Issue - meetings

Urgent Care

Meeting: 15/11/2018 - Health Scrutiny (Item 13)

13 Urgent Care pdf icon PDF 77 KB

For the Sub-Committee to participate in a workshop regarding the current status and plans for Urgent Care

Minutes:

Consideration was given to a progress report of the Director of Commissioning, Oldham Cares, on the development of plans for urgent primary care. The report also sought to inform the Sub-Committee of the winter planning progress for Urgent Care services in Oldham. This information followed a presentation that had been received by the Sub-Committee at its meeting on 3rd July 2018 on the draft Urgent Care Strategy.

 

The Chief Clinical Officer and the Managing Director, Oldham Cares, attended the meeting to present the information and to address the enquiries of the Sub-Committee.

 

It was reported that Accident & Emergency (i.e.: A&E) continued to support patients who required primary care services. The service was available 7 days a week from 11am until 11pm. Walk in centres continued to operate from 8am until 8pm and they would remain in place until an alternative offer was available in the community.  Work was in progress to develop Urgent Care Hubs as an alternative to the current walk in service offer. This would support urgent care demand in the community and work with a cluster model. Plans were in place to start an area pilot in Oldham in early 2019. The workforce had been identified and work was progressing on the IT element of the project. A data sharing agreement was already in place.

 

Another aspect of developing urgent care in the community to release pressure at A&E was the Visiting Service; this looked at a team of talents brought to residential settings to make decisions that, currently, were taken at A&E.

 

With regard to winter planning, the Sub-Committee was informed that, in order to manage the increased demand that had been experienced in December 2017, the plans for 2018/19 focussed on the following areas:

1.    Supply: provision of additional beds for adults and children, contingency plans for Christmas and Bank Holidays, community providers supporting discharge from hospitals, weekly reviews for patients who stayed in hospital longer than seven days. Focus on alternative ways of delivering discharges and patients’ choice.

2.    Capacity: maintain assessment capacity and bed availability to keep pace with emergency admission. Create bed capacity in the community. Work with families to assist children at home when this was feasible.

3.    Seasonal pressures: make plans for increased pressure on Mondays, Christmas and early January.  

 

Members sought and received clarification / commented on the following points:

-       Positive experience on triage and acute medical unit but care was at times inconsistent;

-       Future of Integrated Care Centres (ICC) – It was explained that the Walk in Centre was not a model for the future; every neighbourhood would try to bring health and social care expertise together around the patients.

-       Out of order x-ray machine at the ICC’s? – It was explained that the lack of sufficient resilience would be addressed.

-       Where urgent primary care services could be accessed in Oldham on Sundays? – It was explained that the seven day services moved around the various GP surgeries in the  ...  view the full minutes text for item 13