{"id":5257,"date":"2024-03-21T10:31:17","date_gmt":"2024-03-21T10:31:17","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/integratedcarejournal.com\/?p=5257"},"modified":"2024-03-26T13:42:00","modified_gmt":"2024-03-26T13:42:00","slug":"why-clarity-consistency-essential-benefits-integrated-urgent-community-care","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/integratedcarejournal.com\/why-clarity-consistency-essential-benefits-integrated-urgent-community-care\/","title":{"rendered":"Why clarity and consistency are essential to realise the benefits of integrated urgent and community care"},"content":{"rendered":"
All integrated care systems (ICSs) are required to provide an urgent community response (UCR) service which delivers urgent crisis support to people in their own homes. Alongside the development of urgent treatment centres (UTCs), these services are a core part of national efforts to alleviate pressure on accident and emergency (A&E), ambulance services and primary care. Well-intentioned national guidance has helped to shape more community-based urgent care services, but the nature and maturity of these services, and the way they are delivered, varies considerably, limiting the potential for systems to realise much needed benefits.<\/p>\n
UCR is designed to deliver clinical support to patients who might otherwise face a long wait for an ambulance and for whom there is no immediate threat to life. UCR provides a response within two hours, to assess the patient, make them comfortable, administer pain relief and fluids, and, where appropriate, stand the ambulance down. Integrated care boards (ICBs) are finding, however, that the efficacy of this service can vary considerably across their system, with multiple providers operating in different areas, all delivering a slightly different service. While they may all meet the minimum national standards, lack of consistency means use of the service is inconsistent.<\/p>\n
UCR should be set up to take referrals from 999, 111, ambulance crews, GPs, pendant alarm companies, care homes and, in specific cases, directly from patients. In our experience, however, this is rarely the case. Some providers take regular referrals from out of hours GPs but have no relationship with their local ambulance service. Others work closely with the ambulance service but have limited contact with GPs or care homes, limiting the community-level support they are able to provide.<\/p>\n
Clinical support varies too. Some providers are GP or senior nurse-led, while others are staffed by more junior nurses. Simple elements such as opening hours can also be inconsistent, all of which impacts the level of care the UCR is able to provide. Collectively, these inconsistencies make it challenging, both for ICBs to understand the quality and consistency of provision across their system, and for individual services to make best use of UCR support.<\/p>\n
Similar challenges exist when it comes to UTCs. Some centres are nurse-led, some GP-led, some offer a wide range of diagnostics while some provide much more limited services. Yet they are generally grouped under one definition, making it more complex for broader services such as 111 and alarm companies to provide confident signposting to patients. If these and other referrers are not confident in their knowledge of what is available, where and when, they will be less inclined to refer patients to these community-based services and opt to rely on more familiar services such as A&E and the ambulance service.<\/p>\n