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Complaint Themes Providing more detail Sally Smith Deputy Chief Nurse and Deputy Director of Quality Liz Coleman Head of Patient Experience Team.

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Presentation on theme: "Complaint Themes Providing more detail Sally Smith Deputy Chief Nurse and Deputy Director of Quality Liz Coleman Head of Patient Experience Team."— Presentation transcript:

1 Complaint Themes Providing more detail Sally Smith Deputy Chief Nurse and Deputy Director of Quality Liz Coleman Head of Patient Experience Team

2 Background Increased number of formal complaints over the financial year; Decreased number of compliments since the publication of the CQC Report; Inconsistent achievement of the response time standard;

3 Complaints Open

4 Main Themes Problems with Communication; Problems with Clinical Management; Problems with Delays.

5 Hot Spots - Problems with Communication A&E; Health Care of the Older Person (HCOOP); General Surgery; Trauma & Othopaedics (T&O); Obstetrics; Evenly spread across sites (WHH has 50 more beds).

6 Hot Spots - Problems with Clinical Management A&E; HCOOP; T&O; Obstetrics; Evenly spread across sites.

7 Hot Spots - Problems with Delays A&E; General Surgery; T&O; Fewer at Kent & Canterbury Hospital.

8 We Care Example 1 Patient said: Medical staff were not listening to her about her pain levels; Conflicting information re long term problem. Complaint upheld, plus After Action Review: Nurses were not empathetic, didn’t listen to patient and person-centred approach not provided; No pain assessment; No physical assessment; No agreed plan of action.

9 Actions : –Developed team knowledge about Functional Presentation; –Effective workplace culture to be developed with this team: ground rules, team vision, role clarity, when to escalate; –Multidisciplinary Team Meetings to be more structured and ‘fresh eyes’ approach; –Time for reflection regarding this case.

10 We Care Example 2: Parents said: No communication with specialist at another hospital; despite there being instructions on the medical records; Doctor did not fully consider the significance of diagnosed condition; Doctor did not complete thorough examination; Antibiotics not administered by appropriate route. Complaint upheld: Staff unaware of Special Register function; Information was not specific with instructions for liaison with medical team.

11 Actions : –Memo to all Emergency Departments to highlight Special Register function; –Laminated cards placed on PC screens; –Special Register entry for patient amended and parents agreed wording; –Parents provided with a copy of the Special Register entry so they can bring it in if they need to attend in future.

12 Problems with Communication by Site ( April – Oct 2014) Note: All three sites have the same top four communication issues: Communication breakdown KCHQEQMWHH Doctor communication issues 132434 Misleading or contradictory information 161421 Nurse communication issues 6914 Lack of information on how procedure went 6310 TOTAL415279

13 Clinical Management Client said: Could not attend appointment. Tried in vain to contact Division, no answer phones, no-one on reception. Patient now down as DNA. Outcome: Complaint upheld – telephone numbers on appointment letters were incorrect. Actions: Staff to be reminded that telephones and reception desks are manned and that a notice is displayed if not possible; Computer system upgrade to address some of the DNA problems and updates of patient letters.

14 Top Three Themes Finally, expressing as ratios (Oct 14): K&C:Episodes of care = 26,923 Number of complaints = 33 Ratio= 1:815 Expressed as a ratio to the number of staff= 1:24 WHHEpisodes of care= 25,936 Number of complaints= 50 Ratio= 1.518 Expressed as a ratio to the number of staff = 1:24

15 QEQMEpisodes of care = 22,929 Number of complaints = 37 Ratio= 1:619 Expressed as a ratio to the number of staff= 1:25

16 Recommendations Going Forward A focussed piece of work on Patient Experience using triangulation of all data to reduce the number of formal complaints (commenced November); –Matron Walk-Arounds; –Emotional Touchpoints –Ward Peer Review –Better use of existing data – Heat Maps, Dashboard, FFT etc. Triaging of all complaints (commenced November); Clients will be called on receipt of their letter to agree the complaint management and what is the most important aspect for them (clarity); Apology letters up front wherever possible; Single letter from the CEO (commenced); Greater emphasis on meeting with the client to resolve issues earlier; Returning clients to be offered a meeting; Improvements in the initial response letter is in place to reduce returning complaints;

17 Recommendations Going Forward Complaints Workshop (held in November); Performance metrics (PET & Divisions); Review of the EPR metrics to reflect performance; Escalation process in place regarding timelines (commenced); Greater visibility of themes for Divisions and Hot Spots by monthly reports; Ensure the investigations identify the root cause (commence in December); Sharing of the learning Trust wide; Divisional accountability of recurring themes or people; Training; All expressed in the Trust wide Improvement Plan.

18 Thank you – Any Questions


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