Saturday, 30 August 2014

Highlights of the Week - 29th August 2014

I'm based in Plymouth, but with a role across the whole of the CCG, seem to spend as much time now in Exeter as I do back in the Western Locality.  It means that both keeping in touch through phone calls and emails is critical and that the team in the Locality are running things really effectively.

The Locality Team goes from strength to strength with new additions that have really added to the skills and abilities and a sense of maturing of arrangements that have been in place for around 18 months.

The joining up with local authorities offers an even better opportunity; we do need to ensure though that we don't destabilise some of the effective systems and processes that are just bedding in.  It feels like we need to avoid the pitfall of those Premier League managers who have just bought in wonderful new talent, but are struggling to make the new, better team gel effectively.  Build on what works.  

Highlights of the Week - 29th August 2014 (@jeclo)

Highlights of the Week 1: Delighted to be asked to join the Plymouth Fairness Commission @plymfairness
Plymouth established a Fairness Commission led by Dame Suzi Leather and after an extensive period of evidence gathering, consultation and consideration, produced a final report.

The premise is simple: what does fairness mean in our society and in the City and how could we all be acting to make life fairer for all?  It clearly raises a whole series of issues, not least for the work of the public sector and the role of NHS within that.  Does making better access to mental health services easier because their is a particular need make society fairer or should we be trying to aim for people in Plymouth to only have the same need for services as elsewhere?

I am really looking forward to joining the Commission and spending time answering those questions and looking for actions.  The report is well worth a read and you can find it here: www.plymouthfairnesscommission.co.uk

Highlights of the Week 2: Strategic Risk Committee-embedding our risk and assurance processes to focus on strategic risk
We have worked really hard to created our Integrated Governance Reporting system within the CCG and I think we have a really good system emerging that reviews risk, highlights the emerging high risk issues and reports on those to the Boards that are responsible for ensuring actions are in place and we are acting to reduce risk, rather than just noting its presence.

With an organisation of the size of NEW Devon CCG, covering multiple providers and urgent care systems, it is important that we don't just deal effectively with individual risks, but that we also manage to pull the perspective back enough to take a strategic and high level view of the overall organisational issues.

The Strategic Risk Committee has this as its purpose: to ensure that our system of risk is well enough developed to be overseen by the Audit Committee and then to spend most time on the whole organisation view.  We made good progress this week and there is a real sense of the final few steps we need to take to have that fully embedded.

Highlights of the Week 3: New style staff briefing is well received. It is still commitment that really matters
We brief in five sites across the CCG.  We have struggled to make this happen each month, consistently - there are, after all, many pressures on our time.  The new process leads us through around 8-10 key issues, each with a short video presentation from the Chair or Chief Officer, followed by a discussion led by the presenting Director.

This format was well received, though we still need to make sure the language we use is understandable by all staff attending - for some the issues of system resilience are their daily vocabulary, for others, there is little contact with what that means.

Overall, though, I still think that it comes down to priority and commitment: what would have to compete in my diary to lead to me not being able to lead staff briefing?  I don't think it works if it is always handed over to deputies.  I am delighted that those who simply can't attend can now watch the video elements later, but ultimately I want all staff to really value staff briefing because of its content and the way we make it work.

Highlights of the Week 4: Board requested a deep dive in diagnostics-impressed by the presentation of our actions
In amongst all the targets that are routinely achieved within our health system - I think Devon is well served by the NHS and provides care in line or exceeding national expectation in most areas - there are some targets that are challenges and a few that have been a struggle for some time.

The diagnostic waiting times in our Locality are one of those targets and, after several months of being updated on the issue, the Locality Board requested a deep dive to fully understand the problem and to assure themselves that our actions are sound.

The presentation this week was really impressive.  Our Head of Commissioning clearly had a grip of all the issues at the level of individual types of diagnostic and impressed the Board with the level of understanding and the detail of the actions in place.

It feels like Plymouth Hospitals have worked really hard to make progress and that we are on the verge of a step change in achievement.  The next few weeks will enable us to see whether that is the case.

Highlights of the Week 5: Another productive discussion with @kcnnoaham-great to have real public health leadership in Plymouth
Kelechi Nnoaham has been in post in Plymouth as Director of Public Health for less than six months, but the impact of having a substantive DPH in post after an extended period of temporary arrangements has been significant.

At a personal level, I really enjoy spending time with Kelechi discussing the range of issues that impact on us both.  There are things we have a different perspective on - we spent some time this week talking about the role of the Health and Wellbeing Board around our alcohol strategy and investment - but it feels very positive to have a consistent force around the core role of Public Health within our community. 

There are some exciting pieces of work that Public Health are working on and no doubt I'll soon be commenting here and explaining the 4-4-54 plan.




You can read other blogs related to the work of the Western Locality of NEW Devon CCG
About our workplan: Western Locality Workplan
About our Locality business: Western Locality Business

Jerry Clough is Chief Operating Officer for Northern, Eastern and Western Devon Clinical Commissioning Group.  He is also Locality Managing Director for the Western Locality of the CCG covering Plymouth and the surrounding areas of South Hams and West Devon.

Previously Jerry has been a Chief Executive and Finance Director in the NHS before spending several years running his own business driving programmes of change and delivering executive coaching and team and Board development.

Monday, 25 August 2014

Highlights of the Week - 22nd August 2014

Back from a wonderful two weeks in Cyprus - a heat that forces relaxation and a slowing down of life; a perfect break and a great time with the four fifths of the family who were there


For regular readers of the blog, I can report that our dog is safe and despite some photos posted on Facebook by "friends" who implied menace, Jasper enjoyed his 2 weeks in a house full of other four legged playmates.

And my daughter had an amazing trip to Tanzania and managed, with the help of neighbours, to return without us being here to meet her.  In fact, better than that, she set up our new broadband service, desperate as she was to be back on line with her friends, did some washing and, most impressively, fixed the boiler when there was no hot water (It was one of the more comedy moments of our holiday as I was trying to explain to her how to lie on your back under the boiler, turn two taps to top up the water, whilst I was eating dinner in a beautiful taverna).

But surely, first week back blues? It has certainly been a busy week, but beautiful Devon welcomed us back and, as ever, there are always highlights amongst the workload


Highlights of the Week - 22nd August 2014 (@jeclo)

Highlights of the Week 1: The babysitters were brilliant; last week's blog was the most read ever-is that good?
Thanks to everyone who got involved in keeping the blog running over the last 2 weeks; I really enjoyed reading it in the sun and, from feedback, the team got a feel for how positive the experience can be.  I especially found last week's piece on the tragic death of Robin Williams and the issues linked to mental health really interesting.

And it seems lots of other people did too - last week's blog received more page views than any other one I have written.  The good part of my brain is delighted and it is exactly the outcome I would have wanted. The ego part, may have preferred that one of my thoughtful pieces previously would have achieved such acclaim!

But it has led to a number of discussions in the Locality and CCG about communication and the role that a blog can play in that.  It also has a role  in the life of the writer - the act of writing and remembering highlights definitely changes how I view a week and how to bring closure at the end of 5 days of turmoil.  We'll see how many page views there are this week!

Highlights of the Week 2: BCF-Lots and lots of issues and work, but the focus is helpful
We have two BCFs to complete, one for Plymouth and one for Devon (where we work alongside South Devon and Torbay CCG). The latest guidance and change of emphasis only ramps up the level of complexity and the scale of the work effort both in this completion phase and, of course, for the delivery of a nationally set target of a 3.5% reduction in emergency activity.

We have redoubled our efforts this week with some additional support helping us to refresh our strategic narrative and the schemes that will underpin delivery.  We assessed ourselves as having low confidence in achieving all the targets in the BCF - we believe this is a realistic assessment at this moment - and this means that our two BCFs figure within 7 in the south of England receiving additional external support and scrutiny.

All the different programmes we are working on interlink - so the BCF aspirations clearly fit within our work on integration and form part of the working with our "Local NHS Futures - transforming care in Devon and Plymouth" programme.  This makes things slower initially, but the week on BCF does point to am emerging clarity of vision, ambition and detail.

Highlights of the Week 3: We need a Programme Director for "Local NHS Futures". Conversations are encouraging
In the last couple of hours before I went on leave the Programme Director that we thought we had secured didn't materialise.  We desperately need this post to steer the programme over the next 6 months and to provide clear leadership across the community, so it was a real disappointment.

This week was therefore 5 further conversations with potential candidates and it feels like  we will quickly be able to find a key leader to take on the role.  The blend of skills are important; we need someone who has the expertise to run a complex programme office, where the complexity is heightened by the reliance on capacity within each organisation as well as a central office function.

We also need someone who has the presence to command respect from the range of senior leaders across the health and social care system and broker solutions to wicked problems.  More positive and hopeful again this week

Highlights of the Week 4: Another meeting to agree a process to ramp up our work on financial recovery
We need to ramp up our efforts on financial recovery - as discussed here previously, we are carrying too much financial risk and the actions we have in place will fall short of achieving the level of change and savings we need.

It is hard to think of new ways to save money, but we have no choice.  In previous incarnations of commissioning, such as District Health Authorities or PCTs, we would have looked across all of the budgets - such as direct provision, public health, primary care, capital and joint spend with local authorities - and found offsetting savings.  These approaches just aren't available to CCGs.

The meeting this week did describe a new emphasis for our work and an approach that will both encourage and demand more input from across all parts of the organisation - it felt like a useful and purposeful way forward.  We need to balance that with maintaining staff commitment and engagement.

Highlights of the Week 5: Joint Health and Social Care development group in Devon shows areas with potential
And the bit that keeps making more sense that most other things I get involved in, is the work we are doing with two local authorities on joining up commissioning and provision.  

This week we were discussing our approaches to community services, Strategic Resilience groups and we spent a good amount of time  looking at the current state of the personal care market, where the Council struggles in some parts of Devon to source enough capacity to meet demand, within the tight cost envelopes that they work to.

It was another area where it feels like we could do something together that would get better outcomes. Most importantly, the quality of the relationships between us that allow those discussions to happen go from strength to strength.


Busy then and managed to get involved in pouring ice cold water over my head - welcome home!



You can read other blogs related to the work of the Western Locality of NEW Devon CCG
About our workplan: Western Locality Workplan
About our Locality business: Western Locality Business

Jerry Clough is Chief Operating Officer for Northern, Eastern and Western Devon Clinical Commissioning Group.  He is also Locality Managing Director for the Western Locality of the CCG covering Plymouth and the surrounding areas of South Hams and West Devon.

Previously Jerry has been a Chief Executive and Finance Director in the NHS before spending several years running his own business driving programmes of change and delivering executive coaching and team and Board development.

Saturday, 16 August 2014

Highlights of an NHS Week - 15th August 2014

Highlights of an NHS Week  -  15th August 2014


I can't imagine that anyone has not heard of the death of Robin Williams this week; either from the news itself of his suicide or the controversy surrounding the media coverage of the story.  Ask anyone in their mid-40s and they are very likely to have at least one film or programme featuring or starring Williams they love; whether it be in the early days in Mork and Mindy which I used to love watching on a Saturday evening as a child or in the really moving Awakenings.  My step-daughter, who is in her mid-20s, loved Jumanji and Mrs Doubtfire and my teenage girls have grown up recognising and loving him in Night at the Museum and as the voice of the genie in Aladdin.  My personal favourite is Good Morning Vietnam - fantastic soundtrack!

Driving to work this week I listened to a moving discussion on the Today programme featuring Adrian Strain, whose 34-year-old son had recently taken his own life. He reflected on the fact that most people knew very little about mental illness and as a parent he always worried about whether he could have done more.
The facts about mental health problems speak for themselves:

·           1 in 4 people will experience some kind of mental health problem in the course of a year
·           Mixed anxiety and depression is the most common mental disorder in Britain
·           About 10% of children have a mental health problem at any one time
·           Suicides rates show that British men are three times as likely to die by suicide than British women
·           Self-harm statistics for the UK show one of the highest rates in Europe: 400 per 100,000 population
·           Only 1 in 10 prisoners has no mental disorder

This statistics, alongside all of the media coverage this week prompted me to reflect on what we are doing as a service to support people with mental illness and the promotion of mental health within the CCG and this became the inspiration behind this week's first highlight.


Highlight of the Week 1 -  Inspiration for this week's blog

Parity of Esteem describes a five year strategy by supporting mental health patients through improved choice, better physical healthcare for people with serious mental illness and better crisis care.  

In the CCG we are working with our mental health providers to implement this strategy and key elements of service development and improvement are being driven forward.  In addition, we are working with our colleagues in the criminal justice system to provide to people in custody and we are one of ten national pilots to provide CPNs in police call centres at critical points in time.

We are joint funding additional psychiatric liaison posts in acute host’s sites and working hard with our providers to improve access to psychological therapies.

Highlight of the Week 2 – Western SLT away-day

So despite it being the middle of August, in the past a quieter time of year for the NHS, the pace of work hasn't really let up.  I love the Locality SLT away-days for some of the reasons I mentioned last week - time to think and reflect but I found myself, for the first time ever this week wondering if I could spare the time to attend with a significant number of deadlines looming and the promise of a day off on Friday!  However, I went and I'm glad I did.

We were fewer in number at this session, facilitated brilliantly by the lovely Kathy Toogood, and this meant we could get into some really detailed discussion about the Locality work plan.  We used our thinking rounds, focused on our strengths as a team and worked through the GROW model in order to determine how best to create the conditions for success for our teams.   

I met my deadlines, have spent a great day with my girls on my day off and also had the privilege of some space and time for me professionally.  Great result!
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Highlight of the Week 3 – Board development

We have a relatively new Board in Western and the Board will be even newer in September with the arrival of our newly elected Board member, Dr Tom Davies.  Every two months we have a Board development session to support their learning of the key issues in commissioning and how, as a Board, they hold our Locality to account.  

This week's session focused on urgent care and the CCG Strategy - what does the CCG's 5-year strategy mean to them as a Board?  How do our commissioning intentions flow from the strategy and into our locality workplan? And how will we know that we're delivering what we set out to achieve?  We had a really productive discussion and it was great to see the Board challenging our work plan and being clear about their involvement.


Highlight of the Week 4 –   Stepping up and giving something back to the service

We are lucky to have a significant number of young people working in our organisation, particularly in our referral support service, many of whom have joined us as apprentices.  This week two members of the service team approached me to see if there were any developmental opportunities in commissioning.  In a nutshell, they will be released for a few hours a week to begin to experience the world of commissioning and the Locality team will support their personal development and learning in the hope that we start to give back some of what the NHS has given us over the years in terms of developmental opportunities.

Highlight of the Week 5 – Who said August was quiet!

August, so often an opportunity to catch up, reflect on those manic days gone by and planning for those to come.   Not so it would seem this year!

As another hectic and challenging week passes by with everything other than “business as usual” commandeering time, the ability to observe, respond and reflect on the impact of those things seems a necessary skill of anyone working in the NHS today – commissioner, provider or volunteer!

“I can’t change the direction of the wind but I can adjust my sails to always reach my destination”    Jimmy (James) Dean  


Happy sailing!



DRSS Summer Blog número dos                                                                 


The work men are finally here!

Fourteen months after we moved into Bridge House, work has finally started on making the building more suitable for disabled access.  The car park’s fine, you can get in and out of the building ok and there’s a disabled loo, but it’s a two storey building, without a lift and the main meeting room is upstairs on the first floor.

Sadly installing a lift (inside, outside or stair lift) is either impractical due to infrastructure reasons or would require some serious financial investment.   So, we are moving all the meeting rooms downstairs and creating more office space on the first floor to ensure that everyone can attend every meeting they need to.

It’s taken a long time, and some serious frustration, to get to this point.  We’re not looking forward to the inevitable disruption of running a contact centre whilst the builders are in, but they are being incredibly accommodating and are working later shifts to avoid our busiest periods. Finger’s crossed things won’t be too bad!

Apologies and thanks to all our staff and visitors with disabilities – sorry it’s been such a long journey and a huge thank you for your patience and understanding.  We’re nearly there!!


DRSS Highlight of the week 1 – Staff surveys, the power of listening

Our staff survey results weren’t great last year and we’re really keen to understand and address the issues.  We also want to give everyone the opportunity to share their ideas and comments and see how we help deliver the 5 CCG pledges.

How do you engage with everyone in a way that makes them want to speak up? Feedback and gathering feedback is something that can be quite hard, it’s very individual.

After much deliberation the DRSS Project Delivery Team gate crashed several small team meetings.  We sat down with around 8 people at a time and we LISTENED to everything they had to say (using the 5 CCG pledges as a guide). It was a wonderful eye opener, listening is a very powerful tool and skill which felt quite liberating. We normally listen in order to respond, to provide answers, to give explanation, in DRSS we are trouble shooters by nature and we want to be able to help but this time we guided others to find the answers for themselves. Listening found a new power in DRSS but it doesn’t mean a lot unless we do something with the information we have learnt.

All this information is being collated and will be fed into the CCG Staff Survey Action Planning Group and their action plan.

DRSS Highlight of the week 2 – Anyone got that holiday feeling?

You may have noticed that holiday season has come to the NHS.  The out of offices seem to talk to each other more often than we do!

Rota-ing is turned into a fine art and clinicians are suddenly thin on the ground; no-one is around to pick up those all-important queries and yet we still seem to have deadlines looming. 

On the bright side, we’re catching up on our emails and are in the office more to do those jobs that have been propping up the ‘to do’ list for a while!!  Shame the stream of patients being referred doesn’t seem to be following the same dip in activity!

We can’t complain though, the constant supply of exotic holiday goodies, sweets and treats is keeping morale up for those of us left behind!

DRSS Highlight of the week 3 – Difficult conversations

Difficult conversations, something best avoided or tackled head on?  We get to have quite a few of them every day.  In our business they’re unavoidable, if not always terribly comfortable.

As providers struggle to meet ever increasing demand on their services there is an inevitable impact on waiting times.  ‘Six-year high for hospital waiting lists’ read the headlines this week.

On the ground, this results in fewer and fewer appointments being made available on Choose and Book as hospitals use every ‘spare’ slot to keep the ship afloat and avoid fines and bad press as a ‘failing hospital’.  Fewer new appointments mean more patients ringing DRSS for appointments that just don’t exist (why ring an appointments line when they have no appointments?).  So it’s onto a waiting list for them and choice of date and time usually go out the window as there is no choice available.

As gatekeeper of commissioned pathways and commissioning policies all referrals are screened, flagged with the on-site GP Referral Facilitator for clinical input, and returned to practices when they don’t meet the agreed criteria.  Whilst this might push up the quality of referrals and reduce unnecessary trips to hospital, for patients in pain (and worried about their health) it’s not usually the outcome they’re expecting, or wanting.  They don’t see what their GP has written in the referral letter; often it differs considerably to what the patient thinks. What is deemed ‘low priority’ or ‘cosmetic’ in the wider scheme of things is anything but to the person living with the condition.

The highlight for us is the commitment and energy that the team bring to these situations, which will surely get harder as the local NHS works towards financial recovery.

DRSS Highlight of the week 4 – Kernow CCG

Kernow CCG recently started a review of the local referral services - DRSS and the Kernow Referral Management Service (RMS) in Truro.  They want to ensure that patients and practices in East Cornwall receive a comparable service to the rest of Cornwall and that the service offers good value for money.

A team from Cornwall (including clinical, patient, practice and CCG representatives) spent an afternoon with us in Plymouth, learning more about our working practices and spending time with the team, before sending a report to the East Cornwall Locality Board. 

We are delighted that the CCG have confirmed their decision to continue their working relationship with us and look forward to greater collaboration, new ideas and ways of working with our colleagues across the Tamar.

DRSS Highlight of the week 5 – Time to reflect

Thank you Jerry for going on holiday.  Obviously we’re missing you a lot, but we’ve had great fun with your blog! 

We usually work at such a pace, on a myriad of different things (generally all at the same time), that we don’t often (or ever) pause to reflect on the highlights.  We’re just not very good at that sort of thing. It’s usually straight onto the next job, the next patient, the next issue. 

Being sandwiched between primary and secondary care, as part of a decidedly imperfect system, makes us a very good target when things go wrong with referrals.  It’s understandable, we know it’s not usually true, but it does rather tend to get us down. 

Taking the time out to chat with each team about what’s made a difference to them this week has been a bit of a revelation – heart-warming and re-affirming.  It has made us incredibly proud of our service and the work we do.  It’s not perfect, but it is full of hard working people who genuinely care about getting patients the right appointments or care.

We really should do more of this reflecting in the future as it has made things much more fun. 

We thought we’d sign off with the words of Peter Drucker:


“Follow effective action with quiet reflection.  From the quiet reflection will come even more effective action.”



We hope you've enjoyed the blog over the last 2 weeks - normal service resumes next week on Jerry's return!    

Saturday, 9 August 2014


Highlights of an NHS Week - 8th August

So Jerry’s away, what can we do with his blog?!?!  Sharons Matson and Williams have been entrusted with this precious item!


We have been left with a clear set of instructions – clear that is, if you understand blog terminology and Twitter.  Jerry’s parting message was “Enjoy, and babysit well!”  In other words, don’t mess it up!!! 


We have seen a few photos of JC and the family; they seem to be having a good time.  Holiday reading material however seems of questionable quality and taste.  Hilariously we have also seen some photos of the Clough’s dog being “looked after” by neighbours and a promise to only return him if Ouzo is brought back!





So when looking after a blog, one finds oneself really reflecting on what’s gone on in the week.  What is worthy of publishing?  What is worthy of tweeting?  At some point, panic sets in that there will be nothing worth sharing.  However, the panic eventually subsides and some moments of brilliant experience emerge.  Here are this week’s.


Highlights of the Week 1 – Co-ordinating a response for national funding


The Western Locality are co-ordinating the CCG’s contribution to schemes to be funded by a national challenge fund.  As is often the case, the rules are prescriptive, the time-scales terribly short and clashing with summer holidays when many people that need to contribute are themselves, on holiday.  Trying to co-ordinate a series of proposals across 124 practices, ensuring that the schemes they put forward demonstrate value for money and will deliver the programme’s ambitions and objectives is a challenge but this week, we have the real sense that we will extend patient access to primary care and genuinely test some new models of care over the next six months.


Highlights of the Week 2 – The complexity of the urgent care system


Our Urgent Care Partnership met this week.  The agenda was full – Better Care Fund, performance and service demands, delayed transfers of care, learning from Operation Springback and a discussion about our Strategic Resilience Planning were just some of the key items for discussion by senior personnel from a range of organisations.  We had some fantastic challenge and input from our secondary and primary care clinicians and wider members of our community.  We have committed to really “test” our resilience plan so that we can demonstrate a real sense of confidence in the plan that will underpin the “winter” period and we agreed to really focus on ensuring that patients receive high quality services in care in the right setting, at the right time, rather than experiencing preventable delays.  The meeting overran slightly but it was worth it for the thought-provoking debate.


Highlights of the Week 3 – Facebook – some elements of brilliance


Anyone who has a Facebook account will be used to seeing photos, jokes, news feeds and random adverts popping up on their timeline.  This week, this appeared on mine:


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This made me pause and think; think how often people genuinely stop, listen and think.  In the Western locality, we have been using Nancy Klein’s wonderful “Thinking Environment” for over a year now.  Personally, I find that using some of the techniques, active listening, rounds and incisive questions, hugely calming and they generate a sense of peacefulness for me.  On a number of occasions, in a large meeting with a complex agenda, where there is a risk of some people not being heard or certain people dominating the conversation, I request that we use the thinking environment to steady the level of noise, the risk of conversations crashing into each other and ensuring that everyone gets a chance to speak and that we get the most out of our expensive and increasingly precious time.  


We’ve been using the Thinking Environment with our wider Locality teams and stakeholders at our Big Events; the third of which was held a few weeks ago.  This week, I wrote up the product of the Big Listen from a few weeks ago where people tell the Senior Leadership Team what’s important to them and the SLT really, really listen to what is said (without hesitation, repetition or duplication!).  There are some real strengths in what’s happening in both the Locality and the wider CCG.  Some of the feedback is set out below:

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Highlights of the Week 4 –   Simon Stevens visits Devon


Simon Stevens NHS England's CEO made his inaugural visit to Devon this week.  He was visiting Dartmouth Hospital to listen to local voluntary organisations and to see local community services in action.


In a county that already subscribes to the value of using community services, resources and assets recently set out at the NHS confederation conference, it was great for local leaders of health and social care organisations to have the opportunity  to talk about the wider health needs of the local population and the challenges at hand. 


Dr Tim Burke, NEW Devon's Chair was delighted to meet with Simon Stevens and glad to see local voluntary sector organisations receiving the recognition they deserve.  They provide such a significant part in supporting local communities across Devon and we have high expectations that this will only increase as the joint strategy signed up to across the health economy moves from plan to implementation.



Highlights of the Week 5 –  Strong partnerships in action

Since March, the demand for emergency care services has risen by about 10%.  We are not alone, the rest of the country is also reporting increases in demand but what makes us slightly different in Devon is that we introduced NHS 111 in March.  The natural assumption is, not unreasonably, that the cause must be 111.  It isn't - if only life were that simple!


All organisations in Devon have worked really hard to get to the root cause of the demand increase - none more so than the service provider themselves.  Their performance is amongst, if not, the best in the country; 95% of patients surveyed would use the service again; the evidence reviewed today at a summit chaired by the CCG shows that the cause is not 111 but is a combination of many facets in our health and care system.  


The debate in the room was hugely positive and constructive.  A robust action plan will be put in place with some small tests of change run ASAP to test their efficacy before 'winter' begins.  It was great that the emphasis was on finding the best solutions for patients and the wider system and not on blame.  Some fantastic collaborative work which can only bode well for the Futures programme in our system.
 
And as promised a bonus Summer blog from DRSS…
It’s a very busy time at DRSS.  Not only are we changing all of our processes so that we have a single way of working across both of our sites in Newton Abbot and Plymouth, and getting a new patient (PAS) system; we are also developing a new database system to feed all the reporting and monitoring requirements of the service.  On top of this we also have all 3 of our major national IT systems being replaced: NHSnet – the NHS Spine, NHSmail and Choose and Book (to be known as e-Referrals), in addition to a new CCG wide IT system, DELT, and a new outsourcing contract for all patient letters – all in the next 5 months!

Whilst all this is going on we will still support approximately 6,000 people per week with their physical and mental health referrals. These come from a range of sources including GPs, opticians, dentists and extended scope practitioners (physiotherapists and podiatrists).

We will also be working hard to support the CCG with their plans for financial recovery as part of the NHS Futures programme, particularly focusing on the demand management.

Never heard of us?  Who we are and why we exist…
Devon Referral Support Services (DRSS) is a referrals contact centre which supports individuals in getting the right advice, care or treatment in a timely manner, and we are very passionate about this!  We can’t do this work alone though and work closely with a wide range of people, groups and organisations within our local communities, and further afield, to build collaborative, sustainable systems and solutions within the context of local CCG priorities.

We also provide a range of services that complement and support the contact centre:
  • facilitation of service and commissioning redesign across Devon to address financial recovery (such as demand management). 
  • managing localised pages of the National Directory of Services (DoS) to ensure the database reflects current service provision in Devon, Cornwall and Isle of Scilly.
  • managing 18 community clinics, and booking the physiotherapy service in  South Devon.
DRSS are part of the Collaborative Business Service arm of NEW Devon CCG and provide services for a number of organisations including the 3 local CCGs, NHS England and Devon Partnership Trust for a population of 1.3 million people. 

DRSS Highlights of the week 1 -  Improving the recruitment process
Nearly 10% of the CCG workforce is either a current or former apprentice and earlier this year the CCG was recognised as being Apprentice Employer of the Year by ETS.  

Since 2010 DRSS have employed nearly 60 apprentices (45% of our workforce). We’re really proud that 44 of these apprentices are still working with us in some capacity and that most of the others still work in the local NHS. Working with ETS to develop an apprenticeship programme tailored to the requirements of a business admin role within a NHS referral contact centre has been a fantastic way to ensure that all their learning is relevant, topical and supportive.  

With so many of our team joining us through apprenticeships it has been important to get the recruitment part right, so we’ve been recently asking candidates, both successful and unsuccessful, for their thoughts on our process and have used this feedback to make some changes.

This is the first interview for some candidates so the ‘traditional’ process of a face to face interview doesn’t really give them the best opportunity to shine and share their potential.  How many times have people stormed the interview process but failed to live up to expectations, or frustrated us by being extremely capable of doing a job but being so nervous that they really don’t interview well at all?

To try and get a rounder picture of candidates (and for candidates to get a rounder picture of DRSS as a potential employer) we have now introduced an icebreaker session which the interviewers join in with, a group exercise, a telephone test, a letter test and a chance to meet current apprentices and chat to them informally.

This may all sound rather daunting, but we’ve now used this in 3 rounds of interviews, the latest last week, and feedback has been great.  The candidates felt they had a good understanding of what the job entailed, and we had more time to spend with everyone to get a better sense of their strengths, values and interpersonal skills, which may not be picked up during the ordinary interview. 

Our current apprentices have also really appreciated the opportunity to give something back and chat to new potential staff members.

DRSS Highlight of the week 2  -  Communication creativity
Communication is always a tricky thing.  No matter what we seem to do people don’t feel that they know what’s going on.  Sometimes we can feel that we repeat ourselves (and bore people) endlessly and yet people still don’t think they know what’s going on.

One area we’ve been thinking a lot about is how we communicate with GP practices. We have a bi-monthly bulletin (monthly if there’s a lot going on) which sometimes feels like it’s full of provider information.  It doesn’t always fulfil its potential to share information about our service and yet we have so much information to share.

This edition feels like we might have turned a creative corner!  In fact, we’re really rather proud of it and are feeling energised by providing something we feel is useful.  It’s available here so have a look and see what you think! (You’ll need access to NHSnet to see it though).

DRSS Highlight of the week 3 -  The impact of health literacy
Dealing with six thousand referrals per week means that we are in contact with a whole range of people, with a whole range of needs.  Equality and Diversity are part and parcel of our work so we were thrilled to meet with the CCG Leads for Learning Disabilities for some really helpful discussions about how 'health literacy' issues can limit access to healthcare due to impaired comprehension, difficulties in communicating, lack of assertiveness and their dependency on carers.

We are really looking forward to working with the team to see how we can better support people with LDs or dementias by reviewing our letters, phone scripts and patient surveys to ensure they are ‘Easy Read’.  
We know it’s going to take a work of art to get our patient letter right for everybody (we’ve already had conversations with our practice manager group on how to do this) but we are up for the challenge!

DRSS Highlight of the week 4 -  Welcoming more primary care practitioners to the team
As a clinically led service we have a team of practicing GPs from across Devon and East Cornwall who, with their clinical knowledge, provide general advice and support to the team.  They are pivotal to supporting the implementation of commissioning policies, clinical referral guidelines (aka pathways) and potential upgrades to urgent or 2ww priorities.

This week we have appointed 6 new GPs to join the team to help ensure we have clinical cover each day, especially over the holiday periods.  

We have found that the GP role is a vital link between practices and providers, building rapport and relationships that inform and shape how the service develops and so we are pleased to welcome some new faces and new energy to the team J.

DRSS Highlight of the week 5 – Take a little time to be kind
Kindness – although we’re all the centre of our own universes not everything is about us as individuals.  Taking minute can have the most profound impact on people and as a contact centre we have dealings with thousands of people each week, all with their own stories.  

This week we booked an appointment for an 84 year old gentleman.  He asked if he could take a further minute to play a song on his cello.  He had been a member of an orchestra and didn’t get to play for people anymore.  The call was put on speakerphone and he played ‘The Swan’ to the team.  Having someone to play to again made him very happy and brightened the team’s day too.

Another, rather distressed, patient called to find out information about his referral for a suspected cancer.  He’d been around the houses a bit, and although his referral hadn’t come through the referral service just the fact that someone investigated for him reassured him that he could carry on his day as normal.  The consultant responded within the hour giving him an appointment and peace of mind that he hadn’t been ‘lost in the system’.

Knowing that taking just a minute of our time, no matter how busy we are, can make such a difference to people is a real bonus to us and can be rewarding for everyone.  In the words of Aesop:
‘No act of kindness, no matter how small, is ever wasted’.