Agenda item 7 Date 25/4/2013

Similar documents
CCG authorisation: the role of medicines management

This SLA covers an enhanced service for care homes for older people and not any other care category of home.

UKMi and Medicines Optimisation in England A Consultation

JOB DESCRIPTION. Pharmacy Technician

Draft Commissioning Intentions

NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR HEALTH AND CARE EXCELLENCE SCOPE

TRUST BOARD TB(16) 44. Summary of Lord Carter recommendations Operational productivity and performance in English acute hospitals

Introducing the NTDA. Medicines Optimisation and Pharmaceutical Services. Richard Seal Chief Pharmacist NHS Trust Development Authority

North Central London Medicines Optimisation Network. Terms of Reference. North Central London Medicines Optimisation Network 1 of 8

The Value of Working in Partnership with Care Homes to Provide a Unique and Sustainable Approach to Malnutrition

5. Does this paper provide evidence of assurance against the Governing Body Assurance Framework?

HOSPITAL PHARMACY TRANSFORMATION PROJECT

Process and methods Published: 23 January 2017 nice.org.uk/process/pmg31

How to use NICE guidance to commission high-quality services

Medicines Management Strategy

Prevention and control of healthcare-associated infections

Are you ready to be liberated? Karen Middleton Chief Health Professions Officer

The Local Health Economy : Understanding Finance in the NHS

Anti-Coagulation Monitoring (warfarin, acenocoumarol, phenindione) Primary Care Service (PCS:01) NHS Standard Contract Service Profile Pack ( )

Title of meeting: Primary Care Joint Commissioning Committee (JCC) Committees in Common (CIC). Date of Meeting 12 th April 2016 Paper Number 7

Clinical Pharmacists in General Practice March 2018

Strategy for Delivery of Clinical Quality and Patient Safety North Norfolk Clinical Commissioning Group.

Care Home support and medicines optimisation: Community Pharmacy National Enhanced Service

NHS Herts Valleys Clinical Commissioning Group Board Meeting 14 April 2016

GOVERNING BODY REPORT

21 March NHS Providers ON THE DAY BRIEFING Page 1

JOB DESCRIPTION. Progressive: A learning organization, encouraging innovation and continuous improvement.

North School of Pharmacy and Medicines Optimisation Strategic Plan

NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR HEALTH AND CARE EXCELLENCE. Health and Social Care Directorate Quality standards Process guide

South East London Interface Prescribing Policy including the NHS and Private Interface Prescribing Guide

Executive Summary points to consider by organisations providing Primary and Community Health services

QUALITY COMMITTEE. Terms of Reference

THE SERVICES. A. Service Specifications (B1) Ian Diley (Suffolk County Council)

DRAFT Service Specification GP-led Urgent Treatment Centre (UTC) Service

2015/16 Annual General Meeting

Medicines Management Policy

NICE guideline 5: Medicines optimisation: the safe and effective use of medicines to enable the best possible outcomes

DELIVERING THE LEFT SHIFT IN ACUTE ACTIVITY THE COMMUNITY MODEL

Defining the Boundaries between NHS and Private Healthcare. MECCG Policy Reference: MECCG142

Strategic overview: NHS system

General Practice 5 Year Forward View Operational Plan Leicester, Leicestershire and Rutland (LLR) STP

Initial education and training of pharmacy technicians: draft evidence framework

NICE Charter Who we are and what we do

Public health guideline Published: 11 November 2011 nice.org.uk/guidance/ph36

Information shared between healthcare providers when a patient moves between sectors is often incomplete and not shared in timely enough fashion.

COMMISSIONING SUPPORT PROGRAMME. Standard operating procedure

Quality and Leadership: Improving outcomes

Your Care, Your Future

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

Regional Medicines Optimisation Committees

Medicines Management Guidance

Primary Care Prescribing Cardiff and Vale University Health Board. Issued: December 2013 Document reference: 447A2013

Title: Replacement of the Commissioning Advisory Forum Agenda Item: 9

Vision 3. The Strategy 6. Contracts 12. Governance and Reporting 12. Conclusion 14. BCCG 2020 Strategy 15

QUALITY STRATEGY

Annex 3 Cluster Network Action Plan South Ceredigion and Teifi Valley Cluster Plan

Quality Assurance Framework

GOVERNING BODY REPORT

Wolverhampton Clinical Commissioning Group - Care Home Document

Guideline scope Intermediate care - including reablement

Birmingham Solihull and the Black Country Area Team

The PCT Guide to Applying the 10 High Impact Changes

Herts Urgent Care. Cambridgeshire & Peterborough Integrated Urgent Care Service. David Archer Chief Executive. 14 th September 2016

Reviewing and Assessing Service Redesign and/or Change Proposals

Aintree University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust Corporate Strategy

Medicines optimisation in care homes

A new integrated model for Care Homes from Walsall CCG/Healthcare NHS Trust

Driving and Supporting Improvement in Primary Care

Cluster Network Action Plan Neath Cluster. Abertawe Bro Morgannwg University Health Board Neath Cluster Action Plan

Is Our South East London Area Prescribing Committee Working To Best Practice, Or Could We Be Even Better?

Community Pharmacy in 2016/17 and beyond

NHS Trafford Clinical Commissioning Group Quality and Performance Strategy S T rafford Clinical Commissioning Group

SCHEDULE 2 THE SERVICES

Council of Members. 20 January 2016

Bristol CCG North Somerset CGG South Gloucestershire CCG. Draft Commissioning Intentions for 2017/2018 and 2018/2019

Lincolnshire JSNA: Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD)

The Welsh NHS Confederation s response to the inquiry into cross-border health arrangements between England and Wales.

Linda Cutter / Dr Charles Heatley. GP Practices and Community Pharmacies

NHS Bradford Districts CCG Commissioning Intentions 2016/17

Improving Patient Outcomes Strategy

MEMORANDUM OF UNDERSTANDING THE PROVISION OF PUBLIC HEALTH ADVICE TO NHS COMMISSIONING IN ROTHERHAM

Developing primary care in Barnet

Northumberland, Tyne and Wear NHS Foundation Trust. Board of Directors Meeting. Meeting Date: 25 October Executive Lead: Rajesh Nadkarni

JOB DESCRIPTION. Deputy Director of Nursing - Tissue Viability. Director of Nursing. Tissue Viability Support Tissue Viability Nurse

Hospital Pharmacy Transformation Plan

South Powys Cluster Plan

SCHEDULE 2 THE SERVICES

Report to Governing Body 19 September 2018

Medicines Governance Service to Care Homes (Care Home Service)

CODE OF CONDUCT WHERE GP PRACTICES OR CONSORTIA ARE POTENTIAL PROVIDERS OF CCG COMMISISONED SERVICES

GP Cover of Nursing, Residential, Extra Care and Intermediate Care Homes. Camden Clinical Commissioning Group. Care Home LES Spec v1

MEDICINES STANDARD B3: WORKING WITH THE PHARMACEUTICAL INDUSTRY

Standards for the initial education and training of pharmacy technicians. October 2017

Quality Accounts: Corroborative Statements from Commissioning Groups. Nottingham NHS Treatment Centre - Corroborative Statement

WOLVERHAMPTON CCG. Governing Body Meeting 8 April 2014

Quality Strategy. CCG Executive, Quality Safety and Risk Committee Approved by Date Issued July Head of Clinical Quality & Patient Safety

NHS operational productivity: unwarranted variations Mental health services Community health services Lord Carter 24 May 2018

New Care Models Pharmacy Services in Care Homes. Pauline Walton

Utilisation Management

Generic Job Description Consultant Pharmacist. Job Purpose

Transcription:

MEDICINES OPTIMISATION STRATEGY to 25 APRIL 2013 BMIP Decision Discussion Information Follow up from last meeting Report author: Heather Gray Report signed off by: John Constable Purpose of the paper: To present the Medicines Optimisation Strategy for East and North Herts CCG Recommendations to the Board: To approve the East and North Herts CCG Medicines Optimisation Strategy Summary Medicines Optimisation Strategy Medicines are the most frequent health care intervention in the NHS accounting for over 11billion spend nationally. 8.8 billion of this prescribing is in primary care. East and North CCG expenditure on primary care prescribing was 71 million in 2012/13 About 14% of CCG budgets will pay for medicines The number of items prescribed by GPs is growing at around 5.3% annually In secondary care about 60% of medicines expenditure is on high cost drugs excluded from PbR. This expenditure is increasing by about 15% per year. CQC investigations into failing services continue to highlight poor medicines management of a contributory factor in some cases In 2007 over 86,000 medication errors were reported to the NPSA :100 of these caused death or severe harm Around 7% of all hospital admissions have been attributed to or associated with adverse drug reactions with up to two thirds of these being preventable. Up to 50% of patients do not take their prescribed medicines as intended. Inappropriate use of antibiotics is a significant problem and implicated in C. diff and MRSA infections. E&NHCCG Medicines Optimisation Strategy prepared by Pharmacy & Medicines Optimisation Team, Hertfordshire, Bedfordshire and Luton 1

The CCG is committed to ensuring an effective strategic oversight on the use of medicines so that this resource is used safely, efficiently and effectively to improve health and wellbeing of the population and will do this by. Engaging the public, patients and professionals in improving the quality, outcomes and value for patients from their use of medicines Establishing a culture of quality and safety assurance with respect to the use of medicines Managing the financial risk with respect to prescribing Ensuring there is specialist professional pharmaceutical support for commissioning medicines and pharmacy services To deliver these strategic goals we will need to achieve the following objectives: Objective 1: Effective Decision making We will identify all our partner organisations and stakeholders and establish effective networks in order to ensure that there is effective joint decision making to deliver innovative, quality and safe, prescribing and use of medicines across health care services. Objective 2 :Medicines safety We will ensure that there is high quality medicines governance and that mechanisms are in place to assure safe, effective and affordable medicines usage in healthcare services, reduce variation in prescribing and reduce medicines related healthcare acquired infections (C.diff and MRSA) and limit medicines related hospital admissions. Objective 3: Primary Care Prescribing The choice of medicines prescribed or recommended by practitioners in primary care will meet patients needs, be evidence based and cost-effective and efficient use of NHS resources. Objective 4: Effective commissioning for medicines optimisation We will commission providers who can show that medicines prescribed for patients accessing their services meet patients needs, are safe, evidence based and cost-effective and efficient use of NHS resources. Patients transferring between care settings will have appropriate advice and information about their medicines to enable on-going safe and effective use. Objective 5: Community Pharmacy We will engage with community pharmacists in Hertfordshire so that they are fully integrated with the CCG to maximise the opportunities in community pharmacy to achieve QIPP and medicines optimisation priorities Pharmacy & Medicines Optimisation Team E&NHCCG Medicines Optimisation Strategy prepared by Pharmacy & Medicines Optimisation Team, Hertfordshire, Bedfordshire and Luton 2

The Pharmacy and Medicines Optimisation team will support the delivery of the medicines optimisation strategy across the CCG. A medicines optimisation template report has been prepared for each practice and the current deployment of the team has been reviewed. The future deployment of the team will be agreed with CCG Medicines Management Prescribing lead and locality prescribing leads in order to best realise the CCG objectives. Conclusion The use of medicines presents significant financial, safety and reputational risk for East and North Herts CCG. This strategy offers an effective strategic oversight on the use of medicines so that this resource is used safely, efficiently and effectively to improve health and wellbeing of the people in East and North Herts CCG. Recommendation It is recommended that the Medicines Optimisation Strategy is approved by the Board. April 2013 Heather Gray John Constable E&NHCCG Medicines Optimisation Strategy prepared by Pharmacy & Medicines Optimisation Team, Hertfordshire, Bedfordshire and Luton 3

CCG Medicines Optimisation Strategy 2013-14 To improve the quality, outcomes and value for patients from their use of medicines Strategic Goals The CCG aims to ensure patients receive the most benefit from their medicines within the available resources and will do this by: Engaging the public, patients and professionals in improving the quality, outcomes and value for patients from their use of medicines Establishing a culture of quality and safety assurance with respect to the use of medicines Managing the financial risk with respect to prescribing Ensuring there is specialist professional pharmaceutical support for commissioning medicines and pharmacy services. 4

Context Medicines are the most frequent health care intervention in the NHS which if applied wisely can make a major impact to improve the health and wellbeing of a population. Modern medicines, however, are very potent and, increasingly, are designed to work at specific target sites in the body. This means that if a medicine is not used as intended it is unlikely to effective and may be harmful. Inappropriate use of medicines may also present significant financial, and reputational risk to CCGs. Medicines account for over 11billion spend nationally. 8.8 billion of this prescribing is in primary care. East and North CCG expenditure on primary care prescribing was 71 million in 2012/13 About 14% of CCG budgets will pay for medicines The number of items prescribed by GPs is growing at around 5.3% annually In secondary care about 60% of medicines expenditure is on high cost drugs excluded from PbR. This expenditure is increasing by about 15% per year. In 2008/9 over 520,000 bed days in England and Wales were attributed to adverse events caused by medicines. Costing the NHS over 235million. CQC investigations into failing services continue to highlight poor medicines management of a contributory factor in some cases In 2007 over 86,000 medication errors were reported to the NPSA :100 of these caused death or severe harm Around 7% of all hospital admissions have been attributed to or associated with adverse drug reactions with up to two thirds of these being preventable.. Up to 50% of patients do not take their prescribed medicines as intended. Inappropriate use of antibiotics is a significant problem and implicated in C. diff and MRSA infections. Medicines optimisation features in all the five domains NHS outcomes framework: Domains 1 Preventing people from dying prematurely 2 Enhancing the quality of life for patients with long term conditions 3 Helping people to recover from episodes of illhealth or following injury 4 Ensuring that people have a positive experience of care 5 Treating and caring for people in a safe environment; and protecting them from avoidable harm 5

Objectives The CCG is committed to ensuring an effective strategic oversight on the use of medicines so that this resource is used safely, efficiently and effectively to improve health and wellbeing of the population. To deliver these strategic goals we will need to achieve the following objectives: Objective 1: Effective Decision making We will identify all our partner organisations and stakeholders and establish effective networks in order to ensure that there is effective joint decision making to deliver innovative, quality and safe, prescribing and use of medicines across health care services. Objective 2 :Medicines safety We will ensure that there is high quality medicines governance and that mechanisms are in place to assure safe, effective and affordable medicines usage in healthcare services, reduce variation in prescribing and reduce medicines related healthcare acquired infections (C.diff and MRSA) and limit medicines related hospital admissions. Objective 3: Primary Care Prescribing The choice of medicines prescribed or recommended by practitioners in primary care will meet patients needs, be evidence based and cost-effective and efficient use of NHS resources. Objective 4: Effective commissioning for medicines optimisation We will commission providers who can show that medicines prescribed for patients accessing their services meet patients needs, are safe, evidence based and cost-effective and efficient use of NHS resources. Patients transferring between care settings will have appropriate advice and information about their medicines to enable on-going safe and effective use. Objective 5: Community Pharmacy We will engage with community pharmacists in Hertfordshire so that they are fully integrated with the CCG to maximise the opportunities in community pharmacy to achieve QIPP and medicines optimisation priorities 6

Objective 1: Effective Decision making We will identify all our partner organisations and stakeholders and establish effective networks in order to ensure that there is effective joint decision making to deliver innovative, quality and safe, prescribing and use of medicines across health care services. Action Appoint board level lead for medicines optimisation Ensure we have the resources to deliver the strategy and work closely with GP prescribing and clinical leads to realise its objectives Provide specialised medicines optimisation and therapeutic advice to the CCG Board, locality groups, GP practices and prescribers Maintain and develop the health economy decision making framework (the Hertfordshire Medicines Management Committee (HMMC) and the Primary Care Medicines Management group (PCMMG)) for introduction and use of medicines, meeting national criteria for good practice. Ensure engagement with local GP, nurses and practice staff through representation of locality groups on CCG prescribing strategy and planning groups Develop and communicate prescribing and medicines optimisation guidance from CCG decision making groups Ensure medicine optimisation is integrated in CCG clinical priority workstreams and integrate medicines optimisation expertise in the redesign of health services and patient pathways Establish links and joint working with council-based public health teams Improve/establish joint working and networking with relevant health care professionals, eg, Acute service, specialist pharmacists, specialist nurses, community specialists, community pharmacists, the Local Pharmaceutical Committee and the Local Medical Committee and the Local Professional Networks develop local workforce and education and training to support delivery of this strategy Commission services to ensure access to the required expertise to ensure safe, legal and effective use of medicines and develop systems to keep abreast of new medicines related guidance and legislation Be proactive in sharing best practice both within the organisation and externally 7

Develop a policy for working with the industry to promote innovation in line with national good practice guidance. Objective 2 :Medicines safety We will ensure that there is high quality medicines governance and that mechanisms are in place to assure safe, effective and affordable medicines usage in healthcare services, reduce variation in prescribing and reduce medicines related healthcare acquired infections (C.diff and MRSA) and limit medicines related hospital admissions. Actions Deliver improved prescribing systems for patients in accordance with national programmes Put in place effective systems to ensure safe and improved medicines optimisation across interfaces between all care settings (acute, mental health and community hospitals, intermediate care, care home, domiciliary. etc) Identify gaps and develop medicines optimisation services for the most vulnerable patients and patients at greatest risk of medicines related problems Improve assurance of medicines optimisation and safety and ensure medicines expertise by commissioning quality Medicines Information services Improve assurance of medicines management and safety by commissioning IT systems to inform decision making on prescribing and to provide intelligence about prescribing trends for GP practice Establish assurance processes for medicines governance Deliver a systematic assessment and shared learning process for medicines related events Consult and agree medicines safety audits of GP practices and ensure sign-up by all practices 8

Contribute to Local Authority and Hertfordshire and South Midlands Area Team and Local Professional Network quality improvement initiatives for community pharmacy services Liaise with the AT Accountable Officer (controlled drugs) to ensure safe and secure handling of controlled drugs within our CCG Deliver National Institute of Health and Care Excellence guidance/guidelines within national timeframes Deliver and local and national medicines related performance indicators Provide medicine governance information to GP practices. Ensure medicines safety through targeting medicines optimisation to high risk patients, including those on high risk medicines, polypharmacy or cared for in care homes or intermediate care Establish systems to confirm the communication of and implementation of HMMC and PCMMG decisions within the CCG Deliver improved patient safety, reduce medicines risk and avoidable hospital admissions by effective commissioning of services. Improve medicines optimisation and safety in care homes 9

Objective 3: Primary Care Prescribing The choice of medicines prescribed or recommended by practitioners in primary care will meet patients needs, be evidence based and cost-effective and efficient use of NHS resources. Actions Undertake annual horizon scanning for new drug developments Develop and disseminate evidence based prescribing guidelines to primary care practitioners Provide pharmaceutical and medicines optimisation support and expertise to all primary care prescribers and GP practices 10

Ensure the availability of up-to date and accurate prescribing data to provide intelligence to plan workstreams and to keep GP practices/primary care prescribers informed Use of effective software and computer assisted decision making technology Regular monitoring and feedback to practices on prescribing KPIs and costs Medicines optimisation arrangements to be addressed in all care pathway and pathway redesign including development of AQP services Increase the level of engagement between patients, pubic and health professionals to improve, quality outcomes and value for patients from their use of medicines. Improve the use of information for patients in relation to medicines and pharmacy services and engage the public through medicines waste reduction and self care campaigns. Identify and prioritise high risk patients with Long Term Conditions for regular clinical medication reviews Identify and prioritise high risk patients for referral to community pharmacy for New Medicines Service (NMS), or targeted Medicines Use Review (tmur) Objective 4: Effective commissioning for medicines optimisation We will commission providers who can show that medicines prescribed for patients accessing their services meet patients needs, are safe, evidence based and cost-effective and efficient use of NHS resources. Patients transferring between care settings will have appropriate advice and information about their medicines to enable on-going safe and effective use. Actions Ensure that there is joint decision making and working with neighbouring CCGs, acute and mental health trusts and community health services and other providers as appropriate to improves medicines optimisation 11

Contract specifications will set out our expectations for optimal use of medicines, these will include quality measures for prescribing and pharmacy services, and implementation of NICE guidance Maintain an effective, fair and transparent Individual Funding Request (IFR) process to ensure individual special circumstances can be considered objectively and fairly with respect to applications for funding medicines outwith current CCG policy Improve relationships to ensure best use of medicines across the interface between care settings (eg hospital to GP, hospital to care home) including Medicines Reconciliation on admission or transfer. Establish a protocol for referral of high risk patients to community pharmacists for New Medicines Service or targeted Medicines Use Review. Objective 5: Community Pharmacy We will engage with community pharmacists in Hertfordshire so that they are fully integrated with the CCG to maximise the opportunities in community pharmacy to achieve QIPP and medicines optimisation priorities Action Work collaboratively with community pharmacy contractors and the Hertfordshire and South Midlands Area Team in order to maximise community pharmacy engagement with the CCG and GP practices. Ensure all community pharmacy contractors are aware of CCG priorities and the potential to contribute to CCG and national QIPP and medicines optimisation priorities 12

Collaborate with the Hertfordshire and South Midlands Area Team and Hertfordshire Local Authority to develop community pharmacy workforce to meet national and local objectives Contribute to the Hertfordshire Pharmaceutical Need Assessment so that it reflects patients medicines management needs in each locality To collaborate with AT/Local Authority to benchmark community pharmacy services and support the Healthy Living Pharmacy accreditation scheme To use the pharmacy Local Professional Network for cross-sector pharmaceutical advice. Ref: Ensuring the delivery of prescribing, medicines management and pharmacy functions in primary and community care: an organisational competency framework and key functions checklist, October 2010 NPC The NHS Outcomes Framework 2013/14 13