| Literature DB >> 30094346 |
Amar Shah1, Auzewell Chitewe2, Emma Binley2, Forid Alom2, James Innes2.
Abstract
Early intervention following initial referral into healthcare services can have a significant impact on the prognosis and outcomes of patients. Long waiting times and non-attendance can have an immediate and enduring negative impact on patients and healthcare service providers. The traditional management options in reducing waiting times have largely revolved around setting performance targets, providing financial incentives or additional resourcing. This large-scale quality improvement project aimed to reduce waiting times from referral to first appointment and non-attendance for a wide range of services providing primary and secondary care mental health and community health services at East London NHS Foundation Trust (ELFT). Fifteen community-based teams across ELFT came together with the shared goal of improving access. These teams were diverse in both nature and geography and included adult community mental health teams, child and adolescent mental health services, secondary care psychological therapy services, memory services, a musculoskeletal physiotherapy service and a sickle cell service. A collaborative learning system was developed to support the teams to come together at regular intervals, share data, test and scale-up ideas through quality improvement and have access to coaching from skilled improvement advisors in the ELFT central quality improvement team. Over the course of the 2-year project, waiting time from referral to first face-to-face appointment reduced from an average of 60.6 days to 46.7 days (a 23% reduction), non-attendance at first face-to-face appointment reduced from an average of 31.7% to an average of 20.5% (a 36% reduction), while referral volume increased from an average of 1021 per month to an average of 1280 per month (a 25% increase).Entities:
Keywords: continuous quality improvement; control charts/run charts; mental health; pdsa
Year: 2018 PMID: 30094346 PMCID: PMC6069911 DOI: 10.1136/bmjoq-2018-000337
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open Qual ISSN: 2399-6641
Figure 1Baseline data on waiting times across community services. CAMHS, child and adolescent mental health services; MHCOP, mental healthcare of older people services.
Figure 2Learning system structure. ELFT, East London NHS Foundation Trust.
Figure 3Driver diagram representing the theory of change for reducing waiting times and increasing uptake.
Figure 4List of change ideas tested within the learning system, linked to the relevant change concept. CAMHS, child and adolescent mental health services; CH, City & Hackney; EE is the text message network; EPCL, extended primary care liaison; LCL, lower control limit; NH, Newham; MSK, Muskuloskeletal; PDSA, Plan-Do-Study-Act; QI, quality improvement; TH, Tower Hamlets; UCL, upper control limit.
Figure 5Outcome measures for the learning system.