Personalised care – is it achievable? · Personalised care – is it achievable? Jessica Corner ....

Post on 16-Mar-2020

2 views 0 download

Transcript of Personalised care – is it achievable? · Personalised care – is it achievable? Jessica Corner ....

Personalised care – is it achievable?

Jessica Corner

Dean of Faculty of Health Sciences, Chief Clinician, Macmillan Cancer Support

2

Personalised care – what do I mean?

3

What patients want – Fast access to reliable health advice

– Effective treatment delivered by trusted professionals

– Participation in decisions and respect for preferences

– Clear, comprehensible information and support for self-care

– Attention to physical and environmental needs

– Emotional support, empathy and respect

– Involvement of, and support for, family and carers

– Continuity of care and smooth transitions

Picker Institute 2007

Personalised care • Compassion

• Empathy

• Responsiveness to needs, values and expressed preferences

• Co-ordination of care

• Information and communication

• Physical comfort

• Emotional support

• Involvement of family and friends

Institute of Medicine (2001)

A decade of addressing personalised care in cancer

6

Engagement and involvement at every level

• Cancer networks

• Patient forums in Networks and Trusts

• Peer review of services in Cancer Centres by the National Cancer Action Team

• Consultation with service users as key stakeholders for policy decisions

• Committees, working groups and decision making has service user representation

7

Advanced communication skills training

• 3 day workshop training

• members of multidisciplinary teams

• 7,000+ trained to date

Information and support centres

11

Addressing access to a clinical nurse specialist

12

How are we doing?

13

14

Measuring outcomes

Cancer Patient Experience Survey Advisory Group

– Responsible for measuring and monitoring improvements in patients experience and making recommendations on the basis of this

– Data available to commissioners and the public on the quality of patient experience as key indicator of performance

– Developing sensitive indicators locally owned but also for national benchmarking

– Patient report outcomes (PROMS)

• 158 Trusts surveyed • One of the largest cancer surveys in the world • 109,477 patients surveyed: treated January-

March 2010 in each Trust • Patient definition: inpatient or day case; with

primary cancer diagnosis;

Methodology

• Questionnaire and cover letter asked patients to refer to treatment at the Trust named on cover letter

• First survey to cover rarer cancer

• First survey to use word “cancer” explicitly • Response Rate 67% (67,713): National inpatient survey

52%

Overall patients are positive – Patients overall responses positive – 80% or over on 33

of 59 scored questions – On 12 questions, cancer patients scored 70% or lower: 6

questions on information; 2 on nurses; 3 on integration of care across sectors and professions; 1 on waiting times in outpatients

– On comparable questions, cancer patients are more

positive than general hospital inpatients

– Rarer cancer patients have less positive experience

But variation in experience of care is significant

– Significant variations by Trust: e.g. given name of CNS - range is 97% to 59%

– 12 Trusts had no instances where patients rated them in

bottom 20% of Trusts on individual questions – 34 Trusts had 20 or more instances where they were rated

in the bottom 20% by patients: 18 of these were in London

We can’t see big change over time

20

Knowing the name of a clinical nurse specialist has a significantly positive impact

21

But Age, Gender, and Ethnicity are linked to poorer experience of care

Age : • Youngest age group 16-25 usually the least positive • But: 75+ group least likely to be given name of CNS

Gender : • Smaller scale differences than other variables • Men more positive about staff, privacy, respect and

dignity, told enough, discharge, written information on type of cancer, free prescriptions

Ethnicity : • On 21 questions white patients more positive • Receiving information, confidence and trust in ward

nurses and pain control are examples of this finding

22

Trust level reports

23

Trust level reports

Macmillan league table

25

We are facing a major loss of confidence in nursing and the quality of personal care

26

What is the picture across Europe?

27

28

29

Evaluation of a complex intervention to improve experienced continuity of care (King et al BJC 98, 529-536, 2008 and BJC 100, 274-280 2009)

• Elements of continuity:

– Infomational

– Management

– Relational

30

Concluding thoughts • Delivering personalised care is complex

• Involves multiple actions at the level of individual, organisation and system

• Skills, commitment and culture

• Ethos and values

• Placing power in the hands of individuals who are ill

• Self care and care of ‘selves’

• We are in danger of going backwards rather than forwards without concerted action

31