I play cricket - or more accurately, for a number of years I used to play cricket to an impressively average standard. I have now retired, though there is a nagging suspicion that a few games for a local village team last year might turn in to something more substantial this year. There are plenty around Keynsham (near Bristol), the Eden Valley in Cumbria and in North Yorkshire who will attest to the fact that the world is not missing much and no one has anything to fear about a sudden return.
I have had moments on a cricket field where I have been nervous or suddenly had the experience of waking up to the fact that this is a game played with a hard ball that can hurt, but the fear of injury has never got beyond a few broken noses, fingers or in my case thumb. The news this week of the tragic death of Phil Hughes, an Australian test cricketer, after being hit by a bouncer during a game of cricket is therefore a complete shock.
There is something about this kind of incident, especially in a game where it is completely unexpected, that I do find really impacts on me. The social media viral collection of photos of cricket bats in his memory have been touching and poigniant and do go to show that the tradgedy has touched people from all round the world.
My faith in medicine is clear - I went to bed with the news that he was in critical condition in hospital and my certain expectation was that he would recover, it happens so often in situations like Michael Schumacher's, that I simply thought that the wonderful medical care and attention he would be receiving would find a way to save hime. I woke up to the news that he had died which I couldn't quite comprehend.
The wonders of modern medical care are all around us - from stories of premature babies thriving to the high profile accidents - and it sets our expectations. This week was a reminder that, in many ways my body and mind are fragile and, in sending condolences to the family who are suffering this week, I am very lucky with the health I have.
Highlights of the Week 1: £1.4m from the Transformation Challenge Award-another marker for our joint work with @PlymouthCC
It is always good to be successful in bidding for money, even better if it is a result of working in partnership and even better still if it supports the core purpose that we are working on. So really pleased that we have secured some funding that will help with the transition costs for our integration programmes and delighted that, whilst we struggle financially, there will be some resource that allows progress to be maintained.
Not that this money solves all of the challenges - we are getting to the point now where we are starting to feel the real operational risks; the risk register is moving from the worry of the strategic intent and making the big agreements to the detailed implementation of IT systems, payment mechanisms and VAT. But we have a real will to resolve issues and the joint commitment is really powerful as the challenges crystalise.
Highlights of the Week 2: Strengths based appraisal; what could be better than an hour and a half talking about me?
There are plenty of challenges around and the extent to which we are meeting them places a long shadow over any review of performance, team or personal. We are committed to a strengths based approach and that does make a difference to the nature of the conversation. So there is a reflection on the year that has gone, that would be fairly typical of any appraisal, but the identification of the areas where things have not gone to plan or where the outcomes haven't been at the level we would have wanted is different. The focus moves to the learning from those issues and the way that you will use your strengths over the next 12 months, rather than dwelling on deficits and inadequacies.
Highlights of the Week 2: Strengths based appraisal; what could be better than an hour and a half talking about me?
There are plenty of challenges around and the extent to which we are meeting them places a long shadow over any review of performance, team or personal. We are committed to a strengths based approach and that does make a difference to the nature of the conversation. So there is a reflection on the year that has gone, that would be fairly typical of any appraisal, but the identification of the areas where things have not gone to plan or where the outcomes haven't been at the level we would have wanted is different. The focus moves to the learning from those issues and the way that you will use your strengths over the next 12 months, rather than dwelling on deficits and inadequacies.
There is a lot for me to work on and I recognise the areas where I can make a bigger impact or alter the way in which I behave to produce better results, but it is certainly useful to go in to an appraisal just a few days after receiving an award!
Highlights of the Week 3: Area Team Assurance Meeting preparation-lots of KLOEs, but a robust process to pull all our information together
We have had a week of returns-more than usual that arrive on a Thrusday with a deadline for close of play on Friday included, this week, to set out our intended use of the private sector to help with the referral to treatment challenge and whether we have done everything we can on the dementia diagnosis rate target. But we were already working on a complex return on payment for additional activity in tranche 1 and 2 of the additional funding for referral to treatment times that consumed a signficant amount of finance and business intelligence resource.
Highlights of the Week 3: Area Team Assurance Meeting preparation-lots of KLOEs, but a robust process to pull all our information together
We have had a week of returns-more than usual that arrive on a Thrusday with a deadline for close of play on Friday included, this week, to set out our intended use of the private sector to help with the referral to treatment challenge and whether we have done everything we can on the dementia diagnosis rate target. But we were already working on a complex return on payment for additional activity in tranche 1 and 2 of the additional funding for referral to treatment times that consumed a signficant amount of finance and business intelligence resource.
We have received a report about our transformation schemes and management of savings that questions our level of resource in business intelligence and the need to focus it on recovery activity more directly. We agree with the concept, but it isn't easy to see how we make that happen when the emails with CAPITAL LETTER DEADLINES appear.
But in amongst all of that, we needed to produce a response to the key lines of enquiry in advance of our quarterly assurance meeting next week. And the programme office, contracting, finance, commissioning and business intelligence teams have all worked really well together to produce what I think (I'll let you know the feedback next week!) is a comprehensive and high quality set of papers. Or, put slightly differently, it is what I wanted us to produce, rather than me having to cover over gaps in a meeting for a return that we knew wasn't complete.
Highlights of the Week 4: Individuals at the Centre 2 Mentor call-is anything happening out there? Hold your nerve @timrobson07
We have 16 teams embarking on a new set of projects to drive forward tansformation of care pathways under the Individuals at the Centre 2 banner - the second year of our methodology of change. The process encourages the groups to become self managing teams and therefore the role of the mentors is to support and coach, but not to direct, even though they are members of the leadership team who are desperate to make the programme an even bigger success than last year.
Highlights of the Week 4: Individuals at the Centre 2 Mentor call-is anything happening out there? Hold your nerve @timrobson07
We have 16 teams embarking on a new set of projects to drive forward tansformation of care pathways under the Individuals at the Centre 2 banner - the second year of our methodology of change. The process encourages the groups to become self managing teams and therefore the role of the mentors is to support and coach, but not to direct, even though they are members of the leadership team who are desperate to make the programme an even bigger success than last year.
We had a mentor call to check-in with progress and the feedback was mostly that mentors haven't heard much from their teams and there wasn't a clear sense of any momentum gathering.
We concluded that we needed to believe in the process-all the data we get is learning and teams need to take responsibility for themselves. We can nudge and encourage (we send out a nudge every week - here is this week's),
but we do need the teams to feel the increase in urgency if they are two weeks away from the next module without a lot of action to showcase. In is clearly much more natural for us to intervene, spotting progress behind plan and to direct the improvement effort, but that won't help in the long term and it isn't the learning we want in this programme.
but we do need the teams to feel the increase in urgency if they are two weeks away from the next module without a lot of action to showcase. In is clearly much more natural for us to intervene, spotting progress behind plan and to direct the improvement effort, but that won't help in the long term and it isn't the learning we want in this programme.
So the message was to hold your nerve; the programme will deliver!
Highlights of the Week 5: Western Locality Board working strategically - integration and orthopaedics transformation to the fore
Another Locality Board that dealt with our in-year financial challenge and the integrated risk process that details the actions we are taking to mitigate issues such as stroke, A&E peformance, communciations with general practice and the follow-up backlog, but also focussed on major strategic decisions.
Highlights of the Week 5: Western Locality Board working strategically - integration and orthopaedics transformation to the fore
Another Locality Board that dealt with our in-year financial challenge and the integrated risk process that details the actions we are taking to mitigate issues such as stroke, A&E peformance, communciations with general practice and the follow-up backlog, but also focussed on major strategic decisions.
In particular this month we had a detailed review of our orthopaedic transformation, which places conservative management at the centre of the pathway with surgery seen as a failure; it is ambitious, offers a better outcome for patients and delivers on our vision to move resources towards prevention. Crucially, the whole pathway has been based on clinical leadership, involved all providers in our system and has had public and HealthWatch input.
Integration marked the next step in the programme with a recommendation to the Governing Body next week to approve the high level design of integrated commissioning with Plymouth City Council. Sometimes, we definitely get the right balance of attending to the now and working towards the future.
And so to the weekend and to enjoy time with the family, all fit and healthy; plenty to be thankful for.
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.
Integration marked the next step in the programme with a recommendation to the Governing Body next week to approve the high level design of integrated commissioning with Plymouth City Council. Sometimes, we definitely get the right balance of attending to the now and working towards the future.
And so to the weekend and to enjoy time with the family, all fit and healthy; plenty to be thankful for.
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.