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Transcript of Welcome to The new GMS & PMS Learning Exchange The National Primary and Care Trust Development...
Welcome to
The new GMS & PMS
Learning ExchangeThe National Primary and Care
Trust Development Programme
The Future is NowNew GMS and PMS
Rob Webster
Director, contract implementation
Principles of Public Sector Reform
• National Standards• Empower frontline staff to design and
deliver services• Flexibility of service provision to meet
patient need• Giving people choice
Primary Care
Quality (What Patients’ Value)• Availability and Accessibility• Technical Competence• Communication Skills• Interpersonal Attributes of Care• Continuity of Care• Range of On-Site Services
Vision
• Universal, fast and convenient access• by informed patients• to an extended choice and range of high
quality services• delivered in modern primary care settings• by suitably trained and qualified
professionals
Context
• GP most respected public figure• Primary Care highest satisfaction rate• Primary care internationally admired• Quality is improving• PCTs as inclusive organisations• and new contracts mean we are in the
verge of a renaissance in Primary Care
Scope [England]
• c300 Million Consultations• c1m Specialist Attendance • 6 Million on-line hits• 6 millon NHS Direct calls• Over 7 Million OOHs calls• c1 Million WiC attendances• 600 Million items dispensed
Strategic Test 1
• Did you replace your out of hours service or reform your emergency care system?
Strategic Test 2
• Did you support the effective use of the quality frameworks to manage chronic diseases?
Strategic Test 3
• Did you use enhanced services, and the “floor”, to reconfigure services or treat them as a cross to bear?
Strategic Test 4
• Did you use patient feedback and flexibility in the new contracts to advance the notions of patient choice and improve the patient experience?
• Did you use the practice based contracts and new roles of the PCT to develop opportunities around skill-mix?
Strategic Test 5
• Did you use the contract as a lever for recruitment and retention and for improving morale?
Strategic Test 6
• Did you use the additional flexibilities in PMS and PCTMS to tackle specific local issues?
Strategic Test 7
• Did you develop the entrepreneurial culture in primary care?
Strategic Test 8
• Did you use contracts as a lever for modernising services or as a payment mechanism for GPs?
Strategic Test 9
Summary
• Alignment: principles, values, vision• Positive context, huge scale• Operations and Strategy• Contracts can deliver Strategy for NHS• Use this event to get you there
The new
GMS & PMS
Learning Exchange
The National Primary and Care Trust Development Programme
The Provision of General Medical Services
Ian Dodge, Head of GMS, Department of Health
Objectives for the session
• Key points from chapter 2 of Delivering Investment in General Practice (except OOHs)
• What PCTs need to do, why, and when
• Q&A
Not a substitute for reading chapter 2
Five Themes• Using the four contracting routes
• Understanding essential services and related statutory requirements
• How patient registration, list-closure and forced assignments will work
• Understanding additional services
• Using enhanced services to deliver whole system change
The Four Contracting Routes (1)
• New Primary Medical Services duty
• PCT must from 1st April “commission or provide primary medical services to the extent that it considers necessary to meet all reasonable requirements”
• PCTs must ensure sufficient alternative provision in place at the time additional service/OOHs opt-outs take effect
The Four Contracting Routes (2)Contract Providers
General Medical Services (GMS) Practices with at least one GP provider (single-
handers, partnerships, or a certain type of limited
company described in chapter 6)
Personal Medical Services (PMS) Practices (single-handers, partnerships, or a
certain type of limited company described in
chapter 6)
Nurses and other clinicians
PCTs
Alternative Providers Medical
Services
(APMS)
Commercial providers
Voluntary sector
Not-for-profit organisations
NHS trusts and foundation trusts
Other PCTs
PCT Medical Services (PCTMS) PCTs
The Four Contracting Routes (3)• Obligations & rights with GMS contract:
– essential services: must provide– additional services: right & expectation to provide for own population– enhanced: right to provide 3 DES: access, QUIP, CVI– “GMS and PMS contractors do not have preferred provider status for
other enhanced services” (para 2.13, page 22)
• Greenfield sites (“significant population expansion”): expectation PCT “could advertise and seek applications through a two stage process”
• Brownfield sites: no preferred provider status
Essential Services (1)
• Understanding is pre-requisite to effective commissioning of enhanced services
• Management of all patients suffering from disease as defined in the ISCD- eg disabilities, long-term conditions, infertility, depression etc
• Contractors must provide “appropriate ongoing treatment and care for all registered patients and temporary patients”, including advice about health promotion
Essential Services (2)• Enhanced services specifications: “no part of the
specification by commission, omission or implication defines or redefines essential or additional services”
• Para 2.19: “GMS contractors are funded through the global sum and MPIG to provide the equivalent services for which they were previously funded under existing GMS”
• Exceptions are flu; CVI; cervical cytology and minor surgery (part); intra-partum care; intrauterine contraceptive devices and implants
Essential Services (3)
• Core hours: contractor responsible for ensuring provision 8am-6.30pm, Monday to Friday except public and bank holidays
• Normal surgery hours: must be “to the extent necessary to meet reasonable needs”
• Replaces 26 hour a week face to face commitment on an individual GP
Essential Services (4)
• Temporary patients obligations remain
• Home-visiting “if the patient’s medical condition is such that, in the reasonable opinion of the contractor, it is necessary to do so”
• Newly registered patients
• Three-year rule and over 75 checks at patient request
Patient registration (1)
• Obligation to ensure lists are accurate
• Choice of practitioner subject to availability, appropriateness, reasonableness
• New PCT Guide to Primary Care Services
• Contractors to review patient leaflets before April
• PCTs and contractors agree practice areas before April
Patient registration (2)
• Open/closed status: discuss with practices before end of February
• Open list:– “must accept any application … unless it has fair and
reasonable grounds for not doing so”– must not discriminate & give reasons for refusal in writing
and keep a record (same applies for all removals)– PCT can assign patients
Patient registration (3)• Closed list:
– must not accept new patients save immediate family– new patient assignment procedure applies
• Formal closure and assignment procedures from 1st April:– rejecting closure notice/application to assign patients to contractors with closed lists leads to Assessment Panel
determination– appeal is to the SHA (not the FHSAA(SHA))
• PCTs cannot assign to closed lists from 1st April other than through this procedure; may need to develop applications, and put panel arrangements in place
• Open list:– “must accept any application … unless it has fair and reasonable grounds for not doing so”– must not discriminate– must give reasons for refusal in writing and keep a record– PCT can assign patients
Additional services (1)• PCTs must ensure sufficient in place from 1st April
• Contractors do not have to provide if not already doing so
• PCT discretion to agree opt-outs before April 2004 when opt-out procedure applies; ascertain intentions in January, decide in February
• Tariff for opt-out (% of global sum, not GS+MPIG)
• No fixed price for recommissioning additional services
Additional services (2)
• Purpose of opt-outs is to manage contractor workload
• PCT can reject opt-outs if the contractor is providing any enhanced services
• If it approves the opt out, but then cannot find alternative provision despite best endeavours, PCTs can seek SHA approval that there are exceptional circumstances
Using enhanced services (1)• Expanding range, improving choice, convenience,
VFM, & reducing pressures on hospitals
• Local floor from 2004/05 monitored nationally
• Initial plans during February - to include the 6 DES
• PEC sign off proposals and must seek LMC agreement that spend counts to floor
Using enhanced services (2)• Tighter definition of spend
• Includes:– DES, NES, LES from any provider– PWSI– Plus in PMS Plus, Specialist in PMS specialist– Local incentive schemes from GMS & PMS providers– Recommissioned services ONLY if contestable for GMS & PMS contractors &
could reasonably be provided by them
• Excludes any baseline spend on trusts/other providers simply rolled forward, or anything funded through other primary care routes
Using enhanced services (3)• PCT must commission 6 DES from 1st April, and offer 3 of the
DES to GMS contractors
• PCT commissions as primary medical services, decides when, from whom & how it commissions other enhanced services
• Bear in mind definition of essential services
• PCTs may wish to be guided by NES but “commissioning decisions are entirely a matter of local negotiation” (para 2.84)
Summary
• New duty & four commissioning routes
• Understand essential services
• New patient registration, list closure & assignment arrangements
• Additional services commissioning & opt outs
• Understand enhanced services commissioning rules, spend, and use to deliver strategic change
PCT actions
• Strategy for commissioning primary care• 1st Jan: offer 2003/04 access & QUiP DES• End Jan: reviewed additional services commissioning &
contractor intentions• 1st Feb: commission violent patients DES• End Feb: agreed practice areas, open/closed status, discussed
normal hours, offered 3 DES, agreed early additional service opt-outs
• End Feb: drawn up initial plans for commissioning enhanced services
• Apr: set up assessment panels & proposals for assignments if need be
Questions
The new
GMS & PMS
Learning Exchange
The National Primary and Care Trust Development Programme
Microsoft PowerPoint Presentation
nGMS and PMS EVENTSFINANCE
Michael Munt
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
Overview
• Financial Arrangements• Contractors - Statement of Financial
Entitlements• Allocations to PCT’s • Contractor Budgets• Financial Management and Monitoring• Key Milestones
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
Financial Arrangements - Headlines
Spending on Primary Medical Services in the UK to increase from £6.1bn in 2002/03 to £8bn in 2005/06
Arrangements underpinned by Gross Investment Guarantee for the years 2003/04 to 2005/06
All allocations are now cash limited with some minor elements of dispensing remaining as non cash limited
Link to Local Development Plan
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
Gross Investment Guarantee (GIG) Mechanism to monitor overall spend on Primary Medical
Services. Technical Sub Committee established comprising
representatives of DH/NHSC/BMA to monitor arrangements.
Component Parts• GMS Non Cash Limited • PCT Unified Allocation, GMS Cash Limited,
Dispensing Drug costs • Centrally Funded Initiatives• New Monies Primarily For Quality
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
EXPENDITURE TYPE England 2002/03 2003/04 2004/05 2005/06
GMS fees and allowances 2,990 3,100 - -
GMS cash-limited payments 988 1,086 - -
Global sum payments 0 2,651 2,690
Quality payments 0 80 682 1,102
Enhanced primary care services 254 315 518 586
Premises 0 60 600 756
IT 0 60 108 108
Other PCT administered funds 0 332 354
Transitional protection 0 297 197
Other (R&R & OOH DF) 74 74 90 90
Demand Management 5 5
Dispensing 726 784 847 917
TOTAL SPEND 5,032 5,559 6,131 6,806
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
Gross Investment Guarantee
GIG is currently being revised to take account of :
• Outturn on 2002/03 fees and allowances• Growth assumptions in GMS Cash Limited monies• Increases in dispensing and drugs costs• Changes in superannuation employers costs• Projected over/underspend in 2003/04
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
Contractor Entitlements SFE
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
Contractor Entitlements
Red Book replaced by the Statement of Financial Entitlement (SFE)
Concept of Entitlement continues but not on the basis of individual Practitioner but on the basis of a Contractor Practice
All payments under the old arrangements cease 31 March 2004
PCT’s must make adequate provision for the accrual of outstanding amounts in their 2003/04 accounts
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
• Additional cash financing requirement will, if necessary be made available
• Any additional costs to be met by PCT
• The SFE gives Contractors certainty over the minimum level of entitlement
• Discretionary funds will be available to Contractors
• The SFE sets out 17 different types of entitlement
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
Key EntitlementsGlobal Sum
• Based on Formula - Carr Hill to establish allocation fair shares
• Formula is weighted at Contractor level to be updated every quarter for changes in Contractor characteristics and weighted population
• Indicative price is currently £50 per weighted patient
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
Off formula adjustments for :
• A London weighting of £2.18 per registered patient not weighted
• Temporary patients adjustment to be calculated as part of a five year rolling average
• Additional Service and Out of Hour Opt outs
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
Minimum Practice Income Guarantee
To provided support to global Sum formula losers
Income levels protected based on comparison of the Global Sum and Global Sum Equivalent
Global sum Equivalent based on reference period July 2002 to June 2003
GSE to be adjusted to take account of changes in list size between reference period and 1st April 2004
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
The initial MPIG is then amended to take account of the adjusted GSE
MPIG is a one off calculation
Uplifted only in line with Global sum
No Global Sum uplift in 2005/06
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
Quality payments
Three payments under the quality heading:
• Quality Preparation Payments -2004/05 is the second and final year
• Quality Aspiration based on one third of the anticipated level of achievement at average £75 per point For 2005/06
• For 2005/06 aspiration payments will be set at 60%
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
Quality Achievement
• Achievement Payments will be based on achievement points multiplied by £75 for a Contractor with average list size
• Payable by end of April 2005
• PCT’s will need to provided for these amounts in their 2004/05 annual accounts
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
Other entitlements will cover:
• Directed Enhanced Services • Locum Payments • Seniority payments • Recruitment and Retention Initiatives • Dispensing to be rolled forward but fee rates have
been uprated• Premises - Existing commitments brought forward• Information Technology - Changes reflect new
reimbursement arrangements
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
Implications for Personal Medical Services
Establish baseline 2003/04 allocation up to wave 5b Excludes Quality preparation and flu allocations Access to new funding streams Improved seniority pay and pensions Ability to opt out of OOH responsibility PMS to GMS movement potential MPIG equivalent based on local data or
benchmark based GMS Global Sum Equivalent based on banded list size
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
Conditions attaching to SFE payments:
• Provision of all necessary information not available to the PCT
• Must be Accurate to the best of the Contractors knowledge
• Provide up to date and accurate information for registration system purposes
• Breach will be subject to disputes resolution process• Obligation to co-operate with investigation undertaken by
auditors and counter fraud services
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
Allocations
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
Allocations to PCT’s
2004/05 Cash Limited Primary Medical Services
Ten separate funding streams but only one “pot”
No separate target for primary care funding will be part of the overall Unified Budget determination
Will need to be managed as part of the overall UB Will become incorporated into three year allocation process
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
• Not ring fenced except for Enhanced Services/OOH
• Local floor level to be set for Enhanced services
• Majority of funding to be allocated to PCT’s
• Only minimal central budgets
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
ALLOCATION ARRANGEMENTS
Global sumMPIG
Correction factor
Enhanced services
QOF
PCO Administered
Out of Hours Premises
Dispensing & PA
PMS allocation
IT
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
Allocation Arrangements
Global Sum and MPIG• Data to inform the calculations via a number of Allocation
Working papers• Practice populations from the Exeter system during April 2003• PCT’s were asked to confirm the attribution of GP’s to practices
and practices to PCT’s• Adjusted for PMS practices in waves 5a and 5b• Expenditure mapped on a cash payments basis from the
reference period July 2002 to June 2003 to establish GSE
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
• Global sum covers 27 categories for expenditure previously paid via the NCL route
• Changes in configuration of practices
• Included were the implication of GP vacancies but NOT practice staffing
• Additions will be made to the £ per weighted registered list size for the increase in employers superannuation cost
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
• Agreed that the historical cost will be on formula.
• Superannuation adjustment will effect both GMS and PMS
• Further information will be provided once agreed
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
Out Of Hours Funding
There are four specific sources of funding to resource out of hours services:
Existing Unified Budget for Out of Hours Development Additional recurring allocation of circa £46m A non recurrent sum of £28m over two years A transfer of 6% of a contractors Global sum excluding
MPIG. The allocation methodology for the OODF will change to a
capitation basis form 2005/06.
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
Enhanced Services
Most of the enhanced services has already been allocated to PCTs in their three year allocations
HSC 2002/12 identified sums of £315m/394m/460mand a national floor
2004/05 additional funding will result from the transfer in of existing non cash limited payments.
The national floor is to be replaced by a local PCT floor in 2004/05. Still to be agreed
Planned spending needs to be signed off by the PEC in consultation with the local LMC
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
Quality and Outcomes Framework
Three funding elements for the QOF• Quality Preparation - to be allocated in January 2004• Aspiration - allocation to be made to PCT in April 2004 • Achievement - resource only to be allocated in year• Financial provision to cover QOF indicatively sufficient to
support 74% and 85% achievement in 2004/05 and 2005/06
• NHS to manage the risk through the NHS Bank - policy still to be determined
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
PCT Administered funds
This will cover:• Seniority• Locum Payments• Recruitment and Retention arrangements
To be allocated mainly on an historical basis except recruitment and retention which will be held central to target
Precise detail will be included in the Allocation statement
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
Premises Funding
Allocations will be based on
• Existing spend• Agreed new premises developments contractually agreed by 30
September 2003• New premises developments including LiFT based on a weighted
capitation approach
The first two elements will be allocated to PCT’s in main allocation followed by the third element going to the nominated lead PCT within the SHA area
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
Information and Technology
Historically funding for IMT part of the Cash limited GMS allocation
Topped up by at least £20m to meet 100% costs of minor upgrades and maintenance. This will be made recurrent.
Allocations to be mapped on the basis of historical spend Balance of funding will be held centrally within National
Programme for IT PCT’s will need to establish asset registers
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
Contractor Budgets
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
Establishing Contractor BudgetsPCT’s will receive ACTUAL Allocations which will include indicative budgets for contractors
ACTION REQUIRED To establish indicative budgets one week after receipt of
allocation To negotiate and provisionally agree by the end of
February 2004 Contracts signed by 31 March 2004 Firm up Actual Contractor budgets during April/May 2004 Make first payment by the end of April 2004, agree a
deduction for superannuation purposes
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
Indicative Contractor Budgets
Contractor Budget Spreadsheet distributed in December 2003PCT’s will need to adjust indicative global sum and MPIG’s where appropriate for:• Any changes in practice configuration since the
reference period• Changes in registered list size • Temporary Patient adjustment to be updated for a five
year average• Any agreed staff vacancy factors• Take account of any PMS returners
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
Contractors Budgets post April 2004
Exeter system will automate the process
Changes that will still need to be reflected by PCT are:• Contractor movements between PMS/GMS• Confirm registered populations are accurate• Reflect any change in opt out arrangements• Take account of contract terminations, withholding of
monies, splits and mergers• Start to record Temporary Patients numbers for future
reference and allocation purposes
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
Financial Management and Monitoring
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
Monitoring Arrangements
Need to change both National and Local Reporting arrangements. This will require:
• Changes to local expenditure coding structures• Local Reporting and monitoring arrangements• National Financial Information System• Statutory Accounts
Aim to produce one set of information that can meet all requirements
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
Key Milestones
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
Key Milestones
1. Mid-January 2004 The Department will have shared 2003/04 baselines for each funding
stream
2. January 2004 PCTs started to complete the indicative contractor budget
spreadsheet
3. First week in Feb 2004 DoH will have given notice of actual PCT allocations with
estimated contractor global sums, GSEs and
MPIGs
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
4. End of January 2004 PCTs prepared indicative financial risk management plan as they are
finalising indicative contractor budgets; linked to their Local Delivery Plans
5. First week Feb 2004 DoH will have allocated the remaining premises money, for
new developments, to lead PCTs
6. Feb 2004 - One week
after allocation rec’d PCTs will have calculated and shared indicative budgets with all GMS
contractors
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
7. Early in 2004 PCTs will have reviewed their financial ledger structure and
new reporting requirements
8. End of February 2004 PCTs will have been notified of changes to the Exeter system
9. End of February 2004 PCTs and contractors will have agreed indicative budgets,
reflecting discussions and provisional agreements about what services will be provided
10. End of March 2004 PCTs will have encouraged GPs to submit claims under the Red
Book
nGMS and PMS IMPLEMENTATIONFINANCE
11. End of March 2004 The Department will have allocated the additional global sum monies to reflect the increase in employer superannuation contributions
12. From April 2004 PCTs will have made monthly payments of new GMS funding to contractors
13. From April 2004 PCTs will have provided FIMS returns on the new basis
14. April 2004 PCTs will have made adequate year-end provision for old GMS sums in 2003/04 accounts
15. By the end May 2004 PCTs will have calculated and agreed actual budgets with contractors
The new
GMS & PMS
Learning Exchange
The National Primary and Care Trust Development Programme
Microsoft PowerPoint Presentation
New Arrangements for GMS& PMS Premises
Jim Latta
0113 2547 164
07788 416 504
New Arrangements for GMS& PMS Premises
• Demise of Statement of Fees & Allowances
• Replaced by easier to administer nGMS arrangements set out in Directions
• These arrangements may be used for PMS
New Arrangements for GMS& PMS Premises
• Separate element for infrastructure costs comprising three elements:– existing spend– resources to meet commitments
contractually agreed by 30 September 2003– plus weighted growth element to meet costs
of developments agreed after 1 October, IGs, use of flexibilities etc
New Arrangements for GMS& PMS Premises
• The first and second elements will form a baseline allocation to all PCTs
• The third element will be allocated to lead PCTs on SHA-aggregate basis
• For onward cascade to PCTs in line with priorities agreed collectively
New Arrangements for GMS& PMS Premises
• Premises funding an element of PCT allocations and can be topped-up
• Baseline determined by recent AWP exercise
• Significant growth funding will start to be made available from 1 April 2004
Role of SHA is to….
Appoint lead PCT to put in place investment prioritisation arrangements
Endorse a framework for SSDP development (to include PPF)
Be satisfied that proposed estate investments address national and local service priorities
Role of SHA (contd.)
• Establish links between Lead PCT proposals and SHA wide capital developments
• Be satisfied that financial accounting and governance framework in place
• Be satisfied premises investment underpins Modernisation
• Broker agreements in disputes between PCTs
Role of Lead PCTs
Ensure adequate arrangements for management of the premises allocations
Work with constituent PCTs to develop an agreed policy on:
- arrangements to prioritise investment proposals
- business case arrangements
- funding use of new premises flexibilities, contingency measures etc
Role of Lead PCTs (contd)
Co-ordinate PCT SSDPs and estate strategies
Ensure parity of access to growth funding to address historic lack of estate investment
Link service developments to modernisation, e.g. Out of Hours, Walk in Centres
Facilitate collective expertise on estate management and procurement
Advise SHA of PCT-agreed investment strategy priorities
New Premises Arrangements Include…..
• Joint MS(H)-GPC Letter
• New premises flexibilities to attract capital investment and allow moves to modern premises
• Revised minimum standards & branch surgery global sum funding
Access to Support
• New Primary and Social Care Planning and Design Guidance
• Web-based with links to supporting sites and search facilities
• www.primarycare.nhsestates.gov.uk
Support Facilities
• NHS Estates Strategic Advisors
• NHS Estates PC Development Managers
• NHS Estates-NatPaCT partnership
Overall Aim Is To….
• work thro’ SHAs to monitor and support PCT delivery to….
• inform PC NHS capital allocations to….
• target investment where most needed.
The new GMS & PMS
Learning ExchangeThe National Primary and Care
Trust Development Programme
Microsoft PowerPoint Presentation