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HEYWOOD MIDDLETON & ROCHDALE CLINICAL COMMISSIONING GROUP QUALITY STRATEGY 2015/16 – 2018/19 1 Contents Section Page 1 Foreword 3 2 HMR CCG Vision and Values 4 3 What is Quality? 4 4 The Case for Change 5 5 Our Vision for Quality 5 6 Key Drivers 6 7 Safeguarding 10 8 Our Approach to Quality 11 9 Our Quality Goals for 2015/16 – 2018/19 12 10 Embedding Quality 13 11 Working in Partnership 15 12 Assuring Quality 15 13 Measuring Quality 17 14 Quality in Care Homes 17 15 Primary Care Quality 18 16 Sharing Good Practice 19 18 Equality & Diversity 20 19 Monitoring 21 20 Conclusion 21 21 Action Plan 22 2 Foreword NHS Heywood Middleton and Rochdale Clinical Commissioning Group’s (“The CCG”) ambition is to commission safe, effective, and clinically-led services for the people of the borough of Rochdale and secure better quality of life and health for our population who experience some of the poorest health outcomes in the country. Ensuring the delivery of safe, clinically effective high quality care for the population of Heywood, Middleton & Rochdale is a key priority for the CCG. Quality of care is at the heart of every commissioning decision we make and is inherent throughout this strategy which has been developed to support us in keeping quality at the heart of all we do. This strategy communicates our vision, the key drivers which underpin it and our ambitions for quality which include strengthening partnership working and greater patient/public involvement ensuring that service user experience really is a core component of quality monitoring and service development processes. The strategy explains how we will deliver our vision and the outcome measures which we will use to measure success. Whist we are pleased with the progress made to date in improving patient experience and reducing avoidable harm, we recognise there is further work to be done to ensure that all our services consistently provide high quality care. This includes ensuring that safeguarding arrangements for children and adults at risk are robust. From 1 April 2016, we will take on delegated responsibility for commissioning of general practice and we will continue to support our member practices in making improvements to their services. The strategy is built around the priorities identified by the CCG for commissioning high quality healthcare services for its population. Reflecting national and local drivers for quality, it supports and complements the NHS HMR CCG Strategic Commissioning Plan 2014/15 – 2018/19 and builds on the achievements of the HMR CCG Quality Framework 2013/15. Dr Chris Duffy NHS HMR CCG Chair Simon Wotton Accountable Officer NHS HMR CCG 3 HMR CCG Vision and Values HMR CCG’s vision is to support people in the Borough of Rochdale to live longer and healthier lives; to commission a range of services that meet their needs and help them to enjoy a better quality of life – adding life to years and years to life. We want to commission services that protect individual human rights, promote dignity, independence and well-being, hear and respond to the needs of children, young people, adults and carers and demonstrate assurance that any child, young person or adult thought to be at risk, is safeguarded and protected from harm or abuse. The values that lie at the heart of the organisation's work are: No decision about me, without me, applicable to all stakeholders Care and compassion in everything we do Being honest, open and visible Providing constructive challenge and being open to challenge Being bold, radical, innovative and aspirational This quality strategy supports the HMR CCG vision and values. What is Quality? In referring to “quality”, HMR CCG is adopting the three part definition of quality as safety, effectiveness and patient experience (figure 1). This definition was first articulated by Lord Darzi1 and is now enshrined in the 2012 Health and Social Care Act as well as the NHS Constitution which sets out the patients’ right to high quality care. Figure 1 How this definition of quality applies to patients and service users is; Safety – Patients and service users need to be assured that they will not come to avoidable harm and that services have systems in place to protect and safeguard them. They need to be assured that when things do go wrong, a prompt robust investigation will be undertaken and appropriate measures put in place to share the learning and 1 (Department of Health. High quality care for all: NHS Next Stage Review final report. Department of Health 2008) 4 prevent future recurrence. Clinical Effectiveness – Patients and service users need to have confidence that the care and treatment which they receive will be appropriate, based on the best available evidence that clinically addresses their needs and delivers the best outcomes. They need to be assured that all providers are able demonstrate that they comply with best practice standards (including NICE technology appraisals and guidance) and that nationally measured outcomes (eg for joint replacements and hernia repairs) and mortality rates compare favourably with equivalent organisations. Patient Experience – Patients and service users want to be treated with compassion, dignity and respect at all times, receiving care that is personal and inclusive to them and which is a positive experience. They need to be assured that there are mechanisms in place for them to provide their feedback and that this will be captured, meaningfully analysed and used to continually improve services. The CCG recognises that quality care is not achieved by focusing on one or two aspects of this definition; high quality care encompasses all three aspects with equal importance being placed on each. We believe that the delivery of high quality care can only be achieved by a shared understanding of quality and a joint commitment to keeping it at the centre of everything we do. We will therefore ensure that quality is at the centre of all our discussions with providers and stakeholders and remains the central focus of all commissioning decisions. The Case for Change There have been a number of high level failures in the NHS such as those at Mid Staffordshire NHS Trust, Winterbourne View Hospital and more recently, Morecambe Bay (see below “Key Drivers for Change”). These put quality of healthcare in the public spotlight, leading to high profile reviews and the publication of key reports with far reaching implications for commissioners and providers. HMR CCG has understood the lessons and recommendations from these national reviews and has developed and implemented action plans in response. We recognise that these signal a shift in how we should commission services and what needs to be done to ensure that all our providers deliver high quality care. We have used the key findings from high level inquiries together with our legal duties to inform this strategy. Our Vision for Quality The HMR CCG vision for quality is that our local population will be kept safe and free from avoidable harm. They will receive care and treatment which is appropriate for them, which is evidence based and clinically effective. Overall, their experience of care and treatment will be a positive one. We want people to be cared for; in the right way (developing and maintaining a workforce that is highly skilled, motivated and competent to deliver the care required) 5 at the right time (accessible services available 7 days a week providing treatment when the patient needs them) in the right place (provision of treatment/services locally wherever possible and in specialist centres where necessary). with the right outcome (improving health, reducing variation in clinical outcomes, reduction in potential years lost to conditions amendable to treatment) Key Drivers for Quality The key national and local drivers which inform HMR CCG’s approach to assuring and improving the quality of commissioned services are described briefly below; National Drivers The NHS Constitution2 The NHS constitution sets out rights for patients, public and staff. It outlines NHS commitments to patients and staff, and the responsibilities that the public, patients and staff owe to one another to ensure that the NHS operates fairly and effectively. All NHS bodies, private and third sector providers supplying NHS services are required by law to take account of the Constitution in their decisions and actions. In relation to quality and safety, the Constitution states that people have the right to be treated with a professional standard of care, by appropriately qualified and experienced staff, in a properly approved or registered organisation that meets required levels of safety and quality. People also have the right to expect NHS organisations to monitor, and make efforts to improve, the quality of healthcare they commission or provide. HMR CCG is committed to ensuring that the NHS Constitution is upheld by the CCG and by all providers of commissioned services. The NHS Outcomes Framework Refreshed annually, the NHS Outcomes Framework builds on the definition of quality by setting out 68 indicators which measure performance in the healthcare system at a national level. It is structured five domains, which set out the high level outcomes that the NHS should be aiming to improve. 2 DoH (2012). NHS Constitution. London: DoH. 6 The domains of the NHS Outcomes Framework are a crucial element of focus for the HMR CCG’s commissioning strategic plan, acting as driver for the CCG’s local priorities for quality and commissioning. The CCG Assurance Framework NHS England has a statutory duty to make an annual assessment of each CCG’s performance. It meets this duty through the CCG Assurance Framework. A new CCG Assurance Framework was published in March 2015 which includes a self-certification process. This will provide NHS England with additional assurances from those CCGs who have taken responsibility for the commissioning of primary medical care services under delegated authority (delegated functions) or a joint commissioning arrangement. In relation to quality the main focus of assurance will be how well the CCG maintains and improves quality and ensures better outcomes for patients. The Care Act 2014 The Care Act 20143 which came into force on 1 April 2015 represents a significant change to social care legislation. The vision for the Care Act is for integrated care and support that is person centred, tailored to the needs and preferences of those needing care and support. It requires local authorities to carry out their duties with the aim of joining up services, in line with the requirements on Clinical Commissioning Groups and NHS England in the NHS Act 2006, and in the context of Joint Strategic Needs Assessments and Health and Wellbeing Strategies The CCG quality team will support the integration of health and social care functions, ensuring that quality remains the central focus of all commissioning intentions and that integrated services provide high quality care. Francis Report 4 A public enquiry into events at Mid Staffordshire NHS Trust led by Robert Francis QC, uncovered a catalogue of serious and systemic failings. It led to publication of the Francis Report in 2013 which suggested that a fundamental change in culture was necessary to address the systemic failures and made a number of high level recommendations. The key aims of the Francis recommendations can be summarised as; A common culture which puts the patient first; A set of fundamental standards which are easily understood, against which compliance can be measured and breach of which will not be tolerated. Openness, transparency and candour throughout the system Greater accountability; individual & organisational Improved support for compassionate, caring and committed nursing Stronger patient centred healthcare leadership Accurate, useful and relevant information to allow effective comparison 3 The Care Act 2014 Francis, R (2013). Report of the Mid Staffordshire NHS Foundation Trust Public Inquiry. London: Department of Health. 4 7 Berwick Report5 Following publication of the Francis Report, the Government commissioned an advisory group in April 2013, to distil the patient safety lessons learnt and specify the changes needed to improve the safety of patients in England. The advisory group was led by Professor Don Berwick, an internationally recognised expert on patient safety and its report was published in August 2013. The Berwick report highlights the main problems affecting patient safety in the NHS and makes recommendations to address these problems saying that the health system must: recognise with clarity and courage the need for wide systemic change abandon blame as a tool and trust the goodwill and good intentions of the staff reassert the primacy of working with patients and carers to achieve health care goals use quantitative targets with caution - they should never displace the primary goal of better care recognise that transparency is essential and expect and insist on it ensure that responsibility for functions related to safety and improvement are established clearly and simply give NHS staff career-long help to learn, master and apply modern methods for quality control, quality improvement and quality planning make sure pride and joy in work, not fear, infuse the NHS performance by patients and the public Keogh Report6 Professor Bruce Keogh carried out reviews of 14 NHS hospitals in England in 2013. The fourteen hospitals were selected by their Summary Hospital-Level Mortality Indicator (SHMI) or the Hospital Standardised Mortality Ratio (HSMR) which had been shown to be higher in comparison to other NHS hospitals over the previous two years. The report identified common challenges facing the NHS and set out a number of ambitions for the NHS in England to achieve in the next 2 years including; The implementation of early warning systems to detect deteriorating in high risk patient’s condition especially out of hours and at the weekends. Demonstrable progress towards reducing avoidable deaths in our hospitals. The utilisation of junior doctors as change agents. Patients, carers and the public should be more involved and be able to give “real time” feedback. Nurse staffing levels and mix of skills should be appropriate to the patients being cared for on any given ward. Winterbourne View7 An investigation into events at Winterbourne View hospital revealed shocking criminal 5 Berwick, D (2013). A Promise to Learn – A commitment to act – Improving the safety of patients in England. London: Department of Health. 6 Keogh, B (2013) Review into the quality of care and treatment provided by 14 hospital trusts in England: overview report, London: 7 Department of Health (2012). Transforming Care - A national response to Winterbourne View Hospital. London: Department of Health. 8 abuse by staff, and a failure to protect vulnerable people with learning difficulties. It led to the Winterbourne View Joint Improvement Programme which provides leadership and support to transform services locally, building on good practice. HMR CCG will work in partnership with Rochdale Metropolitan Borough Council to deliver the concordat which supports the Joint improvement Programme ensuring that wherever possible, vulnerable patients are care for in local community settings. This will improve the quality of the care offered to children, young people and adults with learning disabilities or autism who have mental health conditions or behaviour that challenges to ensure better care outcomes for them. Kirkup Review8 (Morecambe Bay) Dr Bill Kirkup was commissioned by the Department of Health to investigate failings in maternity care at Furness General Hospital (FGH) over a period of several years. His investigated identified at least seven missed opportunities at “almost every level” which meant poor clinical care was not investigated and led to the preventable deaths of one mother and 11 babies. Dr Kirkup’s final report (“The Kirkup Report”) report was published makes a series of recommendations, for both the University Hospitals of Morecambe Bay NHS Foundation Trust and the wider NHS, to prevent such failings happening in future. The recommendations for the wider NHS are; Action by the professional regulatory bodies to investigate the conduct of registrants involved in this case. A national review of the provision of maternity care in challenging circumstances – this could be broadened out to take in all types of care delivered in “rural, difficult to recruit to or isolated” areas. A review of the opportunities and challenges for smaller units. The drawing up of clear standards for incident reporting and investigation in maternity services. Introduction of a duty of candour for all NHS professionals. A duty for all NHS Boards to openly report the findings of external investigations, including promptly notifying the CQC and Monitor. Introduction of a clear national policy on whistleblowing. Clarification from professional regulatory bodies on the duty of staff to report concerns. National standards setting out the duties and expectations for clinical leads at all levels, as well as standards setting out the responsibilities for clinical quality of other managers. A national protocol on the duties of trusts and their staff in relation to inquests. A fundamental review of the NHS complaints system. Effective reform of the Local Supervising Authority system for midwives 8 Kirkup, B (2015) The Report of the Morecambe Bay Investigation, London: DoH. 9 CQC and Monitor to draw up a memorandum of understanding specifying the relationship between their organisations, including roles, relationships and communication. A similar memorandum of understanding to be drawn up between the CQC and the PHSO. NHS England should draw up a protocol to clarify the potential ambiguity that still exists in the division of responsibilities for oversight of service quality and the implementation of measures to correct failures. DH should review how it carries out impact assessments of new policies, as a result of the significant pressures new policies and processes place on management capacity. DH should also draw up a protocol on how to manage organisational change that transfers responsibilities and accountabilities. Recording systems for perinatal death should be improved. A mechanism should be introduced to independently scrutinise perinatal and maternal deaths. Reviews of deaths by medical examiners should be extended to stillbirths as well as neonatal deaths. Systematic guidance should be drawn up setting out a framework for external reviews, and all external reviews of suspected service failures should be registered with the CQC and Monitor. A National Review of Maternity services has been set up following the Kirkup report and a working party agreed. The review is being led by Baroness Julia Cumberledge. The timescale for reporting is the end of 2015. HMR CCG will work with our provider of Maternity services to undertake a gap analysis using the recommendations from the Kirkup report and to implement any necessary changes. Safeguarding Safeguarding children and adults at risk is a key priority for the CCG. We believe an integrated approach to Quality and Safeguarding serves to protect those most vulnerable to abuse and helps to identify where safeguarding practice can be improved to prevent and reduce the risk of abuse and neglect to both adults and children. The CCG Safeguarding Team takes the lead role in ensuring that the CCG’s statutory responsibilities are fully met. Designated Safeguarding Professionals provide safeguarding leadership across the health economy. Their functions include reviewing safeguarding arrangements within commissioned health services to determine whether they are meeting their statutory safeguarding responsibilities and holding providers to account if any deficiencies are identified. Seeking assurances from commissioned services is undertaken through the use of formal audit tools and through working in collaboration with the safeguarding leads within these services. The Designated Safeguarding Professionals also review how effectively all 10 commissioned health services work together to safeguard children and vulnerable adults, ensuring that there are appropriate integrated working arrangements in place. This oversight provides a crucial element of quality assurance, given that vulnerable people are often in receipt of health services from multiple providers. HMR CCG will continue to utilise the expertise within the Safeguarding Team to fulfil this vital role. Members of the CCG Safeguarding Team are also working closely with member GP Practices, supporting them in improving the quality of their safeguarding arrangements. This work includes the delivery of safeguarding training, providing case advice, undertaking audits and progressing safeguarding practice development. We recognise that robust safeguarding arrangements within primary care are necessary to safeguard the most vulnerable members of our population and will ensure that this is a key element of our primary care quality framework. Bi-monthly Safeguarding & Quality network meetings provide a forum for healthcare professionals from all settings to come together and share learning, good practice discuss challenges to the provision of high quality care. They also provide an opportunity for learning with presentations from wider CCG staff and external organisations. The detailed processes by which the CCG will meet its statutory obligations to safeguard children and adults at risk can be found below; https://www.rbscb.org https://www.rbsab.org/professionals/multi-agency-policy-and-procedures/ http://greatermanchesterscb.proceduresonline.com/ Our Approach to Quality Our approach to quality is; To provide strong leadership across the CCG, equipping staff with the necessary skills and knowledge to deliver the quality strategy and ensure a consistent focus on quality and safety in all aspects of CCG business. To promote a culture of openness and transparency To work collaboratively across the CCG and with a range of partners (eg patients/carers/voluntary organisations/providers/local authority), triangulating all sources of information and using this meaningfully (eg to inform all planning and commissioning decisions, to inform the service review process, to share good practice and to alert to early signs of quality failings). To maintain and promote access to all, ensuring services help to reduce social inequalities and improve access for vulnerable or excluded groups. To monitor quality and performance of commissioned services holding providers to account for any identified failings. To gather hard and soft intelligence and use this to identify risks to patients and staff and understand at an early stage if there are any concerns in any service or provider organisation. To harness and embed shared learning for the benefit of all parties. To incentive providers to continually improve clinical quality. 11 Our quality goals for 2015/16 – 2018/19 Goal 1: Patients and service users will feel safe and will not suffer avoidable harm We will achieve this goal by; Holding providers to account for reducing the incidence of avoidable severe harm and death and having robust and effective processes in place for the reporting and investigation of all adverse incidents/accidents. Gathering data in 2015/16 and using this as a baseline for improvement in 2016/17 & 2017/18. Promoting a culture of openness and transparency and monitoring compliance with the Duty of Candour when things go wrong. Implementing a rolling programme of Patient Safety Walk-rounds across all care settings. Requiring providers to demonstrate a reduction in the incidence of healthcare associated infections (HCAI) in line with agreed trajectories through implementation of robust and stringent Infection Prevention and Control policies & procedures. Ensuring that robust systems and processes are in place to fulfil specific duties of co-operation and best practice in relation to the safeguarding of vulnerable people. Implementing robust and effective systems for managing serious incidents in accordance with National and local requirements and assisting with complex investigations. Ensuring that lessons learned from serious incidents, complaints, inquests and external reviews are appropriately shared and action taken to embed this learning to prevent future recurrence. Establishing assurance mechanisms for implementation of recommendations from key inquiries (eg Francis, Berwick, Keogh) and Statutory/Regulatory bodies (eg Department of Health/NHS England/NICE/Monitor). Maintaining and strengthening quality monitoring/early warning systems to monitor quality and alert to failings. Ensure the delivery of safe and effective maternity services which reflect the learning from the Kirkup Report, serious incidents and external investigations. Working closely with other organisations – including the North East Sector CCGs, Care Quality Commission, Monitor, NHS England, Local Authorities and Health Watch to share information about the quality and safety of health services. Goal 2: Patients and service users will receive care and treatment which is evidence based, clinically effective and provides value for money We will achieve this goal by; Embedding quality standards & key performance indicators into all of our contracts with providers. Developing our staff to ensure they have the skills to commission services with effective systems for managing and improving quality and safety with a focus on continuous improvement. Ensuring that providers comply with national and local standards/guidance/recommendations made by Regulatory/Statutory bodies (eg Department of Health NHS England/Monitor/NICE) and guidance from other 12 professional bodies eg Nursing and Midwifery Council, General Medical Council. Requiring providers to demonstrate a cycle of continuous improvement underpinned by clinical audit. Ensuring that systems and processes are in place for reviewing mortality data and securing a reduction in mortality rates. Monitoring provider compliance with safer staffing levels. Incentivising quality, rewarding excellence by linking a proportion of healthcare provider incomes to the achievement of quality improvement goals (CQUINS) Supporting providers to implement 7 day services. Establishing processes for reviewing provider Cost Improvement Plans (CIPs) and evaluating the impact of these on the quality of commissioned services. Goal 3: Patients and service users will have a positive experience of healthcare services We will achieve this goal; Actively seeking the views of patients, carers, member Practices and the wider community about their experience of NHS services and how they can be improved Ensuring that systems and processes are in place to capture patient and service user feedback from complaints and PALS enquiries and used to drive service improvements. We will triangulate this with other sources of intelligence to monitor the quality of care and hold providers to account where failings are identified and remedial action required. Requiring providers to implement national guidance (eg Friends and Family Test/In Patient Survey/Staff Survey) in line with national guidance and use the results to deliver demonstrable improvements. Embedding Quality Quality is embedded throughout the HMR CCG structure; HMR CCG Governing Body The CCG Governing Body will receive regular reports and information on the quality of commissioned services across Primary, Secondary and Community Care including reports from the Quality & Safety Committee which reports directly to the CCG Governing Body on patient safety, patient experience and clinical outcomes. There is also a Lay Member on the Board who is the Lay Member lead for Quality HMR CCG Quality Team Made up of experienced clinicians and support staff with extensive backgrounds in NHS services, the team supports the Director of Quality & Safety/Executive Nurse to ensure that care provided in our services is safe, clinically effective and provides the best possible experience for patients and services users. The quality team does this by continuously monitoring the quality of care in provider organisations against the standards set in our contracts with them and taking actions to ensure that providers make improvements where services are not of good enough quality. 13 Working collaboratively with other teams across the CCG including Safeguarding, Medicines Management and Continuing Health Care, the quality teams ensures that there are mechanisms in place to capture and act upon all forms of information and intelligence. HMR CCG Quality & Safety Committee This is a formal sub-committee of the CCG Governing Body. Its role is to: Monitor and manage the quality of services that are commissioned Provide appropriate assurances to the CCG Governing Body about the quality of the services it commissions for the local residents Looks at the Patient Experience, Patient Safety and Clinical Effectiveness of services Ensures overall performance against key quality indicators Reviews quality performance on exception basis across primary, community and hospital based system Commissions deep dive work from Commissioning Boards in relation to quality matters Committees/ Groups in the HMR CCG Governance Structure Quality is intrinsic in the Terms of Reference of all other Committees/ Groups to ensure that it becomes embedded in everything HMR CCG does. Whilst the Quality & Safety Committee will take a holistic overarching view to quality, it will have the ability to request detailed investigative work should it be required to form a more detailed picture on quality matters be it from Committees or groups are responsible for performance managing contracts or specific programme related Groups. Key Committees/Groups with specific Quality related functions and responsibilities include; HMR CCG Patient Experience Assurance Committee Established to provide assurance that the patient voice is heard, that patients, carers and the public’s views and experiences influence the development, design and commissioning of services and that this is clearly evidenced within commissioning plans/outcomes. Additionally, the Committee ensures that patient’s experiences influence the performance and contract management of services commissioned by HMR CCG. A key duty of this Committee is to measure the performance and quality of commissioned services from the patient’s perspective. It does this by triangulating all sources of patient experience data/intelligence and where necessary, requesting additional assurance or requesting focused pieces of work. HMR CCG Finance Performance and Risk Committee Works in collaboration with the Clinical Commissioning Committee, the Quality and Safety Committee and the Patient Experience Assurance Committee to provide assurance that commissioned services are delivered with due regard to patient safety, quality, effectiveness and best practice, and excellent patient experience. One of the duties of this Committee is to scrutinise the key risks around quality of commissioned services. 14 Clinical / Managerial Leadership A key recommendation from recent national inquiries has been the development of strong clinical and managerial leadership. The importance of clinical and managerial leadership is clearly reflected in the way HMR CCG conducts its business. The CCG Chair provides a level of clinical leadership across the organisation and is supported by Locality Leads, Clinical Leads and Committee Leads (those Chaired by GPs). Locality Leads provide the clinical leadership and support required through underpinning safe and effective health commissioning. They provide a focal point for building clinical understanding and ownership of the strategic agenda with their peers and clinicians from other professions. Clinical Leads are clinical experts in their field and undertake their commissioning functions with the continual intention to secure the highest quality of care for local patients. We will continue to develop our Governing Body via development sessions and review the current GP Quality Lead role to ensure we have effective clinical leadership. We will strengthen the CCG quality team with the creation of new roles and will proactively promote and develop leadership skills within the quality team to ensure delivery of quality improvement programmes and overall delivery of this quality strategy. Working in Partnership HMR CCG will work in collaboration with a range of partners to ensure the delivery of this quality strategy. Partners will include NHS England, Rochdale Borough Council, GP member practices, Pennine Acute NHS Trust, Pennine Care FT, Care Homes, smaller contract providers, Health Watch, Health Education England, Care Quality Commission, Trust Development Agency, third sector/voluntary organisations and charities. Assuring Quality Quality assurance is the systematic and transparent process of checking to see whether a product or service being developed is meeting specified requirements. The mechanisms through which HMR CCG will assure the quality of commissioned services are as follows: Clear expectations of quality; All contracts will specify the quality outcomes and quality standards, planned monitoring arrangements and penalties where these apply. Where a threat to quality is identified, the CCG will escalate as appropriate and will use appropriate commissioning and contractual levers to bring about improvements Provider Quality monitoring; Quality monitoring meetings will be held with providers as required by the national NHS Contract. The frequency of meetings will vary according to the size of contract and level of risk. Meetings with large organisations will take place monthly. Meetings with smaller 15 low-risk providers may not be required more frequently than quarterly. Standalone quality monitoring meetings may be held with some providers, for others there may be joint quality & performance meetings. Our quality monitoring systems will allow the CCG Quality team to identify any risks and to schedule additional meetings if required. Providers will be required to submit quality and performance reports that provide evidence of performance against national and locally agreed quality standards. Minimum data requirements for these reports will include; healthcare acquired infections, serious incidents, complaints/PALS, compliance with NICE guidance, staffing levels, patient experience data (eg Friends and Family test) and workforce data. These requirements will be reviewed periodically and following the publication of any relevant national guidance. Where appropriate, ‘deep dives’ or “quality reviews” will be undertaken to analyse data and information to gain a greater understanding of quality issues within a provider. Any concerns will be highlighted and remedial actions agreed. Provider Walk-rounds The CCG will have in place a planned programme of walk-rounds across all providers. Some of these will be conducted in conjunction with other North East Sector CCGs or across the Commissioner footprint. Others will be conducted by the CCG alone, whether as lead commissioner or for locally commissioned services. Associate commissioners to contracts will be invited to participate in walk-rounds. In addition to planned walk-rounds, the CCG will also undertake ad hoc walk-rounds in response to identified quality concerns or evidence of possible quality failings. Walk rounds may be notified to providers in advance or, may be unannounced. The decision whether a walk-round in announced or unannounced will depend on the nature of the quality issues to be assured. The outcome of provider walk-rounds will be notified to providers who will be given an opportunity to comment on the findings. They will also be reported at provider quality monitoring meetings and to the CCG Quality & Safety Committee. Associated action plans will be monitored through these mechanisms. Quality Dashboards Quality dashboards are a key element of the CCG quality assurance process. The HMR CCG Quality & Safety Committee will receive dashboard reports detailing performance against key quality metrics and targets together with details of assurance received and action being taken to address underperformance or quality concerns. Quality Accounts; Providers of NHS care are required to publish annual quality accounts. These must contain a retrospective review of performance of key quality initiatives and priorities and set out the quality priorities for the forthcoming year. Providers are also required to outline clinical audit activity. The account will be available publicly however CCGs must be given the opportunity to comment on providers’ accounts and providers before publication and must include any comments from the CCGs in their entirety in the final publication of the account. 16 HMR CCG will review the quality accounts for all providers and there they are lead commissioner, will co-ordinate and provide comments on the quality accounts for the provider. Where HMR CCG is an associate commissioner, they will provide comments to the lead commissioner for submission to the provider. Providers will be monitored for performance and progress against the clinical priorities through the quality meetings. Quality Surveillance Group HMR CCG is a member of the Greater Manchester Quality Surveillance Group. This is a high level group which meets bi-monthly with representation from all Greater Manchester CCGs and other key organisations including NHS England, Care Quality Commission and Healthwatch. , where concerns and risks are escalated and shared on a wider basis. Each CCG will manage the relevant quality monitoring mechanism appropriate to the provider for which it is designated as the co-ordinating lead. However informal and formal conversations within the CCG, between commissioners, providers and stakeholders on a day to day basis may illicit ‘soft intelligence’ to be triangulated against other measures. To support the sharing and triangulation of information, a high-level Leeds Quality Surveillance Group has been convened which meets on a bi-monthly basis. Membership includes the medical and nursing directors of each CCG, head of quality, head of governance and risk, quality managers and representatives from Healthwatch and the CQC. The meeting forms part of the governance structure of each CCG and is minuted. The purpose of the group is to jointly review quality performance and share information in order to identify potential or actual risks to quality and agree a response. Measuring Quality Measures against which we will monitor the quality of healthcare services include; • Patient outcomes (eg the extent to which the services improve a patient’s situation or condition) Patient Safety Indicators (eg incidence of adverse incidents & errors resulting in harm to patients) Mortality Rates (HSMR, SHMI) Healthcare Acquired Infection incidence • Patient experience (eg feedback from patients/service users about how they were treated by the services, and how satisfied they were with their experience of NHS healthcare.) Clinical Effectiveness (eg results implementation of NICE Guidance) of clinical audits, evaluation of Quality in Care Homes The Quality Team is committed to enhancing the quality and delivery of nursing care within Care Homes; by supporting staff and managers to achieve the optimum levels of care delivery within HMR. Working closely with the CCG Safeguarding and Continuing Healthcare teams and in partnership with Rochdale Borough Council and other 17 agencies, the CCG has implemented a quality monitoring system which alerts to early indictors of possible quality or safety failings. The quality monitoring system includes; Care Partnership Meetings – attended by representatives from a number of key organisations including the CCG, Local Authority, secondary care providers and community providers. These are the forum for multi-agency discussion of care home quality issues/concerns and for escalation of risks and serious concerns to the appropriate body or organisation eg CQC/LASAB/Police etc Care Homes Dashboard – developed by the CCG Named Nurse for Adult Safeguarding this is a “live” dashboard which is continually updated with quality related information eg CQC inspections, Safeguarding alerts, serious incidents etc. It provides an “at a glance” view of current quality issues regarding care homes across HMR and alerts to the signs of possible risks to the quality & safety of care home provision. Safeguarding & Quality Network meetings – bi monthly meetings facilitated by the CCG Safeguarding and Quality teams open to all care homes across HMR. The network aim is to promote best practice, sharing of lessons learned and provide specialist updates on issues of quality & safety relating to care homes eg medicines management/Mental Capacity and infection prevention & control. The care homes quality monitoring system is supported by a local Escalation Plan and Accountability Framework for Care Provision. Developed by the HMR CCG Named Nurse for Adult Safeguarding and adopted by the CCG, Rochdale Borough Council and the Rochdale Borough Safeguarding Adults Board, the Framework sets out the processes, actions and responsibilities HMR CCG and Rochdale Borough Council (RBC) in the event of a care provision concern. This incorporates the responsibilities under the Care Act 2014, including our joint response to managing provider failure. Primary Care Quality The members of HMR CCG are not just clinical commissioners but, just as importantly, are also responsible for the provision and quality of primary medical services. HMR CCG is committed to supporting our members in fulfilling this responsibility, ensuring that the population of Heywood Middleton & Rochdale receives excellent primary medical care. From 1 April 2016, HMR CCG will take on fully delegated responsibility for commissioning primary care GP services under “co commissioning” arrangements with NHS England. Delegated commissioning will support the development and implementation of new integrated out of hospital models of care. This includes multispecialty community providers and primary and acute care systems, as set out in the NHS Five Year Forward View, to transform primary care. The HMR CCG Primary Care Strategy sets out the vision for primary care and what the CCG is aiming to achieve through co-commissioning. Aligned to the CCG corporate objectives and commissioning intentions, the strategy describes the key priorities for primary care and the underpinning initiatives. The CCG recognises that under delegated commissioning arrangements, it will remain accountable for its pre-existing statutory functions in relation to quality assurance, but that these will need to be extended across the primary care contracts for which it will take on responsibility. Delegated commissioning will require the CCG to create a ‘primary care commissioning committee’ to oversee the exercise of delegated functions. This Governing Body sub 18 Committee will have appropriate level membership including Executive Directors, Lay members, Clinical leads and representation from Patient/Public groups. The CCG quality team will support the CCG primary care team in managing quality and developing the required quality assurance processes to meet the responsibilities of delegated commissioning in a safe and effective way. The HMR CCG Primary Care Improvement Group (PCIG) has a role in monitoring and driving quality improvements in primary care general practice. Membership of this group will include a CCG Quality team representative. Quality functions of PCIG include; Monitoring variations in primary care quality and performance including monitoring progress against the CCG GP Quality Standards, performance against GPOS / GPHLI indicators, QOF outcomes, monitoring outcomes of CQC Inspections and progress against associated action plans Data Analysis (eg QOF Performance, GP Practice High Level Indicators (NHS England), prescribing data, delivery of enhanced services Triangulation; various sources of data (eg GP quality feedback, complaints, incidents, Friends & Family test results) will be triangulated and reviewed in order to gain an insight into primary care quality across HMR. NHS England Local Area Team (AT) has established a Direct Commissioning Quality Surveillance Group (DCQSG) where primary care quality is reviewed across Greater Manchester. The CCG is an active member of the QSG and the work of this group will link directly into our Primary Care Improvement Group to ensure that we remain fully engaged in the wider developments of primary care quality. The quality team will also oversee the GP Quality Feedback process. This is the mechanism by which feedback from GP members on a range of quality issues is used as an early warning system to alert to concerns about quality/safety issues in secondary care and a range of other providers. The NHS Five Year Forward View signals a clear and continued shift towards commissioning based on the specific needs of a local area and its patients. In 2016/17, NHS England will be exploring options for the possible expansion of co-commissioning into wider primary care areas, with full and proper engagement of CCGs, NHS Clinical Commissioners and the relevant professional groups. This includes community pharmacy, dentistry and ophthalmic where scoping work will focus upon scoping how to strengthen partnership working between NHS England and CCG commissioners. HMR CCG has embraced the ambitions and challenges set out in the NHS Five Year Forward View. Moving forwards, the CCG will consider future proposal and developments in relation to expansion of co-commissioning, ensuring as always that quality remains central to all commissioning activities. Sharing Good Practice HMR CCG recognises the importance of sharing good practice and lessons learned. Working in partnership with NHS England and local CCGs, we will share good practice across Heywood Middleton & Rochdale in all areas of healthcare, including Foundation Trusts, independent providers, primary care, particularly lessons learned from CQC visits, serious incidents and safeguarding reviews. Where appropriate, we will ensure the wider sharing of lessons learned, eg across Greater Manchester or nationally. 19 Equality & Diversity and Human Rights NHS Heywood Middleton and Rochdale CCG is committed to promoting equality, diversity and human rights in the delivery of all of its functions, in order to ensure that NHS services are accessible and appropriate and are developed and delivered based on the needs of local patients and stakeholders. The CCG recognise that Equality is an integral part of this Quality Strategy. The purpose of including this within the Quality Strategy is to ensure we meet our duties: Under the Human Rights Act 1998 to respect, protect and fulfil people’s human rights. Under the Equality Act 2010 to have due regard, when delivering our functions, to the need to: o eliminate discrimination, o advance equality of opportunity o foster good relations between groups In relation to the ‘protected characteristics’ of age, disability, gender reassignment, pregnancy and maternity, race, religion and belief, sex and sexual orientation. However, we view this as more than mere legal compliance. This is a means to an end and not an end in itself. The end is good quality care for all. Respecting diversity, promoting equality and ensuring human rights will mean that everyone using health and social care services receives good quality care. To put this principle into practice, we will continue to improve the equality performance of our providers through robust procurement and monitoring practice by: Raising the profile of the equality agenda at Quality Monitoring meetings with providers to develop and implement plans to address key areas of disadvantage. Reviewing the Equality KPI, a requirement of the NHS Standard Contract Quality Schedule to ensure a clear linkage to the GM Equality, Diversity and Human Rights contract Schedule (EDHR), which ensures the equality functions of Providers are clear, focussed and addresses Public Sector Equality Duty. Exploring potential CQUIN indicators to drive up EDHR performance. Where possible, supporting providers in developing good practice and connect this into the work of EDS2 and Healthwatch. Connecting the equality implications of Keogh and Francis report via quality schedule (EDHR schedule and Quality and Performance Group plan) Exploring options to enhance analysis of patient experience across protected groups where needs are greatest. Incorporating EDHR principles within our programme of Patient Safety Walk rounds. The CCG is committed to delivering the EDS2 goals and outcomes as described at Appendix 2 with the aim of ensuring the quality of care experienced by vulnerable groups of patients is improved. There are logistical challenges in achieving this which we are addressing. All providers are required to gather data about their patients in relation to the protected characteristics. As a CCG we have requested that this data be included in patient 20 safety, complaints and patient experience reports. This needs to be strengthened moving forward but is hampered by national electronic systems for capturing patient data which does not allow for data collection against all the protected characteristics. We will work with our Providers to ensure they have plans in place to improve the collection of this data against the 9 protected criteria. This will be monitored through quality monitoring meetings with providers. Within the CCG, the CCG Quality & Safety Committee is responsible for monitoring performance against our EDHR objective, whilst the CCG Patient Experience and Assurance Committee will ensure the ethos of Equality and Diversity is a golden thread through HMR CCG, by continuing the inclusive approach and including voices from local protected groups, vulnerable groups and emerging communities. Monitoring Progress against the strategy and action plan (see appendix 1) will be monitored by the HMR CCG Governing Body through the HMR CCG Quality & Safety Committee. It will be reviewed annually to ensure that the strategy continues to reflect national and local priorities for quality and will be refreshed/revised as required. Conclusion Within this document HMR CCG has set out an ambitious strategy for ensuring and improving the quality of care for its population. The CCG is committed to delivering this strategy. 21 QUALITY STRATEGY ACTION PLAN Goal 1 – Patients and Service Users will feel safe and will not suffer avoidable harm Outcome Measure The CCG has assessed progress against its Francis/Berwick/Keogh action plans and addressed areas of partial or non-compliance. Agreed processes will be in place to ensure effective performance management of serious incidents and compliance with current NHS England Serious Incident Management Framework. CCG Quality team members will be trained in serious incident investigation techniques and sit on Serious Incident Investigation panels where a comprehensive investigation is required. Provider contracts will specify quality outcomes and standards together with planned monitoring arrangements and penalties when these apply. Contractual penalties and levers in place for Never Events and underperformance against quality indicators Annual programme of Patient Safety Walk-rounds in place across all care settings Systems and processes in place to monitor compliance with the Duty of Candour and contractual penalties in place for non –compliance. Early Warning Systems in place for all providers to alert to potential serious failings. Annual schedule of Quality Monitoring Meetings across all providers and associated work-plans Mechanisms in place for monitoring the quality impact of Provider cost improvement plans (CIPS) Active participation in NHS England Greater Manchester Quality Surveillance Group Active participation in NHS England Greater Manchester Quality Leads Collaborative Revised GP Quality Feedback Process Date for Completion November 2015 Responsible Lead/Committee November 2015 Director of Quality & Safety/Quality & Safety Committee March 2016 Director of Quality & Safety/Quality & Safety Committee Director of Quality & Safety/Quality & Safety Committee Ongoing On-going Director of Quality & Safety/Quality & Safety Committee On-going Director of Quality & Safety/Quality & Safety Committee On-going Director of Quality & Safety/Quality & Safety Committee On-going Director of Quality & Safety/Quality & Safety Committee On-going Director of Quality & Safety/Quality & Safety Committee On-going Director of Quality & Safety/Quality & Safety Committee On-going Director of Quality & Safety/Quality & Safety Committee On-going Director of Quality & Safety/Quality & Safety Committee October 2015 Director of Quality & Safety/Quality & 22 in place and triangulation with other sources of intelligence eg Serious Incidents/Complaints/CQC reports Care Home Quality & Safeguarding Partnership Meetings in place Processes in place to monitor provider compliance against Safer Staffing levels Reduction of Healthcare Associated Infections in line with NHS England trajectories Post Infection Review (PIR) processes in place HMR CCG newsletter will share best practice and lessons learned. The CCG receives regular reports from providers which triangulate data from incidents, complaints, PALS, claims, inquests and demonstrates how the learning from these has been embedded into practice. Safety Committee On-going On-going Director of Quality & Safety/Quality & Safety Committee Director of Quality & Safety/Quality & Safety Committee On-going Director of Quality & Safety/Quality & Safety Committee On-going Director of Quality & Safety/Quality & Safety Committee Director of Communications & Engagement/Quality & Safety Committee Director of Quality & Safety/Quality & Safety Committee On-going On-going Goal 2: Patients and service users will receive care and treatment which is evidence based, clinically effective and provides value for money Outcome Measure Date for Completion Responsible Lead/Committee CCG Research Champion Completed Director of Quality & Safety/Quality & appointed Safety Committee Implementation of approved April 2016 Director of Quality & Safety/Quality & HMR CCG Research Safety Committee Strategy 50% Increased uptake of December 2016 Director of Quality & Safety/Quality & research activity across Safety Committee HMR CCG member practices NICE Quality Standards as April 2016 Director of Quality & Safety/Quality & part of contractual Safety Committee requirements with all providers. Providers can demonstrate April 2016 Director of Quality & Safety/Quality & that the care and treatment Safety Committee they provide is in accordance with NICE Guidance/technology appraisals Review of provider clinical On-going Director of Quality & Safety/Quality & audit programmes will form Safety Committee part of work programme for quality monitoring meetings Cancer Peer Review September 2015 Director of Quality & Safety/Quality & findings are reported to Safety Committee Commissioners and progress against associated action plans monitored 23 through the Clinical Quality Leads meeting. Quality team will participate September 2015 in HMR CCG Service Review Process Patient Reported Outcome On-going measures (PROMS) included in quality indicators Provider Quality Accounts On-going will include an assessment of the organisations priorities for continuous improvement and a summary of progress on the previous year priorities. Director of Quality & Safety/Quality & Safety Committee Director of Quality & Safety/Quality & Safety Committee Director of Quality & Safety/Quality & Safety Committee Goal 3: Patients and service users will have a positive experience of healthcare services Outcome Measure Date for Completion Responsible Lead/Committee Quality Team representation Completed Director of Quality & Safety/Quality & on the HMR CCG Patient Safety Committee Engagement & Assurance Committee Friends and Family Test On-going Director of Quality & Safety/Quality & results reported by providers Safety Committee and use to drive service improvements. Work plans that takes into Completed Director of Quality & Safety/Quality & account key milestones eg Safety Committee National In-Patient Survey/Staff Survey Patients and service users On-going Director of Quality & Safety/Quality & are able/supported to Safety Committee provide feedback on the care and treatment they Director of Operations & have received through a Engagement/Patient Assurance & variety of mechanisms. Engagement Committee Elephant kiosks are December 2015 Director of Quality & Safety/Quality & effectively utilised to capture Safety Committee a wide range of patient and service user feedback. Patients/service users will December 2015 Director of Quality & Safety/Quality & be represented on provider Safety Committee committees/forums. Director of Communications & Engagement/Patient Engagement & Assurance Committee Development and On-going Director of Communications & implementation of processes Engagement/Patient Engagement & which demonstrate to the Assurance Committee public that HMR CCG has received and acted upon information received. Providers have mechanisms Completed Director of Quality & Safety/Quality & in place to monitor and Safety Committee 24 respond to complaints, PALS enquiries and other sources of patient/service user feedback (eg NHS Choices) and report to commissioners Mechanisms in place to ensure that patients and service users are included in commissioning decisions. On-going Director of Commissioning/Clinical Commissioning Development Group Director of Communications & Engagement/Patient Engagement & Assurance Committee 25 Appendix : 2 EDS 2 Goals & Outcomes 2014 Goal 1: Better Health Outcomes 1.1 Services are commissioned, designed and procured to meet the health needs of local communities. 1.2 Patients’ health needs are assessed, and resulting services provided, in appropriate and effective ways 1.3 Transition from one service to another, for people on care pathways, is made smoothly and everyone is well informed. 1.4 When people use NHS Services, their safety is prioritised and they are free from mistakes, mistreatment and abuse. 1.5 Screening, vaccination and other health promotion services reach and benefit all local communities. Goal 2: Improved Patient Access & Experience 2.1 Patients, carers and communities can readily access hospitals, community health and primary care services, and should not be denied access on unreasonable grounds 2.2 People are informed and supported as they wish to be in decisions about their care. 2.3 People report positive experiences of the NHS. 2.4 Peoples complaints about services are handled respectfully and efficiently Goal 3: A Represented & Supported Workforce 3.1 Fair NHS recruitment and selection processes lead to a more representative workforce 3.2 The NHS is committed to equal pay for work of equal value and expects employers to use equal pay audits to help them fulfil their legal obligations. 3.3 Training and development opportunities are taken up and positively evaluated by staff 3.4 When at work staff are free from abuse, harassment, bullying, violence from any source 3.5 Flexible working options are available to all staff consistent with the needs of the service and the way people lead their lives. 3.6 Staff report positive experiences of their membership of the workforce Goal 4: Inclusive Leadership 4.1 Boards and senior leaders routinely demonstrate their commitment to promoting equality is advanced within and beyond their organisations. 4.2 Papers that come before Boards and other major committees identify equality- impacts including risk, and say how these risks are to be managed. 4.3 Middle managers and other line managers support their staff to work in culturally competent ways within a work environment free from discrimination. 26 27