David Colin-Thome
• National Clinical Director for Primary Care
• GP, Castlefields, Runcorn
• Honorary Professor,M.C.H.M, Manchester University
• Honorary Professor, School of Health, University of Durham
The P.M.’s Principles for the Public sector
• National Framework of Standards and Accountability
• Devolution to the Local Level
• Improved Rewards and Conditions of Employment (Flexibility, Incentives, Rewarding Success, Shedding Bureaucracy)
• More Choice, More Contestability
PCT
Manager of the local NHS
COMMISSIONING
• Service Delivery and Service Re-Design.
• Contract Management and Monitoring.
PPF 2003-6• Improving Access-Emergency Care,
Waiting, Booking, More Choice
• Clinical Priorities & Improving life chances for children
• Improving patients experience
• Reducing Health Inequalities
• X Government Drug Misuse programme
Policy
• Developing a Wider Range of Services in Primary Care
• GPs with Special Interests – 2004 Target
• At least 1 million outpatient appointments to be delivered in the community by 2006
Commissioning Primary Care
• nGMS• nPMS• nCommunity Pharmacy• LPS, PDS• ‘Liberating the talents’• Community Dentistry ‘Options for Change’• PwSI• Secondary to Primary care• Self care and self management
National ESPCTs may establish;
• Monitor anti-coagulation
• Care of the homeless
• Intra partum care
• IUCD fittings
• Minor injury service
• More specialised services for patients with Multiple Sclerosis.
• More specialised sexual health services
• Services for alcohol misusers
• Services for drug misusers
• Near patient testing
• Immediate and first response care
• Specialised care for depression
Local ES
PCTs may establish any number of LES. Pricing and specification will be negotiated locally. LES may not provide for funding in respect of any service provided as Essential,Additional,DES or NES unless that service is to a higher standard or different specification.
Clinical Resource Management
• Practice based incentives and budgets
• Case Management
• Assertive outreach
• Secondary to Ambulatory shift including PwSI
• Clinical Appropriateness
• Expert Patient
“General practitioners with special interests supplement their important generalist role by delivering a high quality, improved access service to meet the needs of a single PCT or group of PCTs.They may deliver a clinical service beyond the normal scope of general practice, undertake advanced procedures, or develop services. They will work as partners in a managed service not under direct supervision, keeping within their competencies. They do not offer a full consultant service and will not replace consultants or interfere
with access to consultants by local general practitioners.”
DH / RCGP Definition
PwSI Work Completed
• 1250 GPwSI
• Frameworks
• ‘Step by step’ advice document for PCT
• NwSI
• National Development Group
Initial Frameworks
• ENT• Coronary Heart
Disease• Echocardiography• Drug misuse
http://www.doh.gov.uk/pricare/gp-specialinterests
Modernising the Primary Care Workforce - ENT services
provided by GPsWI
• 30-40% of ENT patients can be seen by a GPwSI.
• Up to 20% of ENT patients seen by GPwSI are referred onwards to a consultant or surgical waiting list.
• DNA rates for GPwSI clinics are typically 1-2%.
• One GPwSI, holding a weekly clinic, can manage the relevant ENT workload generated by a population of 75,000.
• An established GPwSI, holding a weekly clinic, can perform 500 consultations per annum.
2003 frameworks produced
• Child protection• Dermatology• Drug misuse(revised)• Emergency care• Epilepsy• Headaches• Palliative care
• Respiratory medicine • Mental health• Sexual health• Diabetes• Care of older people• Musculo-skeletal
conditions(?soon)
Future Frameworks
• Public Health• CAMH• Genetics• ?Pain
http://www.doh.gov.uk/pricare/gp-specialinterests
Work in Progress
• AHPwSI
• ? Scientists
• ?Pharmacists
• ?Dentists
• ?Optometrists
• ?Midwives
• ?Practice Managers