THE HEALTH SCRUTINY COMMITTEE FOR LINCOLNSHIRE

Similar documents
Lincolnshire Sustainability and Transformation Plan

MEETING OF THE GOVERNING BODY IN PUBLIC 7 January 2014

Vanguard Programme: Acute Care Collaboration Value Proposition

Integrated Care Systems. Phil Richardson NHS Dorset CCG

Humber Acute Services Review. Question and Answer sheet February 2018

Urgent Care Short Term Actions to Improve Performance

Norfolk and Waveney s Sustainability and Transformation Plan (June 2017)

Plans for urgent care in west Kent:

Our NHS, our future. This Briefing outlines the main points of the report. Introduction

Surrey Downs Clinical Commissioning Group Governing Body Part 1 Paper Acute Sustainability at Epsom & St Helier University Hospitals NHS Trust

SWLCC Update. Update December 2015

Presentation to the Care Quality Commission. Dr. Lucy Moore, CEO 15 September 2015

James Blythe, Director of Commissioning and Strategy. Agenda item: 09 Attachment: 04

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY... 1 HEALTH AND WELLBEING STRATEGY VISION... 2 ULTIMATE AIM... 3 DELIVERING THE VISION AND THE PRIORITIES... 4 FOCUS...

Report of the Care Quality Commission. May 2017

City of Lincoln Council. Lincolnshire County Council North Kesteven District Council

Strategic Commissioning Plan for Primary Care: Hull Primary Care Blueprint

Integrated Health and Care in Ipswich and East Suffolk and West Suffolk. Service Model Version 1.0

North Central London Sustainability and Transformation Plan. A summary

HOSPICE CARE FOR EVERYONE

Norfolk and Waveney STP. Meeting with East Suffolk Partnership 27 September 2017

NHS England (London) Assurance of the BEH Clinical Strategy

8.1 NHS DORSET CLINICAL COMMISSIONING GROUP GOVERNING BODY MEETING CLINICAL SERVICES REVIEW CONSULTATION OPTIONS. Date of the meeting 18/05/2016

East Lindsey District Council. Lincolnshire County Council North Kesteven District Council

Purpose of the Report: Update to the Trust Board on the clinically-led Trauma and Orthopaedic GIRFT review. Information Assurance X

The North Central London Sustainability and Transformation Plan. and. Camden Local Care Strategy. Caz Sayer Chair, Camden CCG

NHS DORSET CLINICAL COMMISSIONING GROUP GOVERNING BODY MEETING CASE FOR CHANGE - CLINICAL SERVICES REVIEW

ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS YOU MAY HAVE

Dudley Clinical Commissioning Group. Commissioning Intentions Black Country Partnerships NHS Foundation Trust

NHS Bradford Districts CCG Commissioning Intentions 2016/17

LINCOLNSHIRE HEALTH AND WELLBEING BOARD

Urgent Primary Care Update Paper

NORTH EAST LINCOLNSHIRE CCG

Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Sustainability and Transformation Plan / Fit for the Future Programme. Frequently Asked Questions Second Edition

2017/ /19. Summary Operational Plan

Agenda Item No: 6.2 Enclosure: 4 17/1/02012 Intended Outcome:

RTT Assurance Paper. 1. Introduction. 2. Background. 3. Waiting List Management for Elective Care. a. Planning

This paper explains the way in which part of the system is changing to become clearer and more accessible, beginning with NHS 111.

NHS DORSET CLINICAL COMMISSIONING GROUP GOVERNING BODY MEETING A&E DELIVERY AND URGENT CARE BOARD UPDATE

STAFFING ESCALATION TIMELINE

Humber, Coast and Vale STP STP Submission v st October 2016

SUMMARY. Our progress in 2013/14. Eastbourne, Hailsham and Seaford Clinical Commissioning Group.

Making the PMO the beating heart of the NHS Change Agenda:

Your Care, Your Future

Manchester Health and Care Commissioning Board. A partnership between Manchester. City Council and NHS Manchester Clinical Commissioning Group

DELIVERING THE LEFT SHIFT IN ACUTE ACTIVITY THE COMMUNITY MODEL

You said We did. Care Closer to home Acute and Community Care services. Commissioning Intentions Engagement for 2017/18

Northumberland, Tyne and Wear NHS Foundation Trust. Board of Directors Meeting

Referral of NHS Proposal Meeting the Challenge Mid Yorkshire Hospitals NHS Trust Clinical Services Strategy

Devon Pre-Consultation Business Case

Integrated Annual Operational Plan 2016/17. Delivering the NHS Five Year Forward View: United Lincolnshire Hospitals NHS Trust

Lincolnshire County Council: Councillors Mrs W Bowkett, R L Foulkes, C R Oxby and N H Pepper

Ashton, Leigh and Wigan Primary Care Trust & Wigan Council. Review of Intermediate Care. Phase 1: Diagnostic

Care coordination functions scoping research

Aneurin Bevan University Health Board Stroke Services Redesign Programme

General Practice Commissioning Strategy Development

Mental Health Crisis Pathway Analysis

Title Open and Honest Staffing Report April 2016

Appendix 1: Integrated Urgent Care Service Update. 1. Purpose

Five Reconfiguration Tests Self-assessment (Path to Excellence Phase 1a)

NHS England (Wessex) Clinical Senate and Strategic Networks. Accountability and Governance Arrangements

BOLTON NHS FOUNDATION TRUST. expansion and upgrade of women s and children s units was completed in 2011.

UNIVERSITY HOSPITALS OF LEICESTER TRUST BOARD 2 MARCH 2017 PAGE 1 OF 6 Emergency Floor Project: Monthly Update

Aintree University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust Corporate Strategy

North School of Pharmacy and Medicines Optimisation Strategic Plan

MERTON CLINICAL COMMISSIONING GROUP GOVERNING BODY

NHS GRAMPIAN. Grampian Clinical Strategy - Planned Care

Better Healthcare in Bucks Reconfiguring acute services

THE NEWCASTLE UPON TYNE HOSPITALS NHS FOUNDATION TRUST. Board Paper - Cover Sheet

Melanie Craig NHS Great Yarmouth and Waveney CCG Chief Officer. Rebecca Driver, STP Communications and Jane Harper-Smith, STP Programme Director

Integrated heart failure service working across the hospital and the community

Knowledge for healthcare: A briefing on the development framework

MAKING THE MOST OF NHS BUILDINGS AND LAND

Improved access to Primary Care

SCOTTISH BORDERS HEALTH & SOCIAL CARE INTEGRATED JOINT BOARD UPDATE ON THE DRAFT COMMISSIONING & IMPLEMENTATION PLAN

The Care Values Framework

HERTFORDSHIRE COMMUNITY NHS TRUST INTERMEDIATE CARE SERVICE UPDATE WINDMILL HOUSE MAY 2011

Agenda Item: 10.1 (3) HR & OD Monthly Trust Report (September 2016)

Guy s and St. Thomas Healthcare Alliance. Five-year strategy

SCHEDULE 2 THE SERVICES

CQC Inpatient Survey Results 2016

Integrated Care Co-Ordination Model. Healthier Together. Project Initiation Document

Greater Manchester Health and Social Care Strategic Partnership Board

Buckinghamshire, Oxfordshire and Berkshire West Sustainability and Transformation Plan (BOB STP)

1. NHS Tayside Independent review by Grant Thornton UK on financial governance in NHS Tayside, including endowment funds

IMPLEMENTING THE OUTCOME OF THE SOUTH WALES PROGRAMME THROUGH ACUTE CARE ALLIANCES AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE SOUTH WALES HEALTH COLLABORATIVE

Summary two year operating plan 2017/18

Shaping Future Care. A sustainability and transformation plan for Devon.

Leicester, Leicestershire and Rutland s Sustainability & Transformation Plan (STP)

A mechanism for measuring and improving patient experience on an acute medical unit

RESPONSE TO RECOMMENDATIONS FROM THE HEALTH & SOCIAL CARE COMMITTEE: INQUIRY INTO ACCESS TO MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIES IN WALES

MERTON CLINICAL COMMISSIONING GROUP PRIMARY CARE COMMISSIONING COMMITTEE. Purpose of Report: For Note

Community Pharmacy in 2016/17 and beyond

Suffolk Health and Care Review

Appendix 5.5. AUTHOR & POSITION: Jill Shattock, Director of Commissioning CONTACT DETAILS:

Executive response in respect of Integration of Health and Social Care Overview and Scrutiny Enquiry

Northumberland, Tyne and Wear, and North Durham Draft Sustainability and Transformation Plan A summary

Health and care in South Yorkshire and Bassetlaw. Sustainability and Transformation Plan a summary

This will activate and empower people to become more confident to manage their own health.

Healthy Wirral Vanguard New Care Model Value Proposition th February 2016

Transcription:

THE HEALTH SCRUTINY COMMITTEE FOR LINCOLNSHIRE Boston Borough East Lindsey District City of Lincoln Lincolnshire County North Kesteven District South Holland District South Kesteven District West Lindsey District Open Report on behalf of Jane Lewington, Chief Executive, United Lincolnshire Hospitals NHS Trust Report to Date: Subject: Health Scrutiny Committee for Lincolnshire 22 July 2015 United Lincolnshire Hospitals NHS Trust Clinical Strategy Summary: The development of the Clinical Strategy for United Lincolnshire Hospitals NHS Trust (ULHT) has been in progress since August 2014. This work was agreed by the Lincolnshire Health and Care (LHAC) Stakeholder Board as a key part of the wider LHAC programme. A key element of the Clinical Strategy's development is being undertaken by ULHT's Clinical Strategy Implementation Group, which has included reducing the long list of possible LHAC options for Emergency Care and Women and Children s Services to a medium size list of five options, which are set out in this report. All of the work developing a Clinical Strategy is being fully shared with the LHAC programme at each and every stage. Actions Required: (1) To provide an update to the Health Scrutiny Committee on the current status of work in progress to develop United Lincolnshire Hospitals NHS Trust's Clinical Strategy. (2) To consider and comment, as necessary on the content of the report. 1. Background The development of the clinical strategy for United Lincolnshire Hospitals NHS Trust (ULHT) has been in progress now since August 2014, and has focussed to date on developing future service delivery model options for Emergency Care and Women and Children s Services. This work was agreed by the Lincolnshire Health and Care

(LHAC) Stakeholder Board as a key part of the wider LHAC programme. The Clinical Strategy Implementation Group has been established within ULHT since July 2014, and is responsible for making recommendations on the future strategic direction of clinical services, to the Clinical Executive Team and to the Trust Board. As these recommendations are being developed, they are being shared with LHAC. In February 2015, an agreement was reached to work collaboratively with LHAC and the Commissioning Lead for Planned Care to develop the future strategy for Planned Care Services. The driver for this approach is the need to look at more integrated care and opportunities for delivering aspects of clinical care outside of the acute hospital setting. An event was held on 16 April 2015 at the Petwood Hotel, and was attended by approximately 70 members of senior clinical and operational ULHT staff. The two key objectives of the event were to: 1. Provide an opportunity for wider clinical engagement in the development of the future Clinical Strategy for ULHT; 2. Explain the case for change in detail; and 3. Share the proposed options that had been developed for Emergency Care and Women and Children s Services. A healthy debate took place at the event, but no decisions were reached in relation to which strategic options to recommend to the Trust Board for the Women and Children s Services, or in relation to hospital site recommendations for a possible Specialist Emergency Centre. The following principles did emerge at the event and consensus reached: Localise services where possible Centralise where necessary In all settings, care should be integrated across health and social care to provide safe, sustainable and seamless patient care Current Progress Recognising the Case for Change There are a number of challenges facing the NHS as a whole and ULHT as an organisation Why do we need to change? We need to ensure we are giving our patients the best possible patient experience We need to ensure that we are consistently delivering our services to the required clinical standards We need to consistently meet national waiting time standards We need to find new ways to recruit and retain staff in all disciplines We need to ensure that our nursing workforce meets the safer staffing requirements

We need to be able to attract key clinical staff into our services Our estate needs to be fit for healthcare in the 21 st century We need to change how our services are delivered to make them clinically sustainable and affordable Medium List of Clinical Options for Emergency Care and Women and Children s Services The Clinical Strategy Implementation Group aided by the individual clinical project teams for Emergency Care and Women and Children s Services have been able to reduce the long list of possible LHAC options for Emergency Care and Women and Children s Services to a medium size list of five options. This was achieved through the application of a set of hurdle criteria agreed at the Clinical Strategy Implementation Group. The five options are: - Option 1: Option 2: Option 3: Option 4: Option 5: Do nothing at all One Specialist Emergency Centre and one consolidated inpatient Women and Children Service located at Pilgrim Hospital One Specialist Emergency Centre and one consolidated inpatient Women and Children s Service located at Lincoln Hospital One Specialist Emergency Centre located at the Pilgrim Hospital site and a two site Women and Children s Service One Specialist Emergency Centre located at the Lincoln Hospital site and a two site Women and Children s Service Each of the above options assumes at this point in time a bespoke model of emergency care at the Grantham Hospital site, and an Emergency Care Centre on the site where there is not an Specialist Emergency Centre, e.g. options 2 and 4 would include an Emergency Care Centre at the Lincoln Hospital, and options 3 and 5 would include an Emergency Care Centre at the Pilgrim Hospital site. Each of the hospital emergency departments would have an Urgent Care Centre at their front door, to stream the patients accordingly in relation to their care needs. The Urgent Care Centre will reduce the pressure on the Emergency Departments, and our modelling has showed that this will reduce inappropriate admissions to the hospital, increase bed capacity, and thus provide an improved performance for the organisation against the A&E four hour waiting time standard. Activity, Workforce and Financial models for Emergency Care and Women and Children s Services Each of the above five options have been modelled to understand the impact on the patient pathways, and to understand the movement of activity and loss or gain of market share activity. The workforce models that would be required to deliver each of the options above have been modelled. The financial modelling is currently a work in progress.

Planned Care Work has started by the Clinical Strategy Implementation group in collaboration with the LHAC programme, to understand the future strategy for planned care services. Each of the planned care services delivered in ULHT hospitals have undergone either a detailed service review or a desktop service review since 16 April, to highlight what is currently working well, to understand the case for change. One of the primary drivers for the future delivery of planned care is to design a future where planned care beds can be protected as much as possible (In 2014/15, 2000 planned surgical procedures were cancelled due to shortage of planned care bed capacity as these beds were being used to look after emergency patients). The reviews have indicated that a significant amount of clinical care does not have to be delivered in an acute hospital, and would be more efficiently delivered closer to patient homes in the community, one example of this being Diabetes Medicine, Ophthalmology and Dermatology. Work is already in progress with the Clinical Commissioning Groups in each of the above areas. Creating Bed Capacity Work is also underway with the proactive work stream of LHAC to reduce the number of emergency admissions to hospital through keeping people well and supporting people in the community. Next Steps We will reform our services. We want to deliver better services in Lincolnshire. We want services to be clinically and financially sustainable for the future. We cannot have one without the other. Building on the Work Completed to Date and the Direction of Travel for ULHT An options appraisal is taking place internally within ULHT on Wednesday 8 July to help inform the preferred option for ULHT. Using the output from the detailed work completed to date for the Emergency Care, and Women and Children s services, and the work completed with the Planned Care Services, the clinical strategy implementation group is currently working on the development of proposed hospital site service configurations for all services. This will in turn inform the Strategic Outline Case for United Lincolnshire Hospitals NHS Trust currently being written, which will highlight the preferred clinical option for United Lincolnshire Hospitals NHS Trust. All of this work is being fully shared with the LHAC programme at each and every stage. Once the Strategic Outline Case has been completed (late August), work will commence on the detailed strategic planning for all hospital services, whilst the broader

proposals are subject to public consultation. The public consultation process will be led by the LHAC programme and Clinical Commissioning Groups. 2. Conclusion The Health Scrutiny Committee is requested to consider and comment on the information presented on the developing options for Lincolnshire Health and Care. 3. Consultation The public consultation process for the proposed changes to the health care system, which includes the strategy for United Lincolnshire Hospitals NHS Trust, will be led by the Clinical Commissioning Groups under the LHAC programme. It is envisaged the NHS gateway process, the process where LHAC will seek approval from NHS to the proposals before beginning the public consultation, will take place between August and October, and if the proposals are accepted by NHS England, the public consultation will begin around November 2015. 4. Background Papers No background papers within Section 100D of the Local Government Act 1972 were used in the preparation of this report. This report was written by Julie Pipes, Assistant Director of Strategy and Change, United Lincolnshire Hospitals NHS Trust Julie.Pipes@ulh.nhs.uk or via telephone on 01522 512512, Ext 2438