Transcript Document

Clinical Senate Summit
10.09.14
A&E, Acute Medicine
and the Medical
Specialties
Dr. Andrew Foulkes
Medical Director Surrey and Sussex Area Team
The Changing Front Door
• Acute and Emergency services in the “future hospital” are
changing.
• Our patients rightly demand the provision of consistent, safe
& high quality medical services 7 days a week, and at all
times of the day and night.
• Early review by an experienced “front door” clinical decision
maker (usually and consultant in A+E Medicine or consultant
physician) improves outcomes.
Modern, sustainable front door
services require:
• standardised working
Medicine.
in depts. of Emergency and Acute
• a sustainable workforce, capable of always responding to surges
in demand.
• immediately accessible supporting services – ALWAYS including:
X -ray, ultrasound, CT scanning and labs services, critical care, &
specialist inpatient beds.
• if paediatrics, general surgery and orthopedics (or any
combination) are not immediately available on site, care pathways
must be in place which provide immediate management and safe
transfer of patients with severe illness or injury.
A+E Departments
• In all A+E departments consultants should be working on the
shop floor for a minimum of 16 hours a day, 7 days a week.
• In major centres, consultant presence should be for 24 hours
a day.
• Adequate, flexible-staffing levels must always be in place to
cope with surges in demand.
• A functioning network of emergency services must be
available to all patients and include: tertiary centres,
emergency medicine dept.(s), primary care, MIU’s, mental
and community health care teams, allied health and social
services.
Acute Medical Units
• Medical emergencies are most vulnerable immediately after
admission; consistently provided early consultant review improves
patient outcomes.
• All newly admitted medical patients should be managed in a
highly organised front door area (also called an “Acute Care
Hub”) and be always reviewed by a consultant within 12 hours of
admission.
• To deliver appropriately timed clinical review by an appropriately
skilled and experienced consultant, acute care hubs should be
staffed by a mix of acute and speciality medicine consultants and
their teams, with dedicated duties rostered together on
successive days.
Managing patient need – first time,
every time
• Early, front door consultant review, improves patient
outcomes for patients but must be based on need.
• Older patients with multiple comorbidities should have early
access to comprehensive geriatric assessment.
• All acute hospitals should have a dedicated on-site liaison
psychiatry service, 7 days a week, for 12 hours a day, with
appropriate access out of hours.
7 Days Acute and Specialty Services
• Acutely ill patients should receive the same care at
weekends and bank holidays as on a week day’s, with
consultant review, access to multi-professional staff and
diagnostic services available on a 7-day basis.
• There should be a consultant presence on wards over 7
days, to provide specialty-specific care whenever it is
required.
Selected References –
each included in the papers
•
Emergency Medicine Consultants: Workforce Recommendations, The College
of Emergency Medicine; 2010.
•
Royal College of Physicians. Acute care toolkit 2: high-quality acute care.
London: RCP, 2011.
•
Future hospital: caring for medical patients. A report from the Future Hospital
Commission to the Royal College of Physicians. London: Royal College of
Physicians, 2013.
•
Consultant Input in Acute Medical Admissions and Patient Outcomes in
Hospitals in England: A Multivariate Analysis Derek Bell et al, Published: April
17, 2013 (IIb)
•
Framework for Quality and Safety in the Emergency Department (2012):
International Federation for Emergency Medicine.