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Clinical leadership: a new era Geraldine Strathdee, Consultant Psychiatrist Oxleas NHS FT Associate Medical Director, mental health, NHSL This talk and some scientific London takeaway facts for you to solve! • What do we need from clinical leaders • What do we need from scientists as leaders • London Scientific problems to take away & solve! Clinical leadership going forward What’s the same • Focus on values • Vision of care • Scientific literate • Informatics literate • Economics literate • Communications literate • Emotional intelligence • People who nurture leaders • Courageous What’s the new focus A value based, affordable vision of care for people with long term conditions & their families in London I was diagnosed early I understand what decisions I can make for now and for my future I got the best treatment I need for my condition & my life My family are well supported in caring for me I am treated with dignity and respect as a person and a sufferer of my condition I know what I can do to help myself and my life I continue to be part of my community and contribute to it I am confident that my end of life wishes will be respected and my death will be a good one for me and my family I enjoy life among my family “Because we were able to have home carers… my husband was able to spend the last six years of his life in our own home, where he was very happy, instead of going into residential care, which would have made us all very sad” (Carer, National Dementia Strategy, 2009) Patients keep telling us they want from the NHS, whether we care at home or in a hospital…….. Safety “Will I be ok?” From the patient’s perspective Effectiveness “Will the treatment do me any good?” Experience Efficiency Will it be a kind, enabling, experience & will I learn more about taking care of my health Will it be fast, safe , near home , Helped me get back to work asap Professor Bruce Keogh, Medical Director of the NHS Plus a London efficiency view What do we need from our scientists? We need you to continue to lead discovery of new assessments, new medications, new treatments, new service models We need your scientific brains to analyze & innovate where: Science is being ignored The patient pathway is tortuous and inefficient We absolutely need you to help us implement evidence based care Where science is needed .. Care Pathway • Prevention • Identification • Assessment • Evidence based NICE pathways • Recovery & social inclusion • • Behaviour change & lifestyles Self screening, self assessment • Clinician assessment tools • • Clinician decision support tools Evidence based service design & delivery • • • Risk alert awareness technology Outreach for the most unwell eRecords, eCare, ePrescribing, eInvestigation results, efMRI • Assistive technology for : – • home based care for LTCs, dementia, LD Technology to reduce bureaucracy & duplication &meetings! London Scientific problems to take away & solve Interactive science : the causes of psychosis Understanding the health & social determinants of mental health conditions Genetic & biochemical Organic brain & neurodevelopmental Societal • Biochemical ‘causes’ Caffeine, nicotine, alcohol, street drugs Neurotransmitters Endocrine disorders Family history Substance misuse /mental ill health/ chaotic deprivation / abuse: physical, sexual, emotional Life cycle times •Unemployment •Redundancy •Long term conditions •Adolescence •Pregnancy Life trauma: •Bereavement •Losses & isolation •Migration •War. Institutions career School difficult Truanting Dyslexia, Dyspraxia, ADHD, Autistic spectrum, Mental illness starts Expensive placements Drug use & dealing Regarded as ‘bad’ or ‘strange’ Youth offenders ‘What could we do?’ Bullied Petty crime In Care ‘What should we do?’ Acute psychiatric wards Forensic units ‘How should we do it?’ The Schizophrenia Commission 2012 Schizophrenia and psychosis costs society – £11.8 billion a year but this could be less if we invested in prevention and effective care. Increasing numbers of people are having compulsory treatment, acute care needs review Levels of coercion have increased year on year and are up by 5% in the last year. Too much is spent on secure care - £1.2 billion or 19% of the mental health budget Only 1 in 10 of those who could benefit get access to true CBT (Cognitive Behavioural Therapy) despite it being recommended by NICE (National Institute of Health and Clinical Excellence). Only 8% of people with schizophrenia are in employment, yet many more could and would like to work. Only 14% of people receiving social care services for a primary mental health need are receiving self-directed support (money to commission their own support to meet identified needs) compared with 43% for all people receiving social care services. Families who are carers save the public purse £1.24 billion per year but are not receiving support, and are not treated as partners. 87% of service users report experiences of stigma and discrimination. Services for people from African-Caribbean and African backgrounds do not meet their needs well. In 2010 men from these communities spent twice as long in hospital People with severe mental illness such as schizophrenia still die 15-20 years earlier than other citizens. What are the emerging scientific facts in London • • Health inequalities in London are stark. Between boroughs life expectancy gaps of 9 years Within borough differences of 17 years • Across England health inequalities are widening due the social and economic determinants of health, which shape peoples’ lives and their health London has more: • Deprivation: • Transport hubs that bring people to London • • • Mobile populations Asylum seekers , & no recourse to public funds More crime The impact of the economic downturn on health & health inequalities that may occur in London: — More suicides and attempted suicides; possibly more homicides and domestic violence — An increase in mental health problems, including depression, and lower levels of wellbeing — major increase in dementia Parity of care & the economic impact Figure 1: Morbidity among people under age 65 Physical illness (e.g. heart, lung, musculoskeletal, diabetes) Mental illness (mainly depression, anxiety disorders, and child disorders) successful outcome. The second point is the level of cost-effectiveness as measured by cost per QALY. This involves two further factors. First there is the severity of the condition which is averted, and second the cost per case treated. The concept of severity used by NICE is that each medical condition involves a reduction in the quality of life, and a successful treatment thus increases the number of Quality Adjusted Life Years (QALYs). The cost per QALY is then the (inverse) measure of the cost-effectiveness of the treatment. The informal cut-off We have very affordable effective treatments 22 Annex B: Prevalence of adult mental health conditions and % in treatment, England 2007 % of adults diagnosable (1) % of (1) in treatment (2) % of (1) receiving counselling or therapy 15.0 24 10 PTSD 3.0 28 10 Psychosis 0.4 80 43 Personality Disorder* 0.7 34 ADHD 0.6 25 4 Eating disorders 1.6 23 15 Alcohol dependence 5.9 14 6 Drug dependence 3.4 Anxiety and/or depression Cannabis only 2.5 14 7 Other 0.9 36 22 Any condition 23.0 * Includes Anti-social P.D. and Borderline P.D. Note: The conditions are not mutually exclusive. 18 Table 5: Cost-effectiveness of some treatments for mental and physical illnesses Mental illness Depression Social anxiety disorder Post-natal depression Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder Physical illness Diabetes Asthma COPD Cardio-vascular Epilepsy Arthritis Treatment Numbers Needed to Treat Cost per additional QALY CBT v Placebo CBT v Treatment As Usual (TAU) Interpersonal therapy v TAU CBT v TAU 2 2 5 3 £6,700 £9,600 £4,500 £21,000 Metformin v Insulin Beta-agonists + Steroids v Steroids Ditto Statins v Placebo Topirimate v Placebo Cox-2 inhibitors v Placebo 14 73 17 95 3 5 £6,000 £11,600 £41,700 £14,000 £900 £30,000 Health care needs to be redesigned to meet the challenge of co-morbidity • Health services in many countries fail to provide coordinated support for patients’ multiple needs. • Patients frequently experience fragmented care and opportunities to improve quality & efficiency are missed. • There is a professional, institutional and cultural separation between mental and physical health that must be overcome. “The greatest mistake in the treatment of diseases is that there are physicians for the body and physicians for the soul, although the two cannot be separated”. Plato (427–347 BC) Co-morbidity is the norm Lancet, Barnett, Mercer et al 2012 Mental health, physical health & deprivation Barnett, Mercer et al 2012 Mental health raises costs in all sectors • Between 12% and 18% of all expenditure on longterm conditions is linked to poor mental health and wellbeing – at least £1 in every £8 spent on longterm conditions. 180% 160% % increase in annual per patient costs (excluding costs of MH care) • Overall, international research finds that comorbid MH problems are associated with a 45-75% increase in service costs per patient (after controlling for severity of physical illness) 140% 120% 100% 80% Depression Anxiety 60% 40% 20% 0% Mental health drives LTC costs Annual per patient costs with and without depression (excluding MH treatment costs) Welch et al 2009 From a GP …………Clare Gerrada • I was struck the other day when I saw a patient - who has been off work for 3 months waiting for CBT. He is depressed and was just told to go on sick leave- no medication, just a referral for CBT in the distance future. • When I saw him , what upset me most was that if he had broken his leg, he would have been treated asap, given rehab, told to go to work on crutches and would not have just been abandoned. • I want to make it impossible for mental health problems to be treated as second class illnesses - with patients with treatable conditions languishing on waiting lists or worst still with no treatment at all Professor Michael Porter GPs are trying to do everything for everyone, too much of 21st Century care was being provided through 19th century organisational models. Porter is a world authority on strategy in business, & has spent the past decade working in healthcare systems in dozens of countries. Poor outcomes of untreated depression comorbidity in physical LTCs Stroke Heart disease Diabetes 2012 publication Compendium of examples of cost effective programmes for people with Long term physical illnesses in acute trusts & primary care settings Thank you for listening If you have ideas on how to improve our implementation of scientifically proven care, please email me on [email protected]