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Update April 2011.  “liberating the NHS” a major policy shift introduced by coalition government  Significant change for NHS and local authorities 

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Presentation on theme: "Update April 2011.  “liberating the NHS” a major policy shift introduced by coalition government  Significant change for NHS and local authorities "— Presentation transcript:

1 Update April 2011

2  “liberating the NHS” a major policy shift introduced by coalition government  Significant change for NHS and local authorities  We will all be involved- whether we like it or not!

3 Introduction  Major shift in government policy, transferring responsibility for commissioning care to GPs  Ongoing political disquiet- model likely to change to involve other parties- secondary care, other health professionals, patients  Improving care, saving money, transferring responsibility and /or blame?

4 Effective commissioning  Should be based on:  Improving outcomes for patients; prioritises demand over supply, innovative approaches to delivery of services  Patient empowerment; promotion of shared approaches to care, keeping patients fully informed, power to shape their own healthcare, and support to care for themselves

5 Effective commissioning  Evidence based practice ;draw on research expertise to use evidence to assess needs, design services and monitor outcome  Community mobilisation ; values of public service, harnessing the power of patients to determine their own health outcome- community engagement. Integrating with public health agenda, promoting wellbeing, preventing ill health

6 Effective commissioning  Ensuring the needs of the vulnerable, overlooked or ignored are addressed  Sustainability ; commitment to the sustainable use of resources – natural environment, NHS finances and the time and spirit of staff

7 commissioning consortia  Organisations that will take on the task of commissioning  Pathfinders ; current model to develop ways of making it work locally, shadowing PCT work  Will need to partner with clinicians and the public, true collaborative working  Major challenge for leadership- breaking down barriers between primary and secondary care

8 commissioning consortia  Breaking down barriers between health and social care and professionals and the public  Engagement across traditional boundaries  Who will do it, and what support will they get?  Currently volunteers, locally elected by peers

9 GPs in consortia  Do they have the requisite skills?  Leadership  Knowledge  Vision  Priorities and context  Negotiation skills  Managing change  Respect

10 GP consortia  Health needs assessment  Contracting skills  Financial and budgetary understanding  ……..ie a major undertaking!

11 What support is available?  New role of Associate Dean for commissioning in Surrey, Kent and Sussex  Taps in to deanery support, links to university  Planned commissioning development groups to tackle practical skills acquirement, understanding and knowledge, along the lines of the existing appraisal development workshops

12 What support is available?  National support through RCGP, LMC, BMA  Planned diplomas, academic modules via universities to develop commissioning skills, possible portfolio careers for GPs  GP Tutor network tasked with helping everyone to understand the process- protected learning time

13 Grass roots GPs  Why should I be interested?  ALL GPs are involved in commissioning  Every prescription and referral is a commissioning act  It will never work without the support and understanding of grassroot GPs  QOF will encourage you!

14 QOF and commissioning  Re allocated points for 2011-2012  96.5 points for quality and productivity indicators  Encouraging increasing efficiency in use of NHS resources  Cost effective prescribing  Reducing emergency admissions and hospital referrals by use of alternate pathways

15 QOF and commissioning  2011-12 indicator changes:  http://www.bma.org.uk/images/summaryqof guidance2011_v3_tcm41-204734.pdf http://www.bma.org.uk/images/summaryqof guidance2011_v3_tcm41-204734.pdf  Local initiatives and the way forward

16 Case Scenarios  You are a newly qualified GP and have been asked to lead on delivery of the QP QOF in the practice- how will you do this, and what skills will you need?  Your practice has been approached by the consortium to be told you are an outlier- how will you manage this situation?  Your senior partner is refusing to change his/her prescribing or referral habit- and they use the Brompton as the local hospital is “not up to scratch” how will you address this?

17  NHS commissioning board  NHS outcomes framework will set expectations for performance- within resource parameters set by government  This board will manage GP contracts and set practice level budgets for the new CCGs  Board will monitor and hold CCGs to account  SHAs and PCTs will go – PCTs from april 2013

18  GP practices will have to belong to a CCG  Part of GP budget likely to go to CCG for the delivery of commissioning outcomes  Current local example in funding practices to participate in “high risk” patient reviews with CMHT and Social Services- and to actively review referral processes

19  Local authorities will form a new relationship with the NHS and CCGs  Public health will move to Las and be subject to new health improvement programmes  Healthcare providers will be subject to dual monitoring and licensing system  Monitor will become the new economic regulator

20 Care Quality Commission will monitor delivery and infrastructure – all practices will have to be CQC registered Two key principles- putting patients first “no decision about me, without me” Proposed information revolution- allowing an extended range of informed choice Improving healthcare outcomes, Quality improvement programme supported by NICE

21  HealthWatch England collates national information, acts as consumer champion

22  1-Planning  Assessing health needs  Reviewing current provision  Capacity planning  Identifying gaps and priorities

23  2- procurement  Service design / redesign  Defining contracts  Procuring appropriate services  Demand management

24  3- monitoring  Monitoring activity and quality  Invoicing, data validation and payment  User and local authority views, choice  Feedback  All clinically driven, with patient. Public and LA input

25  Significant unhappiness with The Health and Social Care Bill- RCGP, BMA etc  However, Bill now through The Lords- Royal Assent expected before Easter  More savings needed- if current target met in 2015, a further £20 billion savings needed “ a decade of no money” Richard Douglas, DoH director of policy, strategy and finance

26  Essential part of MRCGP- community orientation, teamwork, maintaining trust, safety and quality  We are all involved in micro-commissioning  New skills of enquiry, analysis, collaboration, negotiation and presentation needed for all  CPD needs to change to recognise the cultural shift

27  Five P model for cpd  Personal needs – what do I need to further my career?  Practice needs- what do I need to learn to help develop my practice?  Patient needs- what do I need to learn to provide good care for my patients?

28  Population needs- what do I need to learn to reflect the needs of my CCG population?  Political needs- what do I need to learn to reflect the needs of the NHS?  And maybe some of you will wish to become commissioners/ board members  Portfolio careers


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