Patient initiated follow-up implementation plan and
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Patient initiated follow-up implementation plan and pre-implementation checklist [email protected] NHS England and NHS Improvement
What are patient initiated follow-ups? “Patient initiated follow-up” (PIFU) describes when a patient (or carer) can initiate follow-up appointments as and when required, e.g. when symptoms or circumstances change. Helps avoid unnecessary trips to hospital Helps people take control of their own healthcare Gives people an option to have appointments when they need it e.g. during a flare up Helps reduce pressure on services It was highlighted as a key priority in the NHS’ COVID-19 recovery, and national guidance was included in the phase 3 resources. It is used in lots of places already, but sometimes called different things, including: Open access follow up Patient led follow-up Patient triggered follow-up Patient initiated appointments Supported self-managed follow-up Self-managed follow-up See on symptom Open appointments Open self-referral appointments Patient-activated care 2 Personalised Clinically-led High quality of care
About this guide This document has been produced to aid systems and trusts in their implementation of PIFU, or improving how they use PIFU so that they can get the most benefit for patients and services. It is intended that this is used by systems’ and trusts’ project managers to: Get ready for implementing PIFU at pace Identify who needs to be involved Plan key activities that will be needed as part of that implementation Estimate the time required for each stage of the roll out Find examples to “lift and shift” from existing national resources and case studies from elsewhere in the country Ensure that your model of PIFU is in line with national guidance and delivers safe and high quality of care to patients Ensure that you are adopting good practice in recording and reporting PIFU 3
PIFU rapid implementation plan overview Business case / PIFU plan signed off by senior team Start roll out in next wave of specialties Small scale go live Project set up Preimplementation Design phase Prepare for go live Test and refine Reflect on roll out 8 weeks 2 weeks 3 weeks 2 weeks Embed and sustain Finalise SOP Finalise clinical resources 4 Large scale launch Evaluation for each specialty
Getting ready for roll out: pre-implementation phase Trusts have told us that the below should be ready before starting implementation. You may also find it useful to review the conditions for change. 1 Review the national PIFU guidance as part of the phase 3 resources. 6 2 Identify and engage with your core project team (you may already have an outpatients lead, and you may have multiple people filling the same role): Senior Sponsor (accountable for success of PIFU roll out) Project Manager (responsible for day-to-day management of PIFU roll out) Information Lead (responsible for producing data on success of PIFU roll out) IT Lead (responsible for scoping and implementing changes to systems to support PIFU delivery) Comms Lead (responsible for developing and delivering strategic communications plan to support PIFU) Local personalised care lead if you have one This will expand once you have identified your priority specialties Engage with your Chief Clinical Information Officer 3 Understand whether you are already using PIFU in some form Understand whether PIFU is being used already in the organisation (it might be called something else) If so, understand the extent to whether that is formal (recorded and reported on) or informal (not recorded). If formal, analyse usage and impact. Engage with cancer leads to understand to what extent personalised stratified follow-up has been implemented in cancer 4 Understand clinical appetite for PIFU by asking clinicians how they feel about using PIFU in their service 5 Understand local priorities and build connections with other systems/providers Understand which organisations within your system are already using or implementing PIFU and in what specialties Understand any system priority specialties for PIFU Engage with commissioners Identify any other systems/providers using similar IT systems Understand what forums there are to share learning about PIFU Engage with your PIFU regional lead. Email 5 [email protected] and we can connect you Understand where the opportunity is by analysing: Number of follow-ups per specialty (or number of outpatient appointments per specialty) Follow-up waiting lists/waiting times (or outpatient waiting lists/waiting times) Services with greatest number of long term patients Review nationally available case study data Agree your wave 1 specialties to pilot formalised PIFU based on: Data Local system priorities Clinical engagement Suggest starting with 3-5 specialties including both medical and surgical specialties, and to cover a mix of short and long term pathways of care so that you develop the most flexible model. Expand project team to include: Clinical Leads, at least one for each wave 1 specialty (responsible for drafting clinical materials to support the use of PIFU and leading engagement with other clinicians for the specialty) Operational Managers responsible for clinic management, contact centres, waiting lists (responsible for reviewing and implementing changes to operational management of services) 7 8 Develop and approve PIFU business case, implementation plan and governance arrangements 9 Set up regular (suggest weekly or fortnightly) meetings with project team including clinical leads and IT leads Map out delivery milestones, and reporting timelines. Factor in periods where progress may be expected to be slower (e.g. holiday periods)
Design phase How will we get there? For each specialty, agree which pathways PIFU will be piloted in first Estimate number of patients and clinicians this would affect Develop strategic engagement plan Consider how the change will affect staff (confidence, morale etc) and ensure you have support in place Identify your clinical and operational champions for each service Plan how services will manage their capacity over the implementation phase How many patients in these specialties can PIFU benefit? Review relevant specialty guides, case studies and webinars on FutureNHS Engage with other providers / systems already using PIFU in each specialty (regional PIFU leads can help identify them) Ask clinicians which pathways they see PIFU having the greatest value for patients, e.g. via a clinical engagement workshop Review your data to estimate how many patients will be 6 impacted for these specialties How do patients feel about this? Identify or set up patient groups for each specialty and ask them what is important for t hem Adapt your plans as needed How could this affect health inequalities? Carry out a health inequalities assessment , and plan in actions required to mitigate and reduce inequalities How will we manage the system changes? Understand if you can phase system changes or if they will affect everyone all at once Plan how you will test the system is working How will this work day to day? What do we need at specialty level? Develop a standard operating procedure (template here) Understand how patients on PIFU can be logged and tracked on your system, how this supports implementation of essential safety nets, and how you will record and report PIFU as part of your national data submissions Understand how patients will make contact with the service and develop some options to be adopted by services based on clinical need Engage with others using similar systems ((regional PIFU leads can help identify other providers and systems) Agree and plan any operational changes or materials required to support (e.g. system changes, changes to clinic templates) Set your KPIs Identify and produce additional materials for each specialty to sit alongside the SOP, e.g: Clinical protocols / guidance Target service response times PIFU timescales, and action at the end of the timescale Patient communications Letter templates Web pages Safety nets Triage process Booking process and clinic slots Are there any additional risks to patients or health inequalities at specialty level? Define how PIFU will form part of the organisation’s approach to continuous improvement Is this best practice? Do you have required safety nets in place? Review proposals to ensure they align to best practice, embedding personalised care, shared decision making, safety nets and meet recording and reporting req uirements Finalise SOP Finalise clinical resources
Prepare to go live Are our systems ready? Have we told everyone who needs to know? Update stakeholders on go live plans How and when will we start using PIFU? 7 Set a date for your small scale go live (can be different dates for each specialty) Identify clinicians who will start using it first Is our data reliable? Implement any necessary system changes Test that you are able to record patients as being on a PIFU How will we know the pilot was a success? Are our people ready to go? Agree how you will assess the success of the roll out pilot: Leading and lagging indicators Staff feedback (clinical and nonclinical) Patient feedback Level of uptake Check that patients aren’t already being logged as a PIFU before you have gone live Train clinical staff in how to log patients in the system, how to discuss PIFU with patients, how triage will work Train administrative staff in how to manage clinics, and how to manage queries from patients Give staff the opportunity to ask questions Small scale go live To note, it is likely you won’t have patients initiate an appointment within your small scale pilot, so you will have to continue to monitor how this goes beyond your large scale launch.
Test and refine Are our people ready to go? Do we need to change anything? Review your success measures for the pilot React to feedback from staff on how things are working so far Test safety nets and recording and reporting Are we ready to expand to other pathways in these specialties? 8 Decide whether you can use across other pathways Train clinical staff in how to log patients in the system, how to discuss PIFU with patients, how triage will work Train administrative staff in how to manage clinics, and how to manage queries from patients Give staff the opportunity to ask questions Offer staff the option of shared decision making training How will we launch at scale? Plan communications for staff, patients, system partners Ensure flexible support is available in the first few weeks of using PIFU Large scale launch To note, it is likely you won’t have patients initiate an appointment within your small scale pilot, so you will have to continue to monitor how this goes beyond your large scale launch.
Reflect on roll out How can we celebrate success? What have we learnt? What early results have we seen? 9 Uptake of PIFU Some useful benefits and planning tools can be found here Review your success measures for the pilot React to feedback from staff on how things are working so far What have can we learn from our system colleagues? Engage with regional and system colleagues Recognise staff effort Share results Share impact We’d love to help you! Contact us at [email protected] Where next? Start engaging with other specialties Develop a roll out plan for PIFU to show when you expect uptake in each specialty Develop a plan to improve the current PIFU set up to better align to best practice Start roll out in next wave of specialties
Embed and sustain How will we review and check up to see how PIFU is working? Set a timetable for reviewing the specialties you have rolled out in When will we evaluate the data? Plan in evaluation milestones for each specialties High level guidance on evaluation can be found here. How can we make PIFU business as usual? Consider embedding as part of staff training Consider removing alternative “informal PIFU” options where clinically agreed Consider adding PIFU into job roles for new starters 10