Pharmacy First service agreed as Recovery Plan set to launch

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Negotiations have concluded around the implementation of the Pharmacy First scheme, which is now set to launch in full on 31st January 2024.


The government, NHS England, and Community Pharmacy England (CPE), which represents all community pharmacy owners in England, have reached agreement regarding the launch of the new national Pharmacy First service, set out in this year’s Delivery plan for recovering access to primary care.

CPE’s Committee unanimously accepted the proposed deal, which outlines how the £645 million investment pledged in the Delivery plan will be used to support the rollout of expanded community pharmacy services. The agreement was reached following months of negotiation between CPE, the Department of Health and Social Care and NHS England.

Public Policy Projects has recently advocated for an expansion of pharmacy services in England in its report, Driving true value from medicines and pharmacy, which was chaired by Yousaf Ahmad, ICS Chief Pharmacist and Director of Medicines Optimisation at Frimley Health and Care Integrated Care System.

It is now confirmed that the Pharmacy First services will be launched on 31st January 2024 as an Advanced Service, subject to the required IT infrastructure being in place. Under the new service, pharmacists will be able to offer advice and prescribe treatment for seven minor ailments, including sore throats, insect bites and uncomplicated urinary tract infections for women. Patients will be able to access the service without an appointment, as well as via referrals from NHS 111 and GPs.

Following consultations with pharmacists, patients with symptoms indicative of the seven conditions covered will be offered advice and prescription-only treatments where necessary, under a Patient Group Direction (PGD). CPE hopes that in the future, independent prescribers will be empowered to complete episodes of care without requiring a PGD.

As per CPE, the following stipulations have also been agreed:

  • The writing-off of previous funding over-delivery worth £112 million for CPCF Years 3, 4 and 5. If this money had been re-claimed from pharmacy owners over a year, it would have resulted in a reduction in the Single Activity Fee of around 10 pence per item.
  • Protecting baseline CPCF funding: the new money will be accessible as soon as possible rather than risk further over-delivery against Year 5 CPCF funding – the writing off of some Year 5 projected over-delivery supports this.
  • The inclusion of an upfront payment for of £2000 for Pharmacy First to support pharmacy owners to prepare and build capacity for the new service.
  • Increasing service fees to support ongoing capacity to deliver Pharmacy First, and for an uplift in fees across all services.
  • Reducing activity thresholds at the start of the scheme to “more achievable levels”.

The National Pharmacy Association (NPA) has welcomed the announcement, while also repeating calls for an increase in core funding for the community pharmacy contract to underpin sustainable future growth for the sector. NPA Chair, Nick Kaye, said: “We welcome this commitment to invest in a nationwide Pharmacy First service for common conditions. The new funding, whilst welcome, will not in itself solve the financial crisis in community pharmacy, but it is a substantial investment in a key service that could be a stepping stone to more.

“NHS England have put their faith in us, having seen community pharmacy successfully deliver other clinical services at scale. I’ve no doubt that pharmacies will once again deliver an impressive return on investment for the health service.

Highstreet pharmacist Boots has also welcomed the announcement pharmacy reforms. The chain announced today that it will roll out the NHS Pharmacy Contraception Service, allowing pharmacists to provide contraceptive advice and prescriptions, in the coming months. The service has already been successfully piloted in 22 stores in England.

The NHS Blood Pressure Check Service will also be expanded to most Boots stores in England, allowing pharmacists to check patients’ blood pressure and provide advice on reducing their risk of cardiovascular disease. Boots has said that the new and expanded NHS services will be good news for patients, pharmacy teams and GPs alike.

Seb James, Managing Director of Boots UK & Ireland, said: “We welcome the government’s announcement of plans to launch new contraception and minor ailments services in England, which will make life easier for patients to access the care and medicines they need quickly and help reduce GP wait lists.

“We have been working with our pharmacy teams in stores to roll out these new services to patients in England. We are already commissioned to deliver similar services for the NHS in Scotland and Wales and these are very popular with our patients and pharmacy team members.

“The free NHS blood pressure checks that we offer at most of our stores in England can save lives by spotting potential cardiovascular problems at an early stage, which also helps to reduce the burden on the NHS longer term.”

Not just for Christmas: Winter clinics a shining example of innovation we cannot overlook

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Amid news that no funding is expected for community acute respiratory hubs this winter, Dr Owain Rhys Hughes explains why these are a shining beacon of innovation that the NHS cannot afford to overlook.


As winter fast approaches, the NHS is gearing up for another incredibly tough season. Waiting lists have hit a new record high of 7.8 million people and ongoing staff shortages continue to pile pressure on overstretched services. Innovation has a vital role to play in supporting the NHS to navigate these periods of intensified pressure. The winter clinics that provided lifeline support during last year’s winter months, which are yet to receive repeat funding for this year, are a shining example of the importance of such innovation – and the danger in overlooking it.

While primary care services deal with an existing backlog of appointments and referrals, the additional influx of patients expected to hit GP surgeries during the winter months – due to spikes in cold and flu complaints, for example – threatens to be overwhelming. Expanding the capacity and resources of primary, community and secondary care during this period is therefore essential. Winter clinics provided a crucial first line of defence for patients experiencing cold and flu symptoms last year. This deflected pressure from GPs and emergency services, boosting their capacity to see the patients they really needed to see.

Without initiatives like these, which facilitate the joined-up collaboration desperately needed to ease pressure on individual services and streamline patient triage, the NHS is facing a winter of unprecedented strain. A lack of capacity within primary care could leave many patients turning to A&E for support. In turn, this could place excessive pressure on secondary care, pushing up wait times for those in most urgent need of treatment.

We cannot afford to overlook the vital necessity of innovation that can unlock and support more collaborative care delivery and boost clinical capacity where it is needed most.

Winter clinics are just one example of the value and potential of such innovation during times of excessive pressure and need. There is a wealth of holistic and tech-powered solutions offering the tools for wider collaboration and more effective clinical communication. Harnessing these is essential to providing the infrastructure and support needed to ensure that the NHS can continue delivering exceptional levels of care amid growing strain.

Streamlining referrals into secondary care and introducing new sites for care delivery and diagnosis is a key way in which innovation is helping to do this. The rapid rollout of Community Diagnostic Centres (CDCs) across the health service is providing additional capacity and working to help reduce the number of patients being sent into secondary care for diagnostic tests and consultation. This is not only helping to diagnose illnesses such as cancer sooner, but is also allowing for triage to a wider range of services, ensuring only those who really need to be seen in urgent care are sent into hospital.

Another way in which diagnosis and referrals are being streamlined to free up capacity is through the introduction of digital advice and guidance. The use of digital tools to connect clinicians across different services can enable GPs and community clinicians to contact specialist consultants in real-time. This allows for advice and guidance to be easily and securely shared, and joint referral decisions to be made. As a result, the number of unnecessary referrals into secondary care can be reduced. Meanwhile, patients can be triaged to the most appropriate form of care sooner, avoiding repeat referrals and additional admin for GPs, boosting their capacity to spend with patients.

In my role at Cinapsis, I’ve seen this have an incredibly positive impact. Through our work in Norfolk and Waveney, for example, we’ve seen the use of digital advice and guidance reduce the wait time for specialist advice from 50 weeks to just 48 hours. This benefit has a knock-on effect by reducing the number of patients entering secondary care when they don’t need to. It also saves GPs time previously spent on copious admin and processing unnecessary referrals, freeing them up to see a higher number of patients.

As each new winter brings a fresh wave of increased pressure on our NHS, we must do everything we can to brace for and reduce the strain it puts services under. We cannot remove this pressure altogether; but we must embrace innovation wherever possible to facilitate the cross-service collaboration and vital communication needed to help clinicians unlock capacity and manage heightened patient demand.


Dr Owain Rhys Hughes, Founder and CEO, Cynapsis

Inclusive innovation: using community co-innovation to tackle health inequalities and digital exclusion

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By Fran Ward, Project Manager, NHS Arden & GEM CSU and Dr Paulina Ramirez, Academic, Birmingham Business School.


Digitalisation of the NHS has the potential to enable more personalised care and improve health outcomes. But it can also widen health inequalities. Some people in communities facing social and economic deprivation, which are also those experiencing the poorest health, find accessing care increasingly difficult as the NHS becomes more digital.

If those most in need of health services become less able to access them, health outcomes for these communities will worsen and the overall cost of healthcare will increase. Integrated care systems (ICSs), therefore, need to maximise the value of their investment in digitalisation by making it work for all their communities, not just the ones they know and understand well.

The ‘Building Inclusive Digital Health Innovation Ecosystems’ research programme, led by University of Birmingham’s Business School and supported by NHS Arden & GEM’s digital transformation team and Walsall Housing Group (whg), explores how community co-innovation could be used to develop digital healthcare that works for diverse communities and reduces the risk of exclusion.

Co-innovation is about understanding and framing problems and taking a bottom-up approach to generating new ideas in response. Specifically, this programme of community co-innovation is socially inclusive by design, creating an opportunity for disadvantaged communities to share their knowledge and lived experience. It gives these communities an equal share of voice alongside commissioners, clinicians and other stakeholders in the development of new digital health technologies or design of new online services.


Peer research

To genuinely hear what more deprived communities need, it is important to rethink how we in the NHS structure engagement to make it easier and more comfortable for those we most want to hear from. Training peer researchers from whg and local voluntary organisations enabled us to build on existing skills, connections and relationships. As trusted members of the community, peer researchers were better able to have relevant conversations within people’s homes, and elicit more honest and open responses on how people access technology and the barriers they face.

The resulting insights challenged some assumptions around barriers to adoption of digital technologies. The main source of inequality was found to be the lack of skills and confidence to engage with online services, with an individual’s type of work or family support structure often having a greater influence on digital proficiency than age, for example. Concerns around data privacy and information sharing were high, causing some not to access potentially valuable support. Despite positive attitudes towards digital in general, many felt digital services such as online GP appointments were not an adequate replacement for face-to-face health services due to a combination of trust, complexity and importance of healthcare in people’s lives.

Simply developing more digital services without addressing these fundamental barriers is inevitably going to limit success.


Changing the nature of engagement

Although good examples of user engagement in digital health services exist, there are constraints too. In particular, technology companies often have little or no engagement with deprived communities so can’t be sure their technology will work for those most likely to have the highest health needs. Alongside peer research, we need to create spaces for co-innovation to happen, bringing together these stakeholders to share information and work together to come up with new ideas.

A locally hosted co-innovation event enabled system partners in the Black Country ICS and health technology companies to hear from and engage with peer researchers and other local community organisations to start putting theory into action. Based on health priorities identified through the peer research, table group discussions addressed challenges such as how to ensure that a mental health app was used by those who most needed it, and how to increase numbers of patients from areas of high deprivation attending diabetes reviews. Peer researchers were able to articulate the day-to-day challenges people in their communities face and why, for example, simplicity and ease of use is often preferable to feature-packed, complex apps.

The event has already resulted in a dedicated task and finish group being set up at NHS Black Country Integrated Care Board to explore how community co-innovation can be applied to issues such as digital GP access. Whg is also keen to continue building a space for co-innovation within its community. More broadly, however, there is a wealth of learning from this approach which can be applied to digital transformation across the country.


Developing best practice

It is clear from this work that input from communities facing social and economic deprivation is essential in finding solutions to some of the nation’s most complex health challenges – and that how we do that is as important as why.

Findings from the ‘Building Inclusive Digital Health Innovation Ecosystems’ research have been used to develop a What good looks like for our communities report to support the NHS Digitalisation Framework. This highlights the need for affordable, simple, safe and inclusive technology that is well integrated with in-person services, guarantees data privacy and is supported with local skills training and support.

We have also developed a playbook to guide ICSs in using community co-innovation to develop digital health services, drawing on the learning from this programme to encourage greater use of this approach across the NHS. After all, there is no point in developing digital services that aren’t going to work for the communities we most need to help.


Photo caption: Peer researchers interviewing community members in their own homes in Walsall.

To find out more about digital inclusion and health inequalities, see: The digital divide: Reducing inequalities for better, prepared by Public Policy Projects.

Community Care, News, Workforce

Recognising the value and impact of AHP support workers within healthcare

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This week the Chartered Society of Physiotherapy, along with a coalition of 13 other allied health professional (AHP) bodies, is celebrating Support Worker Awareness Week.


AHP support workers are an integral part of multidisciplinary teams. They are relied upon for the transformative role they have to play across many different services, including physiotherapy. They work within their scope of practice to carry out a wide range of tasks and are supervised by a registered healthcare professional who retains responsibility for patient care.

The value of support workers cannot be underestimated. The contribution to services by support workers, both in the NHS and the independent sector, enhances patient outcomes, improves patient experience and increases service efficiency. They also provide immeasurable guidance and support to the wider health and care team.

Currently, we see increasing numbers of support workers playing a vital role in facilitating education by supporting physiotherapy students with their learning. By supporting physiotherapy students with practice-based learning during their placements, support workers offer a safe and supportive space, and contribute to the growth of the profession.

During the pandemic, support workers demonstrated great flexibility and brought new skills to the role. Their responsibilities increased and elements of their practice developed to meet the extraordinary pressures on the system.


Need for more support workers

More physiotherapy support workers are needed within the NHS, but this demand can’t be met by increasing the registered workforce alone. With ever-increasing physiotherapy waiting lists, an ageing population and more patients living with multiple conditions, more support workers are needed to fulfil population, patient and service delivery needs in safe, effective ways.

The CSP has recently conducted a physiotherapy workforce review in England and is calling for 6,500 additional non-registered physio posts in the NHS over the next five years. Additionally, the recent NHSE intermediate care framework recommends maximising the use of skilled support workers. If utilised at the right points in intermediate care pathways, their skills and expertise will improve access to high quality rehab that is timely, safe and person-centred.

In Northern Ireland, we want to see the implementation of the recommendations outlined in the Physiotherapy Workforce Review Report published in 2020, including the establishment of apprenticeships for physiotherapy support workers. In Scotland, we are calling for funded ‘earn and learn’ routes to be established and in Wales, the expansion of the level 4 apprenticeship scheme for support workers.

The support worker role is evolving, with increased opportunity to carry out additional responsibilities in practice. Higher-level support workers have additional responsibilities across the four pillars of practice. These roles are important to provide a positive impact on patient flow, quality of patient care and to meet new national policy developments.


What support workers need

Support workers need clear opportunities and pathways to develop capabilities and pursue career development. Each UK country should have a programme of work to develop support worker roles including those at higher level. This should both develop CPD opportunities, a greater consistency in levels of practice, capabilities and governance arrangements.

Higher-level support worker roles are one example of career development and provide opportunity for managers to think creatively about the skills mix within their teams.

With the right systems and support in place, support workers can do so much more.


Looking to the future

With the opening of the National Rehabilitation Centre (NRC) in East Midlands planned in early 2025, there is a new pioneering role.

The centre will offer a foundation degree apprenticeship for a rehab assistant practitioner role (band 4 equivalent). The rehab assistant practitioner will work across OT, physio and nursing with an evidence and training base behind them.

The NRC plans to offer around three to four hours a day of rehab as opposed to the 30-40 mins per day rehab normally offered in the NHS. Rehab Assistant Practitioners will be key in meeting these ambitious targets.

It is clearly time to recognise and shine a spotlight on the vital role of support workers but also most crucially to invest in their pathway and career opportunities.

News, Population Health, Primary Care

Pioneering diabetes prehab service launches in Wirral

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Service uses population health data to identify those most at risk of having surgery postponed


One Wirral CIC, a non-profit community interest company that proactively helps to bridge gaps in health services and support for local communities, has launched a ground-breaking diabetes prehabilitation service to reduce surgery postponements, tackle waiting lists, and improve postoperative outcomes for patients. The service uses population health tools and analysis of hospital waiting lists to identify and support those most at risk of having surgery postponed.

Since April 2023, the service has supported two Primary Care Networks – Moreton and Meols PCN and North Coast Alliance PCN, funded by the North West Coast Clinical Networks. However, the service will now be extended across Wirral to all Primary Care Networks. The goal is for the approach to be adopted nationally.

The diabetes prehabilitation service uses the Cheshire & Merseyside Combined Intelligence for Population Health Action (CIPHA) population health management system, on Graphnet Health’s CareCentric platform. CIPHA surgical waiting lists at Wirral’s Arrowe Park Hospital are used to identify diabetic patients who are awaiting surgery and have a HbA1C (hemoglobin A1C – a test commonly used to diagnose diabetes and prediabetes) over 69mmol/mol or a BMI above 40.

The early identification of patients at risk of having their surgery postponed removes the need for GP surgeries to make referrals. The service also receives referrals directly from secondary care, for people that have had their surgery postponed, and have diabetic risk factors.

Once identified, patients are contacted within 48 hours and booked in for an appointment with a diabetes prehabilitation health coach, in a local community setting, such as a library. If a person’s HbA1c is over 69, they are automatically booked in for an appointment with a diabetes specialist nurse, who will look at medicines management and optimisation. Once they have seen the health coach and nurse, they commence a personalised prehabilitation lifestyle plan, which they follow up until surgery, whether that is a matter of weeks or months.

Lucy Holmes, Wellbeing Lead at One Wirral CIC, explained: “The population health and data-driven approach means we are able to contact the right people at the right time and give them the best intervention before their procedure, without anyone slipping through the net. We look at their lifestyle and they’re encouraged to participate in activities, including the free diabetes exercise sessions that are held in the community each week. Their medications are also assessed. It means we’re looking at a person from a holistic point of view, not just clinically and not just non-clinically. It’s a true community-based, multi-disciplinary team approach.

“We’re so pleased to be able to roll this out across Wirral, but it’s an approach that could easily be lifted and shifted. We would love to see it adopted nationally, because we have seen the many benefits of getting people fit before surgery.”

Dr Dave Thomas, Wirral Diabetes GP Lead, added: “With diabetes, we know that if someone is living with excess weight or their sugar levels are very high, then that comes with additional surgical risks, higher complication rates, they’re more likely to have a longer hospital stay, and they’re more likely to generally have a poorer outcome. So, a service where we’re getting people fit and healthy, and optimising their diabetes care prior to their operation can only benefit the patients. From a Wirral-wide point of view, it’s going to help reduce surgical waiting times, reduce complication rates, and it will allow us to reduce hospital stays.

“This really is a fantastic service. We haven’t seen anything like it anywhere else, which is really exciting and hugely positive for the patients that we’re supporting.”


To hear more about the benefits of the diabetes prehabilitation service, please click the video link: Wirral Diabetes Prehabilitation Service | How It’s Changing Lives.

News, Thought Leadership

PPP South West ICS Delivery Forum – key insights

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On 4th October 2023, Public Policy Projects welcomed health and care leaders from across the south west for the South West ICS Delivery Forum to debate and discuss the key challenges the region is facing in the delivery of integrated care.


With an ageing and largely rural population, and the close juxtaposition of affluent and highly deprived areas, the South West of England faces some unique challenges in the delivery of integrated care. Introducing the day’s discussions, Public Policy Projects’ (PPP) Chair, Stephen Dorrell, remarked that the introduction of ICSs represents the biggest opportunity to transform healthcare delivery in living memory. The consensus around ICSs is somewhat unique, as for the first time possibly ever, a major NHS reform is not the subject of intense party-political argument. How ICSs make use of this opportunity will shape health outcomes for generations to come.

To discuss the unique challenges the South West faces, and share examples of meaningful work that are shaping better outcomes for the region’s population, PPP’s South West ICS Delivery Forum brought together health and care leaders from across the region. Central to these discussions were the importance of collaboration, the need for system-level data strategies, and how ICSs can harness all assets at their disposal to improve population health and reduce health inequalities.


Keynote address

By virtue of his decades’ experience in the police service, Stephen Dorrell introduced Dr Jeff Farrar as “the embodiment of the principle that if we want to deliver better health outcomes, we need to begin by bringing together the different elements of local public services.” The former Chief Constable of Gwent Police invoked this experience during his keynote speech, explaining that despite the long-standing consensus that “collaborative services are the way to proceed,” public sector organisations have historically reverted to their old ways. Farrar, who now chairs Bristol, North Somerset and South Gloucestershire (BNSSG), identified a lack of visibility between different parts of the system as a key reason for this.

“The opportunity to get things done in the locality will give huge rewards.”

Dr Jeff Farrar, Chair, Bristol, North Somerset and South Gloucestershire ICB

In an effort to improve communication and collaboration across the system, BNSSG ICB has recently launched a review of its governance structures. The goal of this review is to ensure that the different elements of the system, such as the integrated care partnership (ICP), the ICB, and locality partnerships, have oversight of each other’s work and can align their services to enhance their value and reduce duplication of efforts. Farrar added that the majority of lean continuous improvement and systems thinking has historically taken place within, not across, organisations, and stated his conviction “that if we do that more scientifically this year, we will improve our services and stop duplication of effort in the system.”

Farrar also praised what he referred to as “the jewel in the crown” of integrated care – the possibility to think about and enact reform from the bottom-up, rather than imposing it from the top. “The opportunity to get things done in the locality will give huge rewards,” argued Farrar, “but it needs a little bit of time.”


Developing partnerships – don’t shirk the hard conversations

When discussing partnerships or collaboration, it can be tempting to think in terms of agreement; if organisations are collaborating, they probably have areas of common agreement. Earlier, Jeff Farrar alluded to sitting in rooms in which there is “violent agreement” that integrated services are a good thing, but subsequently, nothing has meaningfully changed. These are the easier conversations that do not tend to include agreement over the more difficult, controversial or intractable problems. They also do not account for what happens when things go wrong.

And as multiple participants remarked, ICSs are hardly operating in an environment that can be described as optimal. While the 30 per cent reduction in operating costs that ICBs must deliver by 2025/26 limits the scope of transformation, it simultaneously makes such efforts – and effective collaboration – all the more important.1 “Obviously, funding is a major factor,” confirmed Mills & Reeve Partner, Rhian Vandrill, “but over time we’ve come to see a genuine realisation that some of the benefits of being able to share workforce and resource over a collaboration can bring benefits to the individual organisations as well as the collaborative.”

If ICSs are to achieve their goals in a straightened economic environment, effective partnerships with the voluntary, charitable and independent sectors will be especially crucial. Although upending long-held consensus about how and where money should be spent will be a difficult process, as Chief Commercial Officer at Nuffield Health, James Murray, noted, “partnerships should be hard. Sometimes you have to fall out and have these conversations and take a leap of faith about what you do and don’t do in the system. With the independent and third sectors, there are massive resources that could add huge weight to what we do and don’t do. It’s going to require leadership and being brave, but I hope that there’s the opportunity within the new ICBs do be able to do that.

“The lessons learnt at the locality level have to have a clear route to the strategic level.”

Cllr Helen Holland, Chair, Bristol, South North Somerset and and South Gloucester Integrated Care Partnership

Vandrill summarised the position succinctly, saying “don’t make an agreement that’s going to be broken. Sometimes you need to air difficult subjects to create an agreement that you all buy in to.

Despite Bristol City Council losing 60 per cent of its funding since 2010, Bristol Health and Wellbeing Board’s Chair Cllr Helen Holland, who also chairs the BNSSG Integrated Care Partnership, remarked that “there is a lot of money in the system. But we’ve been spending a lot of money doing the wrong thing.” Leveraging what Cllr Holland referred to as one of the “jewels in the crown” of ICSs – the role of the voluntary sector – will enable ICSs to develop more cost-effective, bottom-up strategies that take into account population needs, as well as the plethora of resources at the disposal of each system. Holland explained that she regularly produces the BNSSG ICP strategy at meetings, saying that “any organisation doing anything, even the bus company, can look at this and see that they have a role” in the delivering the aims of the system.

Ros Cox, Associate Director of Partnerships at BNSSG ICB, stressed that the presence of the voluntary sector in the ICSs locality partnerships has enabled these places a greater on-the-ground visibility of gaps in the system when it comes to community mental health provision. The integrated care teams that were created thanks to this insight include voluntary sector providers and “have been a huge success in each of our locality partnerships,” said Cox. Not only are these partnerships enabling services now, they are key to informing future policy; “The lessons learnt at the locality level have to have a clear route to the strategic level,” said Holland. As such, “the next iteration of the strategy should look different because it will have been informed by the work of locality partnerships now.


Harnessing pharmacy to revamp patient pathways

It is increasingly being recognised that pharmacy as an asset has been underutilised in healthcare delivery. A slew of recent policy recommendations from both government and the sector itself have focused on the need to expand the role of pharmacy to relieve pressure on general practice and secondary care.2,3,4,5 As ICSs mature and the scale of their challenge comes into focus, it is becoming ever clearer that they will need to harness all of the tools at their disposal if they are to achieve their ambitions. One of the biggest assets that ICSs have is pharmacy. The expanded role the sector assumed during the Covid-19 pandemic is testament to pharmacy’s ability to reach parts of the population that other sectors cannot. However, during this panel, speakers identified a number of barriers holding back the potential of pharmacy and preventing it from become a true partner in the delivery of integrated care.

For pharmacy to be an effectively integrated, it must be integrated digitally with the rest of the system. Peter Fee, Lead Clinical Pharmacist at Taunton Central PCN, remarked that generally, “community pharmacy is quite isolated in its access to the clinical systems”. Pharmacies that do have access to patient records (usually as a result of being owned by the GP practices to which they are attached), “can have a huge impact on patient care”, so establishing a means of granting this access securely should be a priority for all ICSs. Aside from the implications on patient care, this will help to lubricate the joints between pharmacy and general practice in particular, saving the time of GPs and pharmacists and enabling them to focus on better patient care.

Only by granting this visibility can pharmacy then be empowered to act on its findings and physically provide patient care. An example of this is hypertension case-finding, which was commissioned in 2021 as a means of identifying and preventing cardiovascular disease (CVD).6 CVD is a major driver of health inequalities, comprising around 25 per cent of the life expectancy gap between rich and poor populations in England. As such, the hypertension case-finding service could be a tangible and impactful way for ICSs to target and reduce health inequalities, in line with the CORE20Plus5 approach.7

“National contracts are starting to move towards helping those different players work together better.”

Kyle Hepburn, Clinical Director and Lead Clinical Pharmacist, North Sedgemoor PCN

Kyle Hepburn, Clinical Director and Lead Clinical Pharmacist at North Sedgemoor PCN said, however, that all the service presently does “is highlight that a person has hypertension – we can’t complete the episode of care because we can’t currently prescribe in community pharmacy. There are 50,000 people in Somerset alone walking around with undiagnosed hypertension, and current primary care capacity can’t handle that. We’re finding more hypertension cases, but who’s going to pick that up?”

Asking community pharmacy to undertake hypertension case-finding is undoubtedly a positive step towards better prevention of CVD, but if a pharmacist is unable to complete the episode of care, this does little to reduce pressure on primary care – although it may do for secondary care further down the line. Pharmacy needs to be empowered to act on its findings, and the drive towards increasing the numbers of independent prescribers is a good step in this direction.

Interface Clinical Services’ Associate Director, Service Development, Laura Siepker, gave an insight into how pharmacy can support prevention when properly resourced and empowered to manage long-term conditions. Chronic pulmonary obstructive disease (COPD) often interacts with CVD and accounts for more than one million NHS bed days and 140,000 admissions per year, and is projected to cost the health service £2.3 billion per year by 2030. Interface Clinical Services delivers 23,000 days of clinical support into primary care each year, said Siepker, and in the last year, “has delivered over 9,000 COPD clinics over the country to more than 110,000 high-risk patients. Many of those patients will not progress into secondary care, and we’re proud to say that we’ve hopefully avoided around 150 deaths doing this.”

On a positive note, Fee remarked that a recent ICS key stakeholder event attended by representatives from all four pillars of primary care, as well as other members of the ICS, was the first time he had seen so many senior stakeholders in one room “to discuss aligning how they work for the betterment of patients and getting away from the combative mindset that has always been prevalent in primary care”. Kyle Hepburn added that “now, national contracts are starting to move towards helping those different players work together better”, all of which suggests that the dial is shifting in the right direction as ICSs continue their development.


Developing system-level approaches to data

ICSs are bringing with them new appreciation of harnessing data assets to drive not just technology strategies, but to inform all parts of healthcare delivery. A crucial aspect of this new environment is the greater emphasis on population health management (PHM). As Deborah El-Sayed, who is Chief Digital Information Officer at BNSSG ICB, explained, technological advances have created the ability to “address the entirety of the health and wellbeing of people, communities, populations or system,” but enabling this shift requires changes in how data is used at the system level.

This means data providing intelligence, “helping us to understand if we are making the right decisions and spending money in the right place”. El-Sayed continued: “It’s less about activity levels or how many beds we’ve got. Those things remain important, as there’s still a need for the Treasury to know where the money’s gone. But it’s now more about the interconnectedness of the data, what’s happening between organisations and what’s happening in the PHM space. We’re now starting to look at different areas like people’s behaviour, adherence to prevention, approaches to healthy lifestyles, etc.”

“We should have a more MDT approach because then the data people are in the room earlier on in discussions.”

Sarah Blundell. Analytical Development Lead, Analytics Unit, NHSX

However, there are still barriers preventing ICSs from truly developing system-level approaches to data. For Sarah Blundell, Analytical Development Lead, Analytics Unit at NHSX, “the biggest challenge is now around the workforce, not necessarily technology. We may have to pay for it and integrate it, but it is no longer the blocker it used to be. The challenge we now have in data and analytics is there aren’t enough of us who have skills in using, understanding and analysing data. We have a supply and demand problem across all of our data and technology areas in the NHS.”

To make the most of data at the system level, data literacy needs to be improved and embedded at virtually every level of the NHS. This is because data only paints part of the picture and will only enhance services if it is paired with the right understanding of how to use this data to inform strategy and decision-making. “This means not only employing more data and analytics staff, but also improving the data literacy of everybody in our workforce, including the people that are inputting information into the systems.”

Improving data literacy throughout the NHS must also include embedding these skills within multidisciplinary teams (MDTs). Blundell added: “We should have a more MDT approach because then the data people are in the room earlier on in discussions. Through that closer joint working, you then have a better transfer of data skills to people that are making these decisions. We need to stop divorcing [data] and embed data staff into actual programmes. At the moment, clinicians and managers might not be asking the right questions.”

Until data input automation becomes the norm, embedding this expertise will also help to improve data quality, as “I could build you the most sophisticated neural network you’ve ever seen, but if the data coming in is rubbish, the decision making just won’t be there,” Blundell remarked. Similarly, automation will reduce the burden on clinicians. El-Sayed added that “we need systems that, almost as a by-product of delivering a service to a patient, can actually capture data in sophisticated ways that mean we haven’t got this human burden.”

An example of how comprehensive, longitudinal data analysis is enhancing ICSs’ system-level understanding was provided by Oracle Health’s Director of Consulting Services, Charlie Evans. Evans is responsible for delivering Oracle data platforms into ICSs, including PHM platforms that integrate real-time data from acute, primary and community health settings, and increasingly, housing data. In North Central London ICS, data from these sources is combined with elective recovery waiting lists, using MDTs to “look across all of the pathways and establish how they can work better with these patients.” This includes some innovative work, including “looking at if there are any carers waiting for surgery and asking if we can bring their care forward, so that they can look after the person they care for in a better way.” Evans confirmed that in South London ICS, this and similar approaches have led to a “reduction in waiting times of around 11 per cent, which is a really massive reduction there.”


Addressing health inequalities in the South West

ICSs are well-positioned to identify and address the root causes of health inequalities, in that these causes often stem from factors outside of the health system’s control. As such, ICS’s ability to mobilise, engage and coordinate a wide range of public services makes it possible to develop holistic strategies that can address these wider determinants of health.

They are also well-equipped to take on health inequalities due to their intrinsically local focus. “You can’t think about health inequalities without thinking about ‘place’”, began Andrea Beacham, who is Senior Programmes Manager for Health Inequalities at Northern Devon Healthcare NHS Trust. “That’s because the characteristics of the populations we serve are so heavily influenced by the places they live,” that developing a meaningful understanding of the causes of health inequalities is almost impossible without first understanding the specific interplay of “independent and mutually reinforcing” factors that is unique to each ‘place’ in each system.

“We’ve been working at solutions that have actually been identified in the community.”

Jonathan Higman, Chief Executive, Somerset ICB

Specifically in Northern Devon, there are “huge disparities between the affluent and non-affluent areas which, because we work in averages, can obscure the depths of the deprivation we’ve got. So we often don’t quality for things like the levelling up fund, because our whole area on average isn’t too bad.” This provides another reason why data alone cannot be relied upon, and must be supplemented with local insight.

Local networks, such as PCNs, make for an ideal means of gathering this insight, “not because of PCNs themselves,” said the Chief Executive of Somerset ICB, Jonathan Higman, “but because of the footprint that PCNs service and the ability to have neighbourhoods with integrated teams from primary care, the voluntary sector, education and transport, all coming together to solve local issues.” This capability has enabled the Somerset ICS to understand and begin to address inequalities that previously were more opaque and intractable, such as among the farming community. “We’ve been working at solutions that have actually been identified by the community,” Higman explained, “and we now do things like taking health checks out to farmers’ markets, targeting that community with lots of preventative work.”

This example demonstrates that, to be effective, action on health inequalities needs to be proactive, targeted and rooted in local insight, which means listening to people and understanding their unique circumstances. Dr Jim Forrer, a GP and Director of Population Health at Optum offered another example as he related the story of a woman with learning disabilities who had missed three ophthalmology appointments and, in line with procedure, was about to be struck off the waiting list. “A quick phone call revealed that her husband also had learning disabilities and they both found the thought of going to hospital too overwhelming,” Forrer explained. “And so, we arranged voluntary transport, had somebody meet them at the hospital entrance, take them to the outpatients’ department and stay with them. Ultimately, this woman got the care she deserved with a bit of support and outreach, and a different approach.”

Although noting that volunteering services “can be very clearly linked to a reduction in health inequalities,” the Royal Voluntary Service’s Head of Business Development, Duncan MacLeod, used his address to touch on the benefits that volunteering can offer to volunteers themselves. Alongside keeping service users connected to health, community and social prescribing services, McLeod cited a London School of Commerce evaluation of the Volunteer Responders programme, which identified that volunteering provides the “double bonus” of fostering feelings of greater wellbeing and social connectedness among the volunteers themselves. The Volunteer Responders programme was established in March 2020 to support clinically vulnerable people who were shielding from Covid-19. The same report also highlighted the cost-effectiveness of volunteering, finding that each volunteer/client interaction in the programme generated social value of approximately £500.


Conclusion

If ICSs are to achieve their objectives while simultaneously managing significant real-terms cuts to their operating costs, they will need to mobilise all assets at their disposal. Over the course of the South West ICS Delivery Forum, the following insights were identified:

  • Workforce constraints, rather than technology, are now the main barrier to the development of systems-level data strategies.
  • Pharmacy must be empowered to take on a greater role in the treatment of minor illnesses and conditions to relieve pressure from primary and secondary care and enhance prevention.
  • The specific interplay of factors contributing to health inequalities are unique to each local context – action on health inequalities must be proactive, targeted and predicated on local insight.
  • Complex networks of place-based statutory and non-statutory organisations play a key role in mitigating the worst impacts of health inequalities. ICSs must ensure that the vital contributions of voluntary organisations in particular are recognised, and their local insights used to improve service provision, reduce health inequalities, and improve health outcomes.

References

1 NHS England (2023) Integrated care board running cost allowances: efficiency requirements [online] Available at: https://www.england.nhs.uk/long-read/integrated-care-board-running-cost-allowances-efficiency-requirements/ [Accessed 16/10/2023]

2 Company Chemist’ Association (2023) Transforming pharmacy practice in England through Pharmacy First and independent prescribing [online] Available at: https://thecca.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Developing-pharmacy-practice-through-Pharmacy-First.pdf [Accessed 16/10/2023]

3 Royal Pharmaceutical Society (2023) RPS Recommendations for Integrated Care Systems [online] Available at: https://www.rpharms.com/england/nhs-transformation/ics-recommendations [Accessed: 16/10/2023]

4 NHS England (2023) NHS Community Pharmacist Consultation Service (CPCS) – integrating pharmacy into urgent care [online] Available at: https://www.england.nhs.uk/primary-care/pharmacy/pharmacy-integration-fund/community-pharmacist-consultation-service/ [Accessed: 16/10/2023]

5 NHS England (2023) Delivery plan for recovering access to primary care [online] Available at: https://www.england.nhs.uk/long-read/delivery-plan-for-recovering-access-to-primary-care-2/ [Accessed:17/10/23]

6 Community Pharmacy England (2023) Hypertension case-finding service [online] Available at: https://cpe.org.uk/national-pharmacy-services/advanced-services/hypertension-case-finding-service/ [Accessed: 18/10/2023]

7 NHS England (2021) CORE20Plus5 (adults) – an approach for reducing health inequalities [online] Available at: https://www.england.nhs.uk/about/equality/equality-hub/national-healthcare-inequalities-improvement-programme/core20plus5/ [Accessed: 18/10/2023]

Digital Implementation, News

How to improve patient and taxpayer outcomes with innovation

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Stuart Watkins, Strategy Manager for Health at Crown Commercial Service (CCS), explains the 3 main stages of buying digital transformation solutions in the NHS, with a clear breakdown of programme stages and projects along the way.


Digital transformation solutions in the NHS can help health and care professionals communicate better and enable patients to access the care they need quickly and easily, when it suits them. It’s vital that our NHS health services, staff and patients are ready.

How, where, and when patient care is given is evolving towards smart healthcare services, where technology is embedded across clinical pathways and the digital patient is the new normal.

From websites and apps that make care and advice easy to access wherever you are, to connected computer systems that give staff the test results, history and evidence they need to make the best decisions for patients, technology can support improvements in patient care.


Innovative technology procurement

Technology procurement in the NHS touches on everything from network refreshes to artificial intelligence, virtual wards and patient self-referral. Health organisations, at whatever stage of their smart healthcare journey, require a robust technology procurement strategy that builds close collaboration between their procurement and ICT functions.

They also need to achieve value for money through their procurements, delivering against clear integrated care system requirements and cost improvement programmes – all while keeping social value and carbon net zero agendas front of mind.


A 3-step guide to digital transformation

To help the NHS meet these objectives for procurements, CCS has developed a step-by-step guide, setting out the three main stages of buying digital transformation solutions in the NHS, with a clear breakdown of programme stages and projects along the way.

Aimed at clinicians, ICT professionals, procurement professionals, CEOs and board executives, the guide supports NHS England’s ‘digital first’ guidance and makes a process that can all too easily go wrong more straightforward.

NHS trusts and ICS digital programmes that need to rationalise suppliers, save money, secure value, and ensure interoperability requirements are met will benefit from using the guide.

Covering a comprehensive programme of projects, the guide makes it straightforward for the NHS ICT functions to assimilate into their own ‘live’ digital programmes today. It is organised around the 3 key phrases of digital transformation (Prepare, Transform, Enhance).

Let’s take a brief look at these 3 phases:

1. Prepare

The first step is to develop a technology strategy that aligns with the trust’s organisational development plan and its intended outcomes. From here, you can develop your programme, create your design and delivery structure, prepare outline and full business cases, and allocate budgets.

Next, it is important to review existing assets with the aim of getting the “maximum value from what you already have”. Start by looking at where your core infrastructure and networks need refreshing. Then, explore how unified communications can bring together phone, email, and instant messaging to complement each other and encourage collaboration.

This is also the stage to consider how devices, applications, and databases will be rolled out and managed, and how cyber security requirements can be met.

2. Transform

The ‘transform’ stage invites users to consider how best to digitise patient records: these can be integrated into software and clinical systems, facilitating the delivery and receipt of patient data digitally at the point of service.

For example, if you need to scan historic paper records, consider what further processes and resources are required. You’ll need a validation process to check that scanned documents match the original paper versions and create new workflows to ensure they are available securely.

Smart technologies can also be deployed to enable patient participation and empowerment throughout their clinical pathways. You could integrate systems such as picture archiving and communication (PACS), radiology, pathology, pharmacy, and bedside monitoring, focusing on interconnection and sharing of data, using unified messaging standards such as Health Level Seven. This is also a good time to:

  • Review data warehousing, looking at how a central data store could improve reporting and analysis.
  • Build integration into your solutions.
  • Consider how to extend use securely to other organisations, such as primary, acute, mental health, and social services.

3. Enhance

In the ‘enhance’ stage of the digital transformation process, the focus should be on early intervention and prevention initiatives, in partnership with other healthcare providers in the integrated care system. Everyone involved in the technology procurement should be thinking about people, not tech. At this stage, you should be aiming to put the digital patient at the heart of everything you do.

Smart “champions” who take ownership of the process can help keep the focus on the people who are supposed to benefit from the transformation, while training providers can create bespoke training programmes that empower users and tackle change resistance.
You may even want to consider how apps could help improve the patient experience and provide easy access to clinical services.

The guide suggests that the “enthusiasm” of patients who are already using smart technologies to manage their health can be utilised to encourage widespread change. But it also emphasises the importance of ensuring that digital healthcare solutions are inclusive and accessible to the most vulnerable and disadvantaged people.

There is danger in assuming that all patients and their carers have the necessary digital skills to benefit from new digital healthcare services. This is not always the case and why you should consider how to provide support to anyone who cannot access digital services independently, helping them to find information and complete transactions.

Finally, it’s vital to ensure digital inclusion by helping patients and their carers gain basic digital skills so that they can access these digital services in order to benefit from better healthcare.

You can download the guide from the CCS website.


Stuart Watkins, Strategy Manager for Health at Crown Commercial Service

Transforming rehabilitation services in England: A new model for community rehab

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By Sara Hazzard, Assistant Director Strategic Communications at The Chartered Society of Physiotherapy (CSP) and Co-Chair Community Rehabilitation Alliance


Change is in the air when it comes to rehabilitation in NHS England.

And while the word ‘change’ may send shivers up the spines of many, the change that is underway in the rehab space must be seen as positive, if we are to safeguard the future of the service for current and future generations.

At the Chartered Society of Physiotherapy, we have long been calling for change and transformation when it comes to rehabilitation. Our Right To Rehab campaigning has made significant progress in pushing this issue up the agenda. And we are not alone. As part of the Community Rehabilitation Alliance (CRA), which we are proud to convene and co-chair, 60 health and care charities and professional bodies are also united in seeing rehabilitation become a central part of NHS thinking and future planning.

So, what does the most recent change, when it comes to rehab, mean?

For the answer, we need to look at two landmark publications from NHS England: the Integrated Care Framework and a new model for community rehabilitation.

Issued in September this year, this framework and model, read together, signal a step-change in the way community rehabilitation is regarded at a system-level within the NHS. While rehab has been steadily growing in prominence over the last few years, to have tangible, clear policy setting out the expectations for what good rehab looks like is a seminal moment.

What is hugely encouraging is that the ICF and new model for rehabilitation reflect strongly the rehab best practice standards, which were developed and endorsed by the CRA. This again shows that there are many voices all calling for the same thing, and for everyone’s right to rehabilitation to be realised.

Significant, too, is that before looking at the detail of the ICF and new rehab model, their very existence is an acknowledgement from the top of the service in England that rehabilitation must be taken seriously and delivered comprehensively to improve patient and population health outcomes. It is a pillar of health care as important as medicines and surgery.

The evidence for needing this shift is clear to see.

Stroke rehabilitation for example, delivered at the optimum time, reduces the risk of a further stroke by 35 per cent. It enables people to regain function and independence yet only 32 per cent get the recommended amount of rehab.

Updated guidance from NICE in October 2023 (the month of this publication) has further bolstered the importance of rehab, by advising that the level of rehab offered is increased to at least three hours a day at least five days a week. This is significant because NICE are guided by effectiveness and cost.

Roughly one in four emergency hospital admissions and ambulance call outs are due to a fall.

Falls prevention saves the NHS £3.26 for every £1 invested because it reduces admissions and bed days. Preventive rehab such as Fracture Liaison Services (FLS) are therefore a cost-effective intervention.

COPD exacerbations are the 2nd largest cause of emergency hospital admissions. Rehab is vital and can reduce admissions by 14 per cent and hospital bed days by 50 per cent yet less than 40 per cent of eligible people are offered rehab.

It is the same with cardiovascular disease and heart attacks. Only 50 per cent of eligible patients receive cardiac rehab. There would be 50,000 fewer hospital admissions if access was 85 per cent.

The release of the ICF and new model for community rehabilitation could therefore not come soon enough.

But with publication, all efforts must now ensure that the actions set out in them, including an adequate rehab workforce, are delivered at pace. We need roles created in the community. It is where people need the help and support. The Chartered Society of Physiotherapy stands ready, alongside our partners in the Community Rehabilitation Alliance, to work with the NHS to make this happen.

The good news is that maximising the rehabilitation workforce is a key feature of the ICF and rehab model, as it highlights AHP leadership at system level to lead implementation. This focus to make the best use of the workforce ensures that individual expertise is used to best effect and has a potential valuable knock-on impact when it comes to the progression and retention of staff.

Also of key importance is the use of data to make the best decisions about service delivery. While there is some data available, much of it is condition specific and/or held in just one place. Now work must develop to ensure that information is shared, and silos broken down.

We must at minimum collect information to identify who needs rehab, who gets rehab and the outcomes.

We therefore have an opportunity, with the momentum and appetite for rehabilitation firmly behind us from the top of the NHS. We must not waste this moment and instead work together, understand what this new approach to rehab means for us in practical terms and then forge a way forward. We owe this effort to the more than one million people waiting for NHS community services, of which rehabilitation makes up a large part.

Digital Implementation, News

12 questions that NHS IT buyers should ask communications technology vendors

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While digital communications solutions are plentiful, budgetary constraints mean that asking the right questions of technology vendors is more important than ever, writes Dave O’Shaughnessy.


Today’s experience economy is not only applicable to customer-facing businesses. In the NHS, patients are the equivalent of customers and staff wellbeing is as important as in any other organisation. This means that putting experiences at the centre of NHS trusts and ICSs —for both patients and healthcare professionals—matters more than ever.

Because good communication and collaboration is at the heart of positive human experiences, every healthcare provider should aspire to an ICS-wide communications and collaboration layer. As NHS IT buyers look to realise the potential of transforming communications and collaboration efficiencies – not least improving their platforms’ ability to speak to one another and deliver service interoperability – what questions should they be asking their technology vendors? Here are some suggestions:

1. Innovation without disruption to day-to-day operations – it’s important to maximise the value and benefit from legacy investments by integrating modern communication solutions with existing technology. Ask technology vendors if they can layer on innovative and valuable features – that address real challenges and meet short-term objectives and long-term goals – without disruption to day-to-day operations.

2. Availability – check if a technology vendor is committed to delivering 99.999 per cent availability for communication services. This is important because, when it comes to hospitals, the availability of timely and dependable communications services can be seen as a matter of life and death. If systems drop or become unavailable because of cloud failure, lives are potentially at risk.

3. Security – the NHS needs the same security and reliability in its communications and collaboration solutions as those enjoyed by similarly sized government organisations worldwide, so a key question for vendors is: where will any cloud or hybrid cloud data reside?

4. Existing system interoperability – a new system must be able to push and pull data from the NHS trust’s current systems, including Patient CRMs or Electronic Health Records but if custom integrated work is needed, time-to-value can exacerbate project costs. This means that it’s important to ask if vendors have out-of-the-box connectors for current systems and how interoperability of digital systems and apps for previous clients has been ensured.

5. Single sign-on – ask if a vendor’s solutions are able to integrate with the current credentials system because single sign-on means staff can use their existing trust credentials to access new systems, minimising security-threats and vulnerabilities, while additionally reducing any complex technology-overhead on staff for accessing multiple applications and services.

6. Legacy device retirement – ask if a new system can take over functions presently performed by pagers, alarms, and notification systems. This matters because Trusts still using pagers and other legacy alerting and communication devices need modern solutions that enable legacy devices to be retired when ready and for modern communications and notifications technology to be rolled out.

7. Workflow automation – the NHS needs technology to help automate as many of its existing manual and time-consuming workflows and processes as is suitably possible. Therefore, a key question for vendors is: can you integrate with a hospital’s CRM or EHR systems so as to facilitate automated or self-service patient and staff services?

8. Remote/WFH capability – facilitating high-quality care even when employees aren’t onsite reduces the need for patients to travel to hospital, improving infection control. At the same time, suitable staff must be able to work remotely or from home without service disruption, so vendors should be asked how they would enable staff to communicate and collaborate remotely without hampering productivity.

9. Mobile experience – smart mobile devices that enable staff to access patient data while making a one-touch call to an on-call specialist accelerate traditionally disparate, time-consuming tasks, so be sure to ask vendors how they have integrated healthcare and communication systems using mobile solutions for previous clients.

10. Multilingual capability – the NHS needs healthcare applications that provide their complete set of features and services in as many languages as possible because it’s important to provide services to all who need them in a language they understand. This means that a key question for vendors is: how easy would it be for a patient to select their preferred language using your application?

11. Device and OS agnosticism – it’s important that digital services for staff and patients are available and deliverable across all access interfaces, so be sure to ask vendors if staff and patients will be able access services over various devices, browsers, and operating systems.

12. Video capability – integrated video calls improve engagement, enhance collaboration, and optimise services delivery, so ask vendors how staff and patients will be able to make video calls using their chosen device, and if the calls will be integrated with other digital applications.

Modern integrated unified communications can make the NHS more collaborative across all trusts, departments, and practice areas, enabling healthcare professionals to overcome frustrating pain points, by optimising every communication and collaboration experience for staff and patients alike.

Taking an Innovation Maturity Model assessment can help trusts and ICSs benchmark themselves against industry standards and visualise their readiness and capacity to maximise the use of existing technology and where holes need to be plugged. A great place to start a digitisation journey is to work with a trusted leader in customer experience. This helps leverage existing communications and collaboration investments and adds capabilities from advanced solutions that deliver enhanced experiences across a patient’s experience lifecycle.


Dave O’Shaughnessy, Healthcare Practice Leader, Avaya International

Thought Leadership

The Diabetic Foot Valley Project: A model for implementing Diabetic Foot Syndrome management

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Following the Covid-19 pandemic, the Diabetic Foot Valley Project was launched in Tuscany as a bottom-up initiative and is now a model for diabetic foot syndrome management.


Diabetic foot syndrome (DFS) has a mortality rate of 60 per cent within five years, comparable to the most aggressive forms of cancer. In the Tuscany region of Italy, 24,000 of a total 250,000 diabetic patients are estimated to be affected by DFS. Although Tuscany released guidelines for the management of DFS in 2003, their implementation has not been successful, and disparities in treatment and outcomes between different treatment centres remained significant.

This was further exacerbated by the Covid-19 pandemic, where other pathologies were left largely under-resourced. For DFS, comparing 2021 to 2019 this meant an excess of lower limb amputations of 47 per cent and deaths of 62 per cent. To react to the situation and implement the Regional Guidelines into clinical practice, the “Diabetic Foot Valley Project” was launched in July 2022. 

The project aims to create a community of healthcare units offering diabetic foot ulcer (DFU) management. A community should include three diabetic foot (DF) centres of excellence, each with sufficient capacity and all necessary competencies, and should be surrounded by a network of inter-related centres. Diabetic Foot Valley – Tuscany is a bottom-up initiative with participation from all healthcare professionals working in the public diabetic services. The base strategy, applied at various levels of patient care, is to improve patient outcomes by: ​

  • Implementing the International Guidelines for DF Management into clinical practice​.
  • Implementing the existing Tuscany organisational guideline for DF management into clinical practice.​
  • Establishing a regional network for DF, involving all the professionals engaged in the management of DF, in hospitals and in the community​.
  • Homogenising the approach to the cases by sharing diagnosis, treatments, and management in a three-level model of care​.
  • Collecting data in relation to the pathology, both with regards to clinical, organisational, and economical aspects, to improve the knowledge base and evidence supporting optimal management of DF​.
  • Promoting the quality of DF management by organising courses, workshops, audits, and scientific meetings for the members of the community of care established in connection with the Diabetic Foot Valley (DFV) – Tuscany.

The initiative is intended to be model for improvement of DF management and is currently being spread to other regions of Europe, supported by the European Wound Management Association (EWMA) Diabetic Foot Committee, established by EWMA. Access to key opinion leaders in the various EU regions is crucial to move the initiative forward, which is ensured via the EWMA network.

Evidence of the Tuscany project’s success:

  • 14 regional clinics have joined.
  • Three regional funded sub-projects target disparities in regional DF care and work towards improving the integrated DF patient’s pathway.
  • A regional patient data registry is under preparation funded by the regional authorities.
  • A one-stop-entry for industry to facilitate clinical trials has been established, assisted by a regional regulatory expert.
  • Regional investment agencies have expressed interest.
  • Three industrial clinical trials are being initiated.
  • Visibility is quickly rising regionally, nationally and at an EU-level including presentations at the EWMA conference 3-5 May 2023 in Milan, Italy.
  • Diabetic Foot Valley Tuscany is trademark protected in Europe.