Hi everyone and welcome to the June 2017 Edition of the Surgery Newsletter.
This edition has a strong focus on the value of team work. Melinda Pascoe and Chrissie Crawford from the Ministry have been out to visit many of you over the last quarter and have not only come back to report on the fantastic work but the way teams are treating each other with respect and modelling the CORE values.
The last few months have been an extremely busy period for NSW Health. Despite increases in volume and the challenges of winter, the percentage of patients who have their surgery completed within their clinically recommended timeframe has increased.
The May Elective Surgery Access Performance (ESAP) Year to Date results are:
The total number of overdue elective surgery patients at the end of May 2017 was 7% less than it was in May 2016.
The most recent Bureau of Health Information Quarterly Report (January to March 2017) highlights included:
Note: These median wait times are all within the clinically recommended timeframe of 365 days.
These improvements are an outstanding achievement and a credit to the ongoing hard work and dedication of the many staff in the Districts and Networks. The ongoing efforts are well recognised by the Ministry.
Congratulations! Working hard together as a team with one vision truly wins in the end. Excellent work guys! Your hard work has truly paid off.
Elizabeth Wood
Executive Director, System Purchasing
On 8 May 2017, the surgery team at Lithgow Hospital enjoyed a development day consisting of education sessions, team bonding activities and time to celebrate their success together. The team at Lithgow was awarded first place by the Nepean Blue Mountains Local Health District for their project ‘Teamwork achieves amazing things’ - they improved on start times and even raised over $60,000 to help a fellow staff member in need! The team has met targets for elective surgery access performance and ensured all patients are treated within clinically recommended timeframes.
They were also highly commended for a range of other projects:
Reducing Perioperative Hypothermia in Lithgow which focused on why patients get hypothermia and prevention strategies
Streamlining processes in Lithgow Day Surgery Unit which looked at improving efficiencies and reducing DOS cancellations.
Melinda Pascoe and Chrissie Crawford were fortunate enough to be invited along to the day to deliver training and provide a state-wide surgery update. Your sincere efforts and hard work is indeed highly appreciated. You should be proud of yourselves. Congratulations to all! Keep up the good work.
In April 2017, Melinda Pascoe, Principal Policy Officer visited Wollongong Hospital to conduct training on the Waiting Time and Elective Surgery Policy for the Illawarra Shoalhaven Local Health District Surgery Team. Topics covered included:
If you would like some training in your Local Health District or Specialty Health Network on the above topics please contact Melinda Pascoe on (02) 9391 9557 or via email at mpasc@doh.health.nsw.gov.au
The patient’s current clinical priority category will determine the maximum days (cumulative) a patient can defer treatment:
The hospital/patient should confirm with the treating doctor if it is clinically appropriate for the surgery to be deferred for Category 1 (admission within 30 days) patients.
The hospital must record the reason for the deferral on the electronic waiting list and on the patient’s RFA.
No. During the leave period, no further patients should be added to the doctor’s waiting list unless approved by the District/Network Program Director of Surgery (Waiting Time and Elective Surgery Policy PD2012_012 - Section 8.Doctor’s Leave - Temporary and Permanent).
We understand that nurses, midwives and students can have health issues that could affect their capacity to work.
When you need support the Nurse & Midwife Support will provide confidential advice, assistance and referral. It is the first national telephone and online service of its kind in Australia.
To find out more about this service, please refer Nurse and Midwife support document.
Functionality optimisation is at the final stages.
EDWARD extract is underway with testing due to commence during the 1st week of July.
In order to meet Cerner Corporation’s deadline for the next Worldwide General Release in February 2018, the project is working towards having the Phase 1 and Phase 2 changes deployed into Production within SYS/SWS by early October. Meeting this deadline will allow for this functionality to be made available for roll-out to other Cerner PAS LHDs from February 2018.
An education session has been arranged for the afternoon of Thursday 6 July 2017. The Cerner Wait List Optimisation Project (CWLOP) team will be providing a demonstration of the new Wait List functionality proposed for Cerner.
The venue for the day will be Conference room 2, Level 5, NSW MoH, 73 Miller Street, North Sydney. For those unable to physically attend, the education session will be held via WebEx.
All those wishing to attend are required to RSVP to John Hallett by close of business Friday 30 June 2017 via email johal@doh.health.nsw.gov.au
Accelerating Implementation Methodology (AIM) is a practical guide to effectively managing change by overcoming personal and cultural barriers. AIM is about learning how to address or remove obstacles that might prevent you from delivering projects on time, on budget and within scope.
The Surgery AIM course focuses on surgery-specific projects and is aimed at any staff member who is involved in, or who would like to be involved in, change management initiatives.
Change Leaders, Project Managers, Training Managers and clinical/non-clinical staff.
Operating theatre efficiency, emergency surgery redesign and hip fracture management.
The next Surgery AIM course will run on Tuesday 19th and Wednesday 20th September 2017 in Chatswood.
Apply to the Accelerating Implementation Methodology course
The deadline for applications is Friday 28 July 2017.
For questions about the course and/or the application process, please contact:
Gavin Meredith02 9464 4644gavin.meredith@health.nsw.gov.au Sarah- Jane Waller02 9464 4728 sarahjane.waller@health.nsw.gov.au
This project reviewed the journey of patients undergoing an elective total hip or knee replacement at the Tweed Hospital. The Project Team, in consultation with staff and patients, implemented a range of improvements, including preoperative assessments, patient information brochures, clinical pathways and pain management.
To reduce the Length of Stay (LoS) for patients undergoing elective hip and knee replacement, and better prepare patients to manage at home following discharge.
Reducing clinical variation is a key priority for Northern NSW Local Health District (NNSWLHD). A review of NSW health data for the 2014-15 financial year identified that average LoS and costs were higher for elective hip and knee replacements at the Tweed Hospital, compared to peer hospitals. This group of patients stayed in hospital a total of 110 days longer than peer hospitals and cost the organisation an additional $135,000. Further data analysis identified that 10% of patients were returning to the ED within 21 days of surgery and 60% patients did not know what to expect following discharge from their hip or knee replacement surgery.
Following extensive consultation with staff and patients, the following four solutions were identified.
Lynn HopkinsonManager Service RedesignThe Tweed HospitalNorthern NSW Local Health District Phone: 02 66200843lynn.hopkinson@ncahs.health.nsw.gov.au
This project has focused on improving the elective patient preoperative journey as well as clinician satisfaction and hospital efficiency.
To provide a high quality, streamlined and sustainable patient centred approach to booked adult surgical services at Canterbury Hospital from the completion of the Recommendation for Admission (RFA) until the day of surgery.
My Check in For Surgery has involved a robust, six stage project methodology using process redesign and change management principles to improve health care and patient journeys. Wide consultation with staff, patients and community stakeholders has assisted to identify barriers and areas for improvement.
Six key issues were identified -communication, clinical processes, guidelines and policy, waiting time, health literacy and data collection. To address these, eleven solutions were developed.
Implementation required a phased approach due to solution interdependencies as well as to reduce change fatigue and manage workload. Solutions included:
Implementation of these solutions has only been possible due to sustained collaboration and support from staff who have been engaged and committed to improving systems and the patient’s journey.
Other key achievements include:
Involvement of key clinicians and stakeholders, strong project team leadership and sponsor support has allowed the success of this project.
Implementation of eleven solutions to address key issues has been achieved through the commitment of solution owners and clinical leads working together and reporting to a Steering Committee.
Ongoing monitoring processes are being established, embedded in everyday business to ensure sustained change and continuous identification of areas for further improvement or refinements to further improve KPIs.
Canterbury Hospital Patients and Carers, Ambulatory Care and Pre-admission Staff, Admissions Office and Day Surgery Staff, Anaesthetists, Surgeons, local GPs, SLHD Health Pathways Representatives, Steering Committee Members, Hospital Executive, Project Team and Sponsors, ACI representatives and SLHD Clinical Redesign Representatives.
Judy McGlynn, Complex Care CNC, Canterbury Hospitaljudy.mcglynn@sswahs.nsw.gov.au or (02) 9787 0254
The purpose of the Information Bulletin is to inform NSW Health service providers and source system administrators of changes to the Indicator Procedure Code (IPC) classification for use in the Elective Surgery Waiting Times Data Collection.
The NSW Ministry of Health expects that all patients that are on the elective surgery waiting list as at 1 July 2017 will be re-coded / re-aliased to the appropriate retained IPC.
Any necessary IPC re-coding / re-aliasing must be undertaken prior to 1 July 2017, particularly for those Wait List bookings that have no Planned Admission Date (PAD) or have a PAD post 30 June 2017.
Wait List removals for June 2017 may still be reported with a retiring IPC, as retirement will take effect from 1 July 2017.
If a patient administration system (PAS) is using internal IPC values which are outbound aliased, then any affected internal codes will need to be re-aliased.
Patients added to the elective surgery waiting list from 1 July 2017 must not be assigned an IPC that had been retired.
What did you think of this edition of the Surgery Newsletter?
Do you have some feedback on one of our stories, or do you have a story idea? We would love to hear from you.
Email the Editors at:Ms Melinda PascoePhone: (02) 9391 9557mpasc@doh.health.nsw.gov.au
Ms Chrissie CrawfordPhone: (02) 9391 9394ccraw@doh.health.nsw.gov.au