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PATIENTS TO BE AT THE HEART OF A&E AND AMBULANCE CARE

 

Changing performance measures to improve patient outcomes

Accident and emergency departments and ambulance trusts will in future assess their performance on what matters most to patients – quality, experience and patient outcomes, Health Secretary Andrew Lansley announced today.

The move comes amid concerns that parts of the NHS feel pressured into meeting process-led targets for A&E and ambulances that distort priorities and lack any clinical justification.

From April next year the current four hour waiting time standard for A&E will be replaced with a set of eight new clinical quality indicators that promote quality and patient safety.  Time will still be measured as part of the new clinical quality indicators as it is a significant risk factor for treating patients, but crucially time will no longer be the only factor. For example the new indicators will include: 

• ‘time to full initial assessment’ - providing an incentive to assess patients quickly so that clinicians can prioritise the patients that require rapid treatment instead of simply who has been waiting the longest; and
• ‘unplanned re-attendance’ - encouraging the NHS to look at whether patients receive the best care first time round so that repeat visits to A&E are avoided.
The A&E indicators have been developed jointly by Professor Matthew Cooke, the National Clinical Director for Emergency Care, together with senior clinicians in the College of Emergency Medicine and the Royal College of Nursing.
At the same time Peter Bradley, National Ambulance Director, has been working with Professor Cooke to develop indicators for ambulance services.  The two sets of indicators have been designed to complement each other.

The Category B, 19-minute response time target for ambulances (serious but not immediately life-threatening) will be replaced with a set of 11 new clinical quality indicators. This will improve the quality and safety of care by focussing on those groups of patients with the greatest clinical need rather than according to the categorisation of call alone.
Ambulance services will still be required to respond to 75% of all category A (immediately life-threatening) patients within 8 minutes and, where needed, to provide transport to these calls within 19 minutes.

The clinical quality indicators have been designed to look at the whole patient care pathway and to encourage discussion in the local NHS about how care can be improved.  The aim is to promote a culture of continuous improvement involving clinicians, managers and commissioners.

Health Secretary, Andrew Lansley, said:

“The new measures will focus on the quality of care and what matters most to patients - giving a better indication of patient care than the previous process-led targets ever could.

“By putting patient safety and outcomes at the heart of the health service, A&E departments and ambulance trusts can demonstrate they provide safe and effective clinical care in a timely manner rather than meeting a specific target. This is not about hitting targets – importantly, it is about giving the NHS more freedom to deliver quality care.
 
“Patients should be able to expect a 24/7 accessible and safe emergency care service which is integrated across the NHS. By shifting the focus to a range of indicators we will ensure that patients receive the best possible care, in the right place, at the right time.

“I want to thank Professor Cooke and Peter Bradley for leading this work along with the Royal College of Nursing and the College of Emergency Medicine for their valuable contribution. This collaboration means that in future emergency care will combine clinical outcomes with patient experience, safety and timeliness of care.”

John Heyworth, President of the College of Emergency Medicine said:

“The College of Emergency Medicine welcomes this announcement. The introduction of measures to ensure timeliness of patient care in the Emergency Department and, crucially, time related incentives to maintain patient flow from the Emergency Department, will provide tangible improvements for our patients.

“The combination of measures of quality and time will drive the continuing improvement towards the world class standard of Emergency Medicine which the public expect and deserve. This is an opportunity to transform emergency care to ensure the Emergency Department becomes the jewel in the crown of the NHS in which the public can place their trust and confidence at any time of the day or night.”


ENDS
NOTES TO EDITORS

1. Full details of the A&E clinical quality indicators can be found in the implementation guidance issued by the Department at www.XXX.gov.uk.  A similar publication for the ambulance clinical quality indicators will follow in the New Year.

2. You can view the department’s Quarterly Monitoring of A&E data for monitoring the four hour standard at http://www.dh.gov.uk/en/Publicationsandstatistics/Statistics/index.htm
Data on performance against the ambulance service response time targets is available at
http://www.ic.nhs.uk/statistics-and-data-collections/audits-and-performance/ambulance

3. Health Secretary Andrew Lansley visited Chelsea and Westminster A&E department in London on Monday 13 December. You can obtain photos of the visit from the Press Association.

4. For more information, please contact the Department of Health press office on 020 7210 5221.


LIST OF A&E INDICATORS

1. Percentage of patients with certain ambulatory care conditions admitted
2. Unplanned re-attendance rate
3. Total time spent in the A&E department
4. Left without being seen rate
5. Service experience
6. Time to initial assessment
7. Time to treatment
8. Consultant sign-off

LIST OF AMBULANCE INDICATORS

1. Outcome from acute ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI)
2. Outcome from cardiac arrest – return of spontaneous circulation
3. Outcome from cardiac arrest - survival to discharge
4. Outcome following stroke for ambulance patients
5. Proportion of calls closed with telephone advice or managed without transport to A&E (where clinically appropriate)
6. Re-contact rate following discharge of care (i.e. closure with telephone advice  or following treatment at the scene)
7. Call abandonment rate
8. Time to answer calls
9. Service Experience
10. Category A 8 minute response time
11. Time to treatment by an ambulance-dispatched health professional

In addition, ambulance trusts will continue to be monitored against the 19 minute transportation standard for Category A calls

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