesign can deliver rapid improvements in the quality of care with significant cost savings potential. Hospital admission for acute respiratory disease accounts for 40% of the cost of managing respiratory disease in the UK. Data from national and European respiratory audits suggest the quality of care received is highly variable, and in the UK only 50% of people admitted for exacerbation of COPD will be managed by respiratory physicians. Admission to hospital is a significant event for someone with respiratory disease and represents an opportunity for the patient to receive a comprehensive and high quality respiratory review and interventions. Through project work with five project sites a structured admission model was developed and implemented through service improvement and process redesign. The components of the model include: • • Appropriate and timely (within 3 hours of admission) access to non-invasive ventilation (NIV) • • Access to respiratory specialist within 24 hours • • Proactive identification and management of high impact service users • • Ensuring every patient receives the key aspects of care during their admission (e.g. smoking cessation, inhaler technique cheque, self management plan) P285 Benefits The system has allowed improved communication between members of the team. The template has served as a management checklist ensuring that important components of COPD care are not forgotten. The system has been used to identify patients with very severe disease for discussion at a severe disease MDT and been associated with a 5% reduction in outpatient attendances.
doi:10.1136/thoraxjnl-2012-202678.375
fatcat:oj3cn2pmwbde7ccrfp7tjwkuba