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Neurodigest Update on Neurology for Primary and Community Care ISSUE 2: 2015 ADVANCES IN CLINICAL NEUROSCIENCE & REHABILITATION Reviews Case Studies Commissioning Rehabilitation In partnership with the Primary Care Neurology Society CONTENTS CONTENTS ISSUE 1: 2014 Welcome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 • Neurodigest Editor, Dr Alistair Church, offers his thoughts on our 2nd issue. Neurology Network . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 • Dr Paul Morrish, Consultant Neurologist, outlines the importance of The Neurology Intelligence Network Service Development . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 • Primary Care management of headache – a pilot pathway and guidelines Commissioning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 • Sue Thomas outlines the importance of expert commissioning support in neurology Case Study . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 • How a network approach has helped in a new model for care provision for people with Motor Neurone Disease Rehabilitation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 • Prof Pam Enderby explores the importance of clarifying patients’ needs and levels of community rehabilitation services required Review . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 • Parkinson’s Disease – does DNA Methylation hold the key? Rehabilitation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 • Targeted botulinum toxin and restoration of hand function following a severe brain injury Review . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 • Rapid and reliable management of early-morning OFF periods in patients with Parkinson’s disease Service Development . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 • Focusing on the ‘invisible patients’ Neurology Networks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 • A round-up of news from the Strategic Clinical Networks across the country If you have any comments or questions about Neurodigest, please email the Publisher, Rachael Hansford at [email protected]. A full PDF of this issue of Neurodigest is available to download from ACNR’s website at www.acnr.co.uk Neurodigest Published by Whitehouse Publishing, in partnership with The Primary Care Neurology Society PUBLISHER Rachael Hansford Whitehouse Publishing, 1 The Lynch, Mere, Wiltshire, BA12 6DQ T. 01747 860168 • M. 07989 470278 E. [email protected] ADVERTISING Cathy Phillips E. [email protected] PRINTED BY Warners Midlands. Tel. 01778 391000 Copyright: All rights reserved; no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without either the prior written permission of the publisher or a license permitting restricted photocopying issued in the UK by the Copyright Licensing Authority. Disclaimer: The publisher, the authors and editors accept no responsibility for loss incurred by any person acting or refraining from action as a result of material in or omitted from this magazine. Any new methods and techniques described involving drug usage should be followed only in conjunction with drug manufacturers’ own published literature. This is an independent publication - none of those contributing are in any way supported or remunerated by any of the companies advertising in it, unless otherwise clearly stated. Comments expressed in editorial are those of the author(s) and are not necessarily endorsed by the editor, editorial board or publisher. The editor’s decision is final and no correspondence will be entered into. NEURODIGEST • ISSUE 2 • 2015 • 3 FROM THE EDITOR Welcome A very big welcome to our second edition of Neurodigest: a communitycentric neurology focused journal. Our mission is to seek out excellent care wherever we find it and disseminate this to our expanding readership. This has never been more important. Another 5 years of Conservative government is likely to see acceleration of commissioning, giving stakeholders a unique opportunity to influence and shape their future local service. CCG’s (clinical commissioning groups) need to be mindful of their patients’ needs before designing a service. Pam Enderby shares her “8 levels of care tool”. This specifically helps to indentify patient’s requirements; an important step in ensuring services are “fit for purpose.” Headache is of course the number 1 reason for referral to secondary care and is thus a low lying fruit ripe for picking. Keith Redhead has kindly shared with us the West Norfolk Pilot Pathway for managing headache in the community - a path I am sure many CCG’s will be looking to go down. We are indebted to Paul Morrish and Alex Massey for highlighting the level of pre-existing Neurology provision across England. It is no surprise to see the word “inequality” coming up time and again. Hopefully the next few years will see his map turning a more homogeneous colour and these “invisible” patients becoming more opaque. The old days of patients with chronic neurological disease, taking their place every 6 months in the local DGH to see their Consultant are hopefully numbered. Ruth Glew and Ken Dawson outline how they have set up a patient centred, multidisciplinary, integrated network for patients with Motor Neuron Disease in SE Wales. Neurodigest is also very grateful to Nigel Williams for providing an “easy to digest” view on the topic of Epigenetics. Greater understanding of how to answer the “Why me?” question patients often pose is knowledge we can all benefit from. Patient stories are always illuminating particularly to those of us who refer our patients to support services such as Neurorehabilitation. Julian Harriss demonstrates how a specialist multidisciplinary approach applied to a patient with traumatic brain injury can lead to dramatic, life enhancing improvement. Management of Parkinson’s disease can become a difficult balance as motor complications arise. Ray Chaudhuri guides us through the treatment options available to help patients though the first hour or two of the day. Finally we report back from several Neuroscience Strategic Clinical Networks who have been kind enough to update us on their progress in reshaping the delivery of local care across the country. We very much hope you enjoy this second issue of Neurodigest. Should you wish to offer your thoughts/comments on any of the subjects being aired, or you would like to contribute to a future issue, please get in touch with the Publisher via Rachael@ acnr.co.uk 4 • NEURODIGEST • ISSUE 2 • 2015 Alistair Church, Neurodigest Editor CASE MANAGEMENT Hemiplegia Parents may initially notice their infant having difficulties such as reaching out and/or manipulating toys with the affected hand. He should be referred to the local paediatric and physical therapy service to: • Confirm the diagnosis that the movement difficulties are due to hemiplegia • Investigate for a possible underlying cause • Provide a management plan with medical follow up and physical therapy In our online article by Dr Anne Kelly, Consultant Paediatrician, NHS Leeds Community Healthcare, you can find out more about diagnosis, neuro-imaging, phsyio and OT assessments, and general principles of management. The article also looks at areas of progress and age related expectations. Read more at www.neurodigest.co.uk Hemihelp HemiHelp is a charity that was set up by a small group of parents in 1990. It has grown into a national organisation that has a membership of over 4,000 families and professionals from all over the UK and beyond. They provide information, support and run events for children with hemiplegia and their families as well as for professionals (medical and educational) involved in their care. Their work benefits professionals in the NHS, social services and schools who work with children with hemiplegia and is the first service recommended to families at the point of diagnosis. For more information about hemiplegia or Hemihelp, see www.hemihelp.org.uk or call 0845 1203713. Neurology Networks What is the NIN (Neurology Intelligence Network)? Paul Morrish Member and adviser to Neurology Intelligence Network Paul Morrish qualified in 1983 and trained in General Practice at Milton Keynes. He went back into hospital medicine and then neurology. He worked in research in Parkinson’s disease, and was Neurology Consultant in Sussex and in Gloucestershire where he pursued an interest in neurology service development and education. He now works part-time as a Neurologist in Bristol and helps the Neurology Intelligence Network with data analysis and interpretation. E: [email protected] We live in an age of information, but information and knowledge are not synonymous. In the NHS in England, information is continually collected and the performance of the NHS judged by it. General practitioners know all too well how information collection in their job has moved from an occasional trawl through Lloyd-George notes in the interest of research and audit, through computerised record keeping and data collection, to payment according to the provision of data for national collecting houses, and then perhaps removal of payment. One national collector of data, the HSCIC, now has masses of data concerning neurology services but it doesn’t have local knowledge. The Neurology Intelligence Network, part of Public Health England, will provide a publicly available source of data and an interpretation in order to improve the health and the services provided for those with neurological symptoms and illnesses. For intelligent commissioning there needs to be a combination of local knowledge and local and national information. That way commissioners can compare their own performance with similar geographies in the difficult task of caring for people with these disabling and often fatal illnesses. To give a taste of the content of this massive information store, this article presents just one of many hundreds of pieces of information and gives a glimpse into the difficulties in interpretation. So here is a patchwork of shading, with the numbers behind that revealing a scarcely believable range in service provision. Some CCG areas, the lightest shade, received between 2 and 6 neurology appointments per 1000 residents, whilst others, the darkest shade, received between 13 and 20, a range beginning as low as 1.7 and ending as high as 19.8 per 1000 residents. Being unhealthily cynical, my next thought is to ponder data quality. Where do these figures come from? The numbers provided for the map excludes DNA’s and cancelled appointments. They are collected by PHE from all the CCGs in England, and the assumption is made that all the CCGs are doing it in the same way, even though it’s quite possible that they aren’t. Exposing and comparing the figures might encourage CCGs to communicate A map of new patient appointments in neurology: This map shows (in quintiles) the number of attended appointments for new patients in neurology in England in 2012-3, for each thousand resident adult population. When such information is shown to GPs and to Neurologists there are numerous interpretations, sometimes informed by local knowledge, and occasionally accompanied by outrage, bias and self-interest. So please do look at the map and jot down your own interpretation of the picture, perhaps considering national and local issues, before reading further on to mine. NEURODIGEST • ISSUE 2 • 2015 • 5 Neurology Networks with each other and compare what they do or don’t include in their data collection; in doing so the quality and comparability should improve. If concern over data quality compels us to exclude the quintiles (or 40 CCG’s) at either end, there is still a range from 6 to 13 per 1000 adult population. There is very definitely not equitable access to a neurology outpatient opinion in the NHS. The map shows one year only so why take any notice? A new consultant appointment, an old consultant absence, a waiting list initiative, a newly introduced deterrent to referral or a newly offered open access to CT or MRI scans will all produce a swing in appointments attended. Local knowledge might help explain where one’s own CCG fits in the picture, but it could take every one of these factors working collectively to move a CCG from one end of the range to the other. The pattern of inequality shown here was also apparent in 2008 and hasn’t changed a great deal despite a doubling in the provision of neurology appointments. medical admissions unit, some teaching, a little research, some agitating for better local neurology services and maybe, for the purposes of an upcoming appraisal, some compulsory reflection. It is probable that appointments for patients with neurological symptoms are provided in many areas by other specialties, or that in some areas patients are referred where in other areas those symptoms are perfectly managed by the GP without referral. There is no evidence either to compare the costs and efficacy of different specialties in managing different neurological symptoms. So the figures need to encourage the development of evidence to guide service development. The second question is to ask what would be the “right” number of new neurology appointments to be provided by a CCG. That number would be the number of patients within each area that develop neurological symptoms, that take those symptoms to the GP, that are assessed and referred according to their belief in the power of a specialist and that GP’s confidence, and then that the GP makes the choice to refer to neurology. So the right number will depend upon the demographics of the CCG, the gatekeeping of the GP and the perceived neurological competence of the local neurologists and the alternative specialists. Referral guidance and triage, good local interaction between primary and secondary care, GPwSI’s working closely with secondary care and communitybased neurology nurses could all improve things, and hopefully can also start to provide the evidence to prove their worth to the local community. This, of course is where we came in; the acknowledgement that national information is important and interesting but may only be relevant in the context of local knowledge. If we accept the data collection as imperfect, and as a snapshot of service two years ago, can we see anything important? The inequality of provision is likely to be multifactorial with area demographics (for example age, sex, socio-economic and racial characteristics) determining the neurological need of an area, but need is clearly not the only factor that underlies neurological demand and provision. North London, perhaps through its proximity to large traditional neurological centres, is relatively well off for appointments. Nearby Tower Hamlets and Newham however appear to benefit less from that proximity. London, in general, seems to be a lot better than elsewhere, and Cumbria REFERENCES and Doncaster do much worse. For me, there are two nagging and related questions that are prompted by the numbers. The first is whether the inequality in provision produces inequality in neurology patients’ care and health. A CCG commissioner might reasonably respond to their area’s relative lack of appointments by asking to see the evidence for the value of more appointments. That evidence is, despite all the data being collected, simply not available at present. Outcomes are difficult to define and measure in all chronic disease, not just neurology. Is it fair to expect patients to wait for the evidence before we provide a service? We don’t ask for an RCT of a parachute. Sometimes things need to be done because it looks like they need to be done. The patients’ organisation, the Neurological Alliance, has published a report3 of its survey on neurological services (see article on page 20). “The Invisible Patients” report tells us that 40% of respondents waited more than a year and that 31% saw their GP 5 times or more about their symptoms before seeing a neurology specialist.3 It is of course important to question the worth of a Neurologist, and my response would be to delicately suggest a read of “What is the value of a neurologist”4 a commentary from a colleague’s day that included diagnosing the unusual, breaking bad news,counselling a family with genetic disease, and supporting the chronically sick; it might also have included a ward round, a visit to the 6 • NEURODIGEST • ISSUE 2 • 2015 1. 2. 3. The Compendium of Neurological Data, England 2012-3 http://www. hscic.gov.uk/catalogue/PUB13776 (accessed Oct 2014). Copyright © 2013, Re-used with the permission of the Health and Social Care Information Centre. All rights Reserved. The Neurology Fingertips Tool http://fingertips.phe.org.uk/profilegroup/mental-health/profile/neurology (accessed Oct 2014). Neurology profiles produced by the Neurology Intelligence Network, cosponsored by Public Health England and NHS England. Crown copyright 2014. The Neurological Alliance, The Invisible Patients; Revealing the state of neurology services. Jan 2015. Service Development Primary Care management of Headache: A pilot pathway and guidelines including access to MRI Keith Redhead Keith Redhead is a GP Trainer in Kings Lynn, Norfolk. Previously a GP Specialist in Neurology, he became Neurology Lead for the West Norfolk Clinical Commissioning Group. E: [email protected] Debbie Craven Debbie Craven has worked in West Norfolk as a Primary Care Pharmacist/Prescribing Advisor for 14 years and always valued the opportunity to work with fellow health care professionals to ensure patients receive optimised care. Dan Rose Dan Rose undertook his Radiology training in Nottingham and is now a Consultant Radiologist and Divisional Clinical Director at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital, King’s Lynn. Andrew Dowson Andrew Dowson worked as a GP for several years before becoming a specialist in headache. In 1996 he founded the NHS King’s Headache Service at King’s College Hospital, London. He is the Clinical Lead for the East Kent Headache Service and lecturer at Edinburgh University. Philip Buttery Philip Buttery is Lead Neurologist for Deep Brain Stimulation (DBS) services in Addenbrooke’s Hospital, working alongside the neurosurgical team. He trained at Oxford University and completed his specialist training in East Anglia. Jonathan Graham Jonathan Graham is Consultant Radiologist with the Midcentral District Health Board in Palmerston North, New Zealand, having trained at Charing Cross and Westminster Medical School and on the Guys and St Thomas Radiology Rotation in the UK. Jeremy Brown Jeremy Brown trained in London and Nottingham and is a Consultant Neurologist at Queen Elizabeth Hospital King’s Lynn and Addenbrooke’s Hospital Cambridge. Geoff Hunnam Geoff Hunnam is a Consultant Radiologist at The Queen Elizabeth hospital Kings Lynn since 1987 where he has been Medical Director from 2006-2012 and Clinical Director of Radiology 1990-1996, 2004-2006. Summary A pilot pathway and guidelines to assist primary care practitioners managing patients with headache was introduced by the West Norfolk Clinical Commissioning Group (WNCCG) after GPs had expressed a wish to have greater access to imaging. The pathway, which included GP access to MRI (GPMRI), provided guidelines as to who should not be referred for scanning, but rather admitted or referred urgently i.e. “Red Flags”. It grouped the “Green flag” patients with primary headache into categories, to aid diagnosis, provide evidence based treatment plans and guidance as to which patients were eligible for GP-MRI. The pilot was preceded by a well evaluated educational programme provided by the authors of the pathway. 12 months following access to GP-MRI there was a 29% reduction in headache referrals to the neurology department. Background Headache is the most common new neurological symptom presented to General Practitioners and to Neurologists. However only 3% of headache consultations are referred to secondary care. Headache is the reason for up to a third of new neurology referrals from General Practice. In 2011-12 it was the reason for 24% of referrals from West Norfolk GPs to the department of Neurology, Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Kings Lynn. Headaches presenting to GPs are most commonly migraine and chronic tension headache and it has been suggested that most primary headache can be managed in General Practice. However, primary care health professionals find the diagnosis and classification of headache difficult, and both health care professionals and patients worry about serious causes such as brain tumours2 despite the fact that when patients present to their GP with headache the risk of brain tumour is 0.09%2. The decision to investigate headache depends on a number of factors including therapeutic value, clinical confidence, time constraints in the consultation, availability of imaging, the GP’s approach to risk and uncertainty, reassurance of an anxious patient and medico-legal concerns. Primary care access to imaging has been shown to reduce referral rates in chronic headache 3,4,5. The findings of a study in Nottingham suggest that a defined access pathway for imaging to investigate chronic headache preceded by a GP educational meeting and clear MRI reporting for non-specialist referrers can be deployed appropriately in a primary-care setting6. At a clinical commissioning engagement meeting (held on 9/2/12) West Norfolk GPs expressed the desire to have access to imaging to investigate headaches. Initial concerns about GP access to MRI Preliminary discussions with the local Neurologists in Kings Lynn revealed their concerns that providing GPs access to MRI may lead to delay of acute diagnoses such as subarachnoid haemorrhage, arterial dissection, meningitis and giant cell arteritis. These patients needed to be admitted or referred urgently and not referred for scanning. An additional concern NEURODIGEST • ISSUE 2 • 2015 • 7 Service Development was the risk of doing harm to the patient by discovering “incidental findings” on the MRI and thereby causing anxiety. Incidental findings on brain imaging may be found in 0.6-2.8% of the population. The radiology department was concerned about the potential for a large number of MRI requests. The (WNCCG) commissioners were concerned about duplication, overspend of resources and the importance of prescribing within the local guidelines. a 29% reduction compared with the 335 referrals in 2011/12. There was a reduction of headache as the reason for referral to neurology as a proportion of total neurology referrals from 24% to 21% to 18% over the same period. 12 months after access to imaging there had been 36 referrals for GP-MRI. 2 patients failed to attend (patients offered 2 appointments). The condition of 1 patient altered after the GPMRI had been requested and that patient underwent urgent CT scan after discussion with the radiology department. Of 33 Creation of a working group to create the pathway A working group consisting of General Practitioners, patients who underwent GP-MRI, there was only 1 abnormal Radiologists and Neurologists met to devise a headache pathway result, a possible normal pressure hydrocephalus. There were and guidelines including access to MRI. The pathway provides 32 normal results, which included 9 incidental findings (27%). guidelines as to which patients need admission or urgent The 9 incidental findings were: referral and those with chronic headache who may benefit from MRI referral. Normal investigation does not eliminate the need • 1 cerebral atrophy for follow up and appropriate management. It is estimated that • 5 small vessel ischaemia 60% of patients presenting to General Practice with headache • 2 pineal cysts have migraine. Accordingly it was agreed that the pilot pathway • 1 type I Arnold Chiari malformation. should also contain guidelines regarding the management of Three of 33 patients who underwent GP-MRI were referred headaches. Advice was provided by the Director of Headache on to the neurology department. One patient with possible Services at Kings College Hospital London. normal pressure hydrocephalus was referred directly as a result The Community Pharmacist collaborated with the WNCCG of GP-MRI. The other 2 patients were referred for further medicines management team, to ensure the pathway treatment advice on the management of their persistent headaches. They plans were in keeping with locally agreed prescribing had incidental findings on their GP-MRI (cerebral atrophy and pineal cyst). guidelines. Subsequently a business plan was drawn up with the Commissioning Manager and agreements were made regarding neurology tariffs and the costs for GP-MRI. A GP-MRI electronic request form was designed including contraindications to MRI for referrers. GP-MRI reporting was to be undertaken by General Radiologists in a suitable GP-friendly fashion. Thus, when incidental findings were detected, explicit guidance would explain their relevance. Monitoring of both GP-MRI and neurology referrals was undertaken by the operations manager of the WNRMC. Launching the pathway All 23 practices in the West Norfolk Clinical Commissioning Group (WNCCG) (population 164,500) were to be provided with access to MRI for refractory headache. This access was linked to an educational programme to launch the pilot pathway. The Neurologists and Radiologists insisted that a representative from every practice attend the educational meeting, to ensure that patients were referred according to agreed criteria. A meeting was held on the 4/7/12 organised by the GP tutor. Every GP was invited and all practices were sent the proposed pathway. The evening 2 hour 15 minute meeting consisted of 5 presentations followed by questions and answers. A second afternoon meeting with a similar format was held on 21/3/13, to ensure that remaining practices were represented. The pilot was launched on the 1/4/13. Results The headache pathway and guidelines were launched on 4/7/12 at an educational meeting, and by electronic distribution of the pathway to all WNCCG GPs. It was originally planned that access to GP-MRI would commence at the same time. However due to contractual problems access to GP-MRI was delayed by eight months, finally launching on 1/4/13. The results of 22/23 practices (population 163,821) who used the Choose and Book system. GP-MRI for headache – A pilot pathway & guidelines* Download the full pilot pathway from www.neurodigest.co.uk Patient 12 years or older presents with Headache Ask the patient to use a headache diary for a minimum of 8 weeks to record: • Frequency duration and severity of headaches Exclude serious cause with history examination and baseline investigations (See red box in online version at www.neurodigest.co.uk) • Associated symptoms • All prescribed and OTC medications • Possible precipitants • Relationship of headaches to menstruation Use headache diary to help diagnose primary headache. Record for 8 weeks. Try conventional treatments according with guidelines for example in green boxes (See green box in online version at www.neurodigest.co.uk). While treatment is ongoing it is important that patients continue to be monitored for emergence of clues for more serious headache (See red box in online version at www.neurodigest.co.uk). If treatment failure after several weeks then it is reasonable to consider referral for GP-MRI. It is acknowledged that in some cases scanning may aid treatment through reassurance for patients and referrer. There was a reduction of headache referrals from 335 in 2011/12 to 299 in 2012/13, and 237 2013/14. This represents *This is an evidenced based guideline rather than a rigid protocol 8 • NEURODIGEST • ISSUE 2 • 2015 Commissioning Discussion The overwhelming support for this project from constituent GPs was demonstrated by their attendance at educational meetings, their evaluation of the pathway, and their willingness to participate in the pilot. The reduction in referrals in the first year would seem to be attributable to the educational meeting and distribution of the pathway. The reduction in the second year would appear to be a combination of the pathway and access to imaging. Overall there was a 30% reduction in headache referrals to neurology, while referrals for other neurological complaints over the same period remained static. The concerns about increased cost and increased demand for MRI were not realised. The discovery of incidental findings on MRI (27%) were offset by appropriate radiological reporting.The pathway is an example of worthwhile clinical commissioning by demonstrating the benefits of GPs working with Neurologists for training and support, (as proposed by the RCP 7) as well as Radiologists, Commissioners and Community Pharmacists. The overall reduction in neurological referrals suggests its cost effectiveness. It is proposed that GPs should continue to have access to GP-MRI according to these guidelines. There is a need for continued data collection to ensure referrals continue to be made in accordance with the guidelines and quality of patient care is maintained. Acknowledgements Dr Phillip Koopowitz and Alison Lowe, Chairman and Operations Manager respectively, of the West Norfolk Referral Management Centre for their assistance with the data collection. Neil Bindemann of the Primary Care Neurology Society for introducing KR to AD and for his encouragement. Dr Hilary Lazarus for her help with the manuscript. REFERENCES 1. National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence. Headaches. Diagnosis and management of headaches in young people and adults. (Clinical Guideline 150.)2012. http://guidance.nice.org.uk/CG150/ Guidance. 2. Department of Health. Direct Access to Diagnostic Tests for Cancer. Best Practice Referral Pathways for General Practitioners. DH; 2012. 3. Simpson GC, Forbes K, Teasdale E, Tyagi A, Santosh C. Impact of GP direct-access computerised tomography for the investigation of chronic daily headache. British Journal of General Practice 2010;60(581):897 901. 4. Howard L, Wessely S, Leese M, Page L, McCrone P, Husain K, Tong J, Dowson A. Are investigations anxiolytic or anxiogenic? A randomised controlled trial of neuroimaging to provide reassurance in chronic daily headache 10.1136/jnnp.2004.057851. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 2005;76(11):1558-1564. 5. Thomas R, Cook A, Main G, Taylor T, Caruana E, Swingler R. Primary care access to computed tomography for chronic headache. The British Journal of General Practice. 2010; 60 (575): 426. 6. Taylor T, Evangelou N, Porter H, Lenthall R. Primary care direct access MRI for the investigation of chronic headache. Clinical radiology. 2012; 67 (1): 24--27. 7. Royal College of Physicians. Local adult neurology services for the next decade. Report of the Working Party. London:RCP,2011 Providing Expert Commissioning Support in Neurology – what a difference this can make January saw the publication of ‘The Invisible Patients’ by Sue Thomas is Chief Executive of the Neurological Alliance (NA 2014), see page 20 of this NHiS Commissioning Excellence. Neurodigest. The report showed that neurology patients are Her background is in nursing, with tumbling through the gaps, because many commissioners have extensive experience in primary care and commissioning. Sue is an alarming lack of understanding around local neurological a Florence Nightingale Scholar, populations and their needs. At a time when NHS England has a Winston Churchill Fellow and approved the first set of GP led clinical commissioning groups has published over 150 papers (CCGs) that will take on the responsibility for commissioning and 20 book chapters. She GP services in April (NHS England 2015), it has never been regularly speaks at national and international conferences. more important for local commissioners to actively improve their engagement with and understanding of neurology. It’s not E: [email protected] impossible to get these services right – models of excellent Sue Thomas practice across the country show it can be done. The major hurdle is knowing where the problems lie and the steps from prompt treatment and management. to take, many which the report highlights. Plus, delivering good CSS can also help identify problem areas, like the top reasons for services for long-term conditions tends to cost less overall – a urgent care in neurology, which is very often not much different for great incentive for CCGs. other urgent care admissions - UTIs, chest infections and falls are Various changes in the NHS are having a positive impact on common causes of admission but in neuro patients may result in a neurology services and many of these are down to expert longer length of stay than someone from the general population. commissioning support services (CSS) which can help ensure Managing patients with more proactive, preventative care could changes are successfully implemented so that patients benefit result in better patient outcomes and reduced admissions. NEURODIGEST • ISSUE 2 • 2015 • 9 Commissioning NHS Vale of York CCG recognised their need for expert neurology support and in partnership with a CSS identified how services were meeting need. They also consulted with a wide group of neurology patients to co-produce a new neurology strategy for York mapping and building separate process pathways for epilepsy, multiple sclerosis, Parkinson’s and motor neurone disease (MND), so that everyone knows what to expect along the disease journey. Helping York understand their neurology data intelligence, the CCG discovered that compared to other matched CCGs, admissions for MND patients were low. This was the result of support from a specialist MND nurse Doreen Foster whose salary was supported by a local charity. The CCG saw the value this nurse provided and took over funding for the post. This is an excellent example of how data can uncover efficiencies in the system as well as inefficiencies! GPs also highlighted a need for more neurology education, and so the CCG has introduced training in neurology for GPs and a new referral support system has also been developed in partnership with Neurologists in the provider unit so that GPs can make more effective referrals. It’s too early to show results yet but neurology has been prioritised in the York CCG QIPP programme (Quality, Innovation, Productivity and Prevention). Hull and East Yorkshire Hospitals NHS Trust worked with CSS to map the Multiple Sclerosis patient journey from diagnosis through the continuum of the disease process.Through this they identified that there were significant delays in referral to treatment time post diagnosis due to on-going specialist nurse referral delays. By developing a new patient pathway, which included converting an existing clinic into a new patient clinic, waiting times were reduced from twelve to two weeks – a remarkable improvement 10 • NEURODIGEST • ISSUE 2 • 2015 for patients. Finally, with the help of CSS the Strategic Clinical Network in South East Coast has developed individual neurology data dashboards for each of its 21 CCGs. This has been really helpful for raising the profile of neurology and to help CCGs to understand their neurology intelligence. Moreover, data is essential for the CCGs to understand why there are demands on acute services so that steps can be taken to rectify issues and bottlenecks in the system. These are just a few examples of CSS in action – demonstrating the value of expert neurology advice. The key to ensuring effective commissioning of neurology services is to make sure that CCGs have a baseline understanding of how services are currently working and also understand what models of care can provide better value. Right care defines value as: • • the value that the patient derives from their own care and treatment the value the whole population derives from the investment in their healthcare Many relatively simple measures can help guarantee that in the future neurology patients are no longer ‘invisible’ but placed firmly on the NHS agenda. REFERENCES 1. 2. 3. Neurological Alliance (2015) The Invisible Patients Neurological Alliance London NHS England (2015) First CCGs take on commissioning of GP services http://www.england.nhs.uk/ccg-details/ last accessed 24 February 2015 NHS Right care programme (2015) htcare.nhs.uk/index.php/programme/ last accessed 24 February 2015 Case Study The Network Approach: A new model for care provision for people with Motor Neurone Disease (pwMND) Ken Dawson is a Consultant Neurologist, working mainly as a General Neurologist in the Aneurin Bevan University Health Board area and also at the University Hospital of Wales, Cardiff, where he also runs specialist clinics for dystonia. He is Neurology Lead and Co-Director of the South Wales MND Care Network and provides neurology input for the local MND clinics covering Gwent and South Powys. Ken Dawson E: [email protected] Ruth Glew RGN, RMN, is a Registered Genetic Counsellor, DipN(Lond), BA, PGDip Therapeutic Counselling (CBT). Prior to taking up her post as Lead Care Co-ordinator for the South Wales MND Care Network in August 2012, Ruth has worked as both a general and Mental Health Nurse within the NHS. She then became a Genetic Counsellor in 1992 with a particular interest in Neurological conditions working in Southampton, Oxford and Cardiff. Ruth Glew South Wales with a mixed rural and urban population of 2.3 million, areas with high levels of deprivation and a relatively aged demographic profile, has a known population of people with motor neurone disease (pwMND) of approximately 170 - 200. Historically, there has been patchy and in areas poorly coordinated care for pwMND. The model for specialist MND care provision in the UK has been largely through specialist regional Care Centres. In South Wales this effectively reached only half of the MND population, who often had to travel long distances to access specialist expertise if available. The new network approach, established in 2012 and undergoing continuing development has a key aim of equity of access to and equality of care for people living with MND in South Wales, which meets the MND Association standards of care, wherever in the region they may be living. This is achieved through: • • • • • • Improved support and co-ordination of services Promotion of effective integrated working between sectors Development of multidisciplinary teams and local MND clinics Introduction of integrated care pathways Education and training events Regular steering group meetings It allows for significant existing expertise across a range of specialities and professions to be incorporated alongside increasingly strong local teams, resulting in improved services. Early palliative medicine input is a central feature.The service aims to be proactive not reactive, allowing for timely interventions such as feeding via gastrostomy and establishment of non-invasive ventilation and avoidance of emergency situations, which have often resulted in lengthy inpatient admissions. Delivery of care makes use of existing health and social care teams and is cost neutral in terms of those local teams involved. the Network Lead for two days a week.There is also a part-time Occupational Therapist. In future years, full funding for these posts will be taken over by the South Wales Health Boards. Early tasks for the network staff included ascertainment of the existing case load and a baseline audit of services and patient experience. Once a patient is diagnosed with MND, they are referred to the network personnel and receive an early initial Care-Coordinator assessment at home and are discussed at a local care network MDT meeting. At least three monthly MND MDT clinic attendances take place, unless the patient is too unwell to travel, in which case care at home with regular telephone follow-up or home visits take place. At a single clinic visit, for many although not yet all of the newly established local clinics, there is access to expertise, including a Neurologist, Palliative Care Physician, Respiratory Medicine Physician, Physiotherapist, Occupational The network has combined funding via a grant from the MND Therapist, Speech and Language Therapist and Dietician, as well Association with existing NHS funding already in place for MND as input from the Care Coordinators. End of life issues can be service provision and has led to the establishment of Care- gently introduced as a matter of routine. Coordinator posts based in the South-East and South-West hubs, in Cardiff and Swansea respectively, one of whom is also To facilitate an open and integrated approach to patientNEURODIGEST • ISSUE 2 • 2015 • 11 Rehabilitation centred care, we have developed a cross-organisation, all Wales electronic patient record (EPR) system allowing data Pw MND to be entered and accessed by any healthcare professional ‘The clinic is fantastic - having met the clinic from any location. team I feel reassured that I have the support I The service provided by the South Wales MND Care Network need now and in the future.’ has the potential to be a useful model for shared learning & ‘It’s really good to be able to see everyone at development in other areas of the UK with widely dispersed the same clinic, and the care is much more copopulations. We believe that this model of care has benefits for ordinated.’ both pwMND and professionals involved in their care. We are presently developing an outcome framework to further evaluate Professionals the impact of this approach on health care. ‘I feel much more supported in caring for Although still a relatively new development, the feedback for the pwMND, I no longer have to deal with this service has been very positive - see box right. on my own and referrals are much easier.’ Acknowledgements: MND Association and South Wales ‘This is much better use of my time and resources.’ MND Association branches. Clarifying patients’ needs and levels of services required Professor Pam Enderby MBE PhD is Professor of Community Rehabilitation at The University of Sheffield. She established the first AAC centre in the UK in 1980, and was awarded a Fellowship of the College of Speech Therapists in 1983. In 1993 Professor Enderby was honoured with an MBE for services to speech and language therapy. Professor Pam Enderby E: [email protected] T: 0114 2220858 The myriad of services which are badged under various labels such as ‘community based rehabilitation services’, ‘enablement services’, ‘integrated care’ and ‘intermediate care’ have been established to address a wide range of health and social care needs of patients and are seen as significant and integral parts of modernised health and social care services aiming to maintain and restore the independence of older people who have a variety of health needs. Increasing pressure on secondary care related to demographic changes has led to a year-on-year requirement to provide more services in the community in order to facilitate early discharge from hospital and avert avoidable admission. Frequently the identification of the requirement for active rehabilitation as compared to care and support are not clearly defined as the needs of the patient/older person are not made explicit. This makes it difficult to monitor the outcomes of services and to configure most appropriate skill mix to serve patient/client needs. This lack of clarity may be exacerbated by the development of more integrated services stimulated by the relatively new initiative of the Better Care Fund. (http://www.england.nhs.uk/ ourwork/part-rel/transformation-fund/bcf-plan/) of two studies of intermediate care in the UK allows comparison of changes over time relating to referral of patients to these services1. The first study2 was carried out between 2005 and 2008; the second study3 collected data between 2009 and 2011. It is clear from this that there has been a change in the types of referrals to community-based intermediate care service between the two time points, with a higher percentage of patients in more recent years being inappropriately referred to active rehabilitation in intermediate care services and who did not require such intervention but required social support and care. Whilst this trend is clear the reasons for this are not. I would suggest that it is possible that this is associated with increasing time pressures necessitating the need to pass responsibility from the acute trust to a community trust without having the opportunity to consider the particular needs of the patient as they return home and the recognition that more detailed assessment of needs is required. Additionally, these studies confirmed that more recently, a higher proportion of patients with more complex conditions were being referred to community-based services needing a range of more active interventions from the broader interdisciplinary team. Management of the patient/client will be dependent on the severity of the primary diagnosis in the context of other health restrictions, retained abilities, potential and social circumstances. As a result, it is difficult to determine the rehabilitation and care needs of the patient based on their medical diagnosis alone. Even cursory consideration of the range of patients who are being supported by community-based services would conclude that there is a requirement for a range of services which are flexible and respond to clients needs but also can be described in a meaningful manner to determine service strategy, staffing levels, skill mix and assist audit, benchmarking and contribute to planning. Previous research has shown that community rehabilitation teams Community services are generally required to intervene to and intermediate care services are highly2heterogeneous varying assist with the consequences of conditions such as progressive greatly in terms of their staffing models . They are often based neurological disease, a stroke, fall or chest infection. A synthesis on historical models rather than the needs of patient groups. 12 • NEURODIGEST • ISSUE 2 • 2015 Rehabilitation Table 1:Ten Levels of Care 0. Patient does not need any health or social care support. 1. Patient/client needs prevention/maintenance programme Aims: • Prevent physical and psychological deterioration • Prevent loss of independence • Promote psychological well-being • Encourage healthy living • Promote positive attitude to independence Services: • Home/care support – social enablers Setting: • Own home – local community setting Status of patient: • Slight frailty or some physical/psychological threat to independent living Include: • Individuals with physical/emotional or cognitive disorder who will not benefit from active rehabilitation but who need monitoring and advice Exclude: • Persons not at risk of deterioration • Any person wishing to exercise personal responsibility for this • Anyone receiving continuing health service where responsibility for this can be identified and passed over 2. Patient/client needs convalescence Aims: • Encourage improvement and/or maintenance of independence • Improve recuperation • Wait for aids adaptions • Wait for family adjustment support • Adjust to new circumstances Services: • Home support } • Residential } not specialist • General care } Setting: • Step-down beds • Own home • Short term residential care Status of patient: • General malaise but generally well, mostly independent Include: • Those needing encouragement, extra time, verbal support, general enablement and confidence building Exclude: • Any person whose family are willing and able to provide convalescence • Any person needing active rehabilitation • Those with ability to retain information, co-operate and understand rehabilitation objectives • Those more likely to benefit from programmes • Those who are not making measurable progress with regular intervention 3. Patient/client needs slow-stream rehabilitation Aims: • Provide watchful waiting • Provide assessment/observation • Provide non-intensive rehabilitation/mobilisation • Improve confidence • Actively encourage, extend and facilitate increased speed of recovery • Provide support programme which is being carried out by patient and carers Services: • Community rehabilitation team } • Home support } generalised/ • Day hospitals } enablement skills • Out-patient therapy } Setting: • Own home – nursing home care • Intermediate care beds Status of patient: • Stable condition, moderate level of disability, partially dependent, potential for improvement: may have combination of disabling conditions Include: • Those with mild impairments and disabilities who need specific guidance, treatment and the opportunity to practise new approaches and techniques • Those requiring rehabilitation with reduced stamina • Those with slowly deteriorating conditions Exclude: • Those more likely to benefit from another programme • Those with stamina and ability to benefit from more active rehabilitation 4. Patient/client needs regular rehabilitation programme Aims: • Provide rehabilitation to maintain steady and measurable progress • Improve expected recovery path Services: • Community rehabilitation • Home support Setting: • Home, out-patients, day hospital Status of patient: • Patient progressing in rehabilitation, further recovery expected • Intensive rehabilitation not appropriately given • Nature of patient’s condition and length of time since onset Include: • Those patients who can benefit from active targeted, goal-orientated treatment from a multi-disciplinary team Exclude: • Patient with diffuse or generalised disability requiring team approach • Patient unable to contribute to therapy programme 5. Patient/client needs intensive rehabilitation Aims: • Change from dependence to independence • Reduce level of dependence on carers • Achieve maximum level of function • Resolve acute disabling conditions Services: • Community rehabilitation } • Home support } specialist • Specialist therapy teams } skills • Specialised nursing } Setting: • Home • Rehabilitation ward • Intermediate care • Day hospital Status of patient: • Medically very fit, motivated, but dependent, and identified by therapist as good candidate for intensive rehabilitation Include: • Fit, motivated patient with (mostly) acute condition judged able to contribute significantly to active treatment • Patient requiring intensive treatment to reinforce new skills/overcome specific impairment Exclude: • Patient who will benefit from another programme • Patient unable to tolerate level of intervention • Patient not making measurable improvement 6. Patient/client needs specific treatment for individual acute disabling condition Aims: • Targeted specific treatment by one profession • Alleviate or reduce specific impairment/disability Services: • Specialised therapy/nursing Setting: • Community/domiciliary therapy • Out-patient therapy Status of patient: • Medically stable, single acute or chronic disabling impairment which can be managed by one specific professional Include: • Patient with single defined disabling condition • Goal be clearly defined: intensity of input may vary 7. Patient/client needs medical care and rehabilitation Aims: • Actively treat medical condition in order to prevent/modify deterioration or secondary sequelae while enabling patient to improve/maintain independence • Appropriately manage medical condition while patient undergoing multidisciplinary rehabilitation Services: • Medical care with generalised/specialised rehabilitation support • Nursing care Setting: • Home (less often) • Rehabilitation ward • Nursing home Status of patient: • Unwell/unstable medical condition, disabled specifically or generally Include: • Patients requiring specialised medical intervention as part of rehabilitation programme Exclude: • Patients too unwell/unstable to benefit from rehabilitation component 8. Patient/client needs rehabilitation for complex, profound, disabling condition Aims: • Provide rehabilitation as part of long-term management of condition • Maximise level of function, prevent secondary disabling condition and improve quality of life • Provide particular provision of services related to those with low-incidence specialised cognitive and physical disorders Services: • Community rehabilitation – specialist multidisciplinary team Setting: • Home, regional unit, rehabilitation ward Status of patient: • Patient will have prognosis of longstanding complex needs requiring specialist medical and multi-disciplinary rehabilitation and multi-agency input, such as progressive neurological disease, head injury, complex neurological and physical trauma Include: • Patients requiring specialised multidisciplinary input Exclude: • Any client whose needs can be met in other programmes stated above 9. Patient/client needs palliative care: Aims: • Provide end of life support and care to patient and family. Pain relief, comfort and dignity. Services: • Nursing, medical, care staff, interdisciplinary team. Setting: • Home, hospice, nursing home Include: • Persons with terminal conditions nearing end of life. NEURODIGEST • ISSUE 2 • 2015 • 13 REVIEW Outcomes are difficult to compare and consequently their cost effectiveness is difficult to establish. To date there has been a lack of information available to community care practitioners to help plan and compare resource needs. Indeed many of the existing models or taxonomies detailed in community studies have been used to describe only one attribute of a communitybased service, such as the purpose of the service. patient/client does not need any health or social care support’ and ‘the patient/client needs palliative care’. These two were added following the more recent study1 which indicated the increased number of individuals being referred to communitybased services but who did not require them and the increasing number of patients receiving palliative care in their own homes and being supported by community services. See Table 1. Patients using intermediate care tend to be older (initial policies stipulated that they should be over 65 and have multiple morbidities). However their admission to intermediate care should indicate that they are medically stable and require some support to help them function more fully in their chosen living environment. This support may be in the form of rehabilitation to facilitate independence, or social care, to supplement skills, to maintain the status quo or to help with daily activities. The synthesis of the two studies1 demonstrated that the LOC Tool does differentiate on the basis of dependency, length of stay, and service costs and was associated with outcomes as measured on the Therapy Outcome Measure. However it did not differentiate on the basis of staffing. As a result of this difficulty, Enderby and Stevenson (1990) developed the 8 Levels of Care Tool (LOC), a taxonomy that identifies the needs of the patients, rather than the structure of the service. This was proposed to assist in the development of a range of integrated community-based services with the appropriate skill mix and formalising the approach adopted by many health and social care providers who determine the needs of an individual having completed an assessment of the situation. The classification system aimed to identify service objectives and was developed following a series of focus groups, forums and workshops with patients, carers and a broad range of community. More recently there has been a development of integrating a broader range of health and local authority services further stimulating the requirement for greater clarity in identifying the particular needs of a patient/client. Thus the 8 Levels of Care has been expanded to incorporate a further two: namely, ‘the Conclusion Using the ‘level of care’ assisted the audits detailed in the studies of intermediate and community-based services1,2 bringing a greater understanding of the needs of clients and the range of services required. I would suggest that evaluation of the integrated services stimulated by the Better Care Fund may be held by using this approach. REFERENCES 1. 2. 3. 4. Ariss SM., Enderby PM., Smith T., Nancarrow S A., Bradburn MJ. Et al. 2015 Secondary Analysis and Literature Review Of Community Rehabilitation and Intermediate Care: an Information Resource Health Service Delivery Research 2015. 3 (1) Nancarrow S., Moran A., Enderby P. et al. (2010) The Relationship between workforce Flexibility and the Costs and Outcomes of Older Peoples Services. Report National Institute of Health Research, London. Nancarrow S A., Enderby P., Ariss SM., Smith T., Booth A., Et al. (2012) The Impact of Enhancing The Effectiveness of Interdisciplinary Working. Southampton. National Institute of Health Research. SDO Enderby P & Stevenson J (2000). What is Intermediate Care? Looking at Does DNA Methylation hold the key to Parkinson’s Disease? collectively account for less than 5% of cases of PD. Dr Nigel Williams is a Reader in molecular genetics at the MRC Centre for Neuropsychiatric Genetics and Genomics, Cardiff University. His research has identified genetic loci that increase risk to schizophrenia, ADHD and frontotemporal dementia. Currently he leads a research team focused on gaining a better understanding of neurological disorders, in particularly Parkinson’s Disease. Dr Nigel Williams E: [email protected] The DNA changes that underlie PD in cases where there is not a strong family history of the illness have proved more elusive. In the last decade this problem has been tackled by a number of large-scale studies. These studies have collectively identified DNA alterations at more than 18 locations in our genome that increase our risk of developing the form of the illness that accounts for 95% of PD cases. However, little is known about how these DNA changes increase risk to disease. As most do not directly affect gene function, it is likely that they increase risk through more subtle biological mechanisms than those seen in rare inherited cases of the disease. What is DNA Methylation DNA methylation (DNAm) is an important, well-characterised chemical modification to DNA that influences gene function without changing the DNA sequence. Rather like a light switch determines whether a bulb is on or off, DNAm can act as a molecular switch that regulates whether a gene is active or So far, a number of changes have been identified in the DNA of silenced (Figure 1). patients with a strong family history of PD that either lead to, or greatly increase the chances of developing the disease. These Importantly, we can now accurately measure DNAm, and this findings have greatly improved our understanding of the disease has allowed researchers to establish that we acquire changes process. However, as these DNA changes are very rare, they in DNAm as we age, and that these can be influenced by The reasons we develop Parkinson’s Disease (PD) are complex. As in diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis and type-2 diabetes, the large majority of cases appear to be caused by a combination of genetic and environmental risk factors. 14 • NEURODIGEST • ISSUE 2 • 2015 Review Figure 1. DNA methylation regulates gene expression environmental factors such as diet, smoking and exposure to toxins. Returning to our examples of rheumatoid arthritis and type-2 diabetes, research into these conditions has demonstrated a correlation between DNAm and DNA sequence changes that increase the risk of developing these diseases. Changes in DNA Methylation can mediate risk to disease The importance of DNAm in the causation and progression of cancer has also been well established by researchers. As these chemical modifications are potentially reversible, they have become the focus of novel anti-cancer therapies. If we can gain a similar understanding of the role of DNAm in PD, we may see similar gains. The neuropathology of PD is well understood, and good quality post mortem tissue is available, making PD particularly well suited to investigations of DNAm. But despite this, there have been few relevant studies. DNA Methylation and Parkinson’s Disease? At Cardiff University’s MRC Centre for Neuropsychiatric Genetics and Genomics, we have a research program examining the role that DNAm plays in the development of PD. We are doing this by collecting DNA from donated post-mortem tissue from regions of the brain known to be affected in PD (e.g. the substantia nigra). Our research takes in large numbers of PD patients and controls matched for age, sex and ethnicity. Using state-of-the-art technology, each DNA sample is being comprehensively assessed in a process that examines over 450,000 DNAm changes spanning the entire human genome. Figure 2. Mechanisms by which DNA methylation could influence Parkinson’s Disease have a major impact on the clinical diagnosis, prognosis and future treatment of PD. Even more exciting is the fact that DNAm modifications and their related biological mechanisms are potentially reversible, and that drugs are already being developed to target these mechanisms in the brain. With this in mind, our research could help highlight new areas for the development of therapies for this devastating disease. We have hypothesised that the role of DNam might take three forms (Figure 2). Firstly, it is possible that changes in DNAm have an effect on the likelihood of developing PD for those who already carry a genetic risk of the disease. To investigate this, we will examine whether having PD genetic risk variants affects the accumulation of DNAm as we age, in turn affecting gene function and increasing risk of developing the disease. Clavis TM Hand-carried device for EMG/STIM-guided injections The ClavisTM offers crystal-clear EMG recording quality for situations such as guided injection, combined with the convenience of being a compact, hand-held device. Secondly, DNAm may increase risk of developing PD independently of an individual’s genetic risk. Age, diet, stress and toxins have already been correlated with the onset and severity of PD, and have also been shown to influence DNAm. By comparing changes in DNAm between PD and control samples we could take an important first step in establishing how environmental factors affect risk of developing the illness. A final possibility is that changes in DNAm are just an inevitable consequence of the disease. If this is the case, it could be established by comparing PD patients at different stages of the disease. Final Remarks Identifying DNAm changes that either affect our risk of developing PD or are correlated with the way the disease progresses could www.optimamedical.com 020 3058 0850 NEURODIGEST • ISSUE 2 • 2015 • 15 Clavis ad.indd 1 16/07/2015 13:54 Rehabilitation Multidisciplinary Neuro-rehabilitation and precisely targeted botulinum toxin restores hand function following a severe brain injury Dr Harriss He has over twenty years experience of multidisciplinary spasticity management, and he offers an impressive track record of establishing spasticity services -internationally, within the NHS, and most recently within the charitable sector. As a Canadian-trained Consultant in Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation he brings a goal-focused and outcomedriven perspective to the UK. Dr Harriss emphasises objective assessments, and he insists on the routine use of ultrasound or EMG/ electrical stimulus-guidance; he attributes this attention to detail to his patients’ often life-changing recovery of function. Dr Harriss is Medical Director of Queen Elizabeth’s Foundation for Disabled People, Clinical Lead in Rehabilitation Medicine at the Lane Fox Clinic, St E: [email protected] Thomas Hospital London, and Honorary Senior Lecturer at KCL. Amy Dennis-Jones (PT), Nicolette Hugo (OT) On admission, physically, RC presented with: • • • • • • Increased tone in both upper limbs, specifically within his pectoral muscles, biceps and wrist and finger flexors Loss of range of movement Decreased grasp and fine motor movements in both upper limbs, including: span, cylindrical, key, ball, pincer and tripod grips. He however had some lateral grip in his right upper limb Decreased active and controlled upper limb movement and dexterity Impaired sensation (Light touch and proprioception were reduced throughout) Left side affected more than right side UL ROM on admission: Right Left Shoulder flexion 100o 75o Shoulder abduction 90 o 90o Elbow extension -50o -30o Wrist extension 25o -30o We use our hands to engage with the world, relying on a variety of discrete grasps to perform countless essential daily tasks. Ashworth on admission: At the Queen Elizabeth’s Foundation (QEF) our emphasis is Right Left Joint affected on restoring abilities through a multi-disciplinary approach Elbow flexors 2 3 including medical treatments and rehabilitation. At the Centre Wrist flexors 2 4 we have established a treatment protocol for spasticity in the upper limbs which seeks to restore hand function, without risking loss of strength in unaffected muscles. Mr RC had difficulty participating in standardised formal UL Mr RC’s history illustrates the importance of precisely testing. Within the Rivermead motor assessment for the upper targeted botulinum toxin treatments, combined with specialist limb component he initially scored 2/15 on the left and 3/15 on multidisciplinary, goal-directed therapies. He was 19 yrs old, the right. looking forward to a career as a Police Constable, when as the passenger in a police car he suffered a severe brain injury: he sustained a left frontal lobe haematoma and diffuse axonal injury. His injuries were life-threatening, and he spent several months on acute medical and surgical wards before being admitted for rehabilitation. Functionally, Mr RC tried, with little success, to engage his right upper limb within everyday tasks of living (e.g. in washing and dressing his upper part of his body and feeding himself). In feeding he had difficulty loading food onto his spoon and taking this to his mouth and was also unable to use a knife and fork to feed himself. When he was admitted to QEF in October of 2013 he had limited functional hand movements and RC was left entirely dependent on his carers for all of his needs. RC was wheelchair dependent however his upper limbs impeded his ability to use a powered wheelchair independently. Botulinum toxin injections were administered approximately quarterly through 2013 and 2014 using Clavis EMG/stimulus guidance in an attempt to allow the shoulders, elbows and wrists to be brought back to a more functional resting position. Great care was taken not to treat the finger and thumb flexors: the goal was to enable restoration of active hand function. Mr RC participated within a full inter-disciplinary team rehabilitation programme including Physiotherapy, Occupational Therapy, Speech and Language Therapy, Psychology, Education and Vocational. 16 • NEURODIGEST • ISSUE 2 • 2015 Management: Mr RC’s care also included an IDT spasticity management Rehabilitation programme. His oral anti-spasticity medications were reviewed before he came to QEF whereby oral Baclofen was reduced to relieve truncal weakness. Focal spasticity was treated with several Botulinum toxin injections, always using EMG/stimulus to precisely target flexor muscles within his upper limbs, administered approximately quarterly through 2013 and 2014 using Clavis EMG/stimulus guidance to precisely target flexor muscles within his upper limbs. Following this, bi-lateral soft/scotch wrist and finger extension resting splints were fabricated to specifically target his hand and wrists only as his elbow range of movement had improved dramatically. Great care was taken not to treat the finger and thumb flexors: the goal was to enable restoration of active hand function. Maximising benefits using specialist technology and interventions Goals of Botulinum Injections During active upper limb rehabilitation, specialist equipment • Increase passive and active range of movement at wrist and techniques were used to maximise functional gains. These and hands included FES, SAEBO MAS, SAEBO glide programme, and task • Reduced flexor tone at wrists and hands specific practice. • Increase functional ability and use upper limbs/hands for reach/grasp. • Facilitate the implementation of an effective splinting regime Units - Rights side (Xeomin) Units Left side (Xeomin) Flexor Carpi Ulnaris flexion 40 40 Flexor Carpi Radialis 40 40 Flexor Digitorium Superficialis 40 40 Muscles injected Flexor Digitorium Profundus 40 40 Biceps 40 40 FES was used to reinforce wrist extension. Thereafter wrist extension was reinforced through practice and functional grasp work. Following initial botulinum toxin injections at QEF two-joint SaeboMAS: splints and bilateral soft/scotch splints were fabricated. These helped to control elbow extension and supported the hand and wrist in a more neutral position. These were worn every day for several hours for a period of 8 weeks. Splints were removed during active upper limb rehabilitation. The SaeboMAS is a weight support upper limb exerciser, which takes the weight of Mr RC’s upper limbs allowing him to move his arms freely in a gravity eliminated plane. This afforded the team an opportunity to work on RC’s postural control in Botulinum injections were then repeated with the following sitting whilst allowing his upper limbs to dissociate and move target muscles below. away from his trunk. The functional task of feeding was used in conjunction with the SAEBO MAS to allow Mr RC to improve Units Units the movements involved in feeding, along with increasing his Muscles injected Right side Left side endurance. The activity was graded by adjusting the gravity and (Xeomin) (Xeomin) task requirements. 10 each muscle (x4) - Flexor Carpi Radialis - 50 Flexor Carpi Ulnaris - 50 Flexor Digitorium Profundus 30 - With a combination of botulinum toxin, splinting regime and upper limb rehabilitation, the tone and range of movement in Mr RC’s upper-limb improved dramatically. Flexor Digitorium Superficialis 30 - With much-improved range of movement and normalisation Lumbricals Reductions to impairment: NEURODIGEST • ISSUE 2 • 2015 • 17 Rehabilitation of tone, he can now perform active functional movement in his brush his teeth. • He is now able to feed himself using a fork or a spoon, upper limbs. as well as cut some food (e.g half an apple) using a knife ROM on discharge: and a fork. Right Left Shoulder flexion Full Full Shoulder abduction 150 150 Elbow extension Full Full Wrist extension Full Full Joint affected Right Left Elbow flexors 1 1+ Wrist flexors 1+ 2 Ashworth score on discharge: Functional improvements: Mr RC is now actively able to use his upper limbs for meaningful The Future tasks: Mr RCs will continue to receive botulinum toxin treatments, • Due to the improvements within the range and power of always under EMG/stimulus guidance, along with ongoing his upper limbs in combination with the increase in therapies. His hand function has steadily improved over the postural control, Mr RC can transfer instead of being past year, and he has regained even more independence since hoisted leaving QEF. He lives at home, with his family rather than in a • Mr RC can independently operate his iPad and iPhone care home, which might have been his only option had we not and touch screen devices. helped him to improve his upper limb function. He will continue • Mr RC can now use a joystick to mobilise his powered to benefit from ongoing botulinum toxin treatments, always wheelchair. under EMG/stimulus guidance, along with ongoing therapies to • Mr RC can now brush his hair, dress his upper limbs and further improve his upper limb functioning. SonoSite’s XPorte® ideal for regional anaesthetic procedures A SonoSite XPorte® point-of-care ultrasound system is proving a key asset for regional anaesthesia at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital King’s Lynn NHS Foundation Trust, as consultant anaesthetist Dr James Stimpson explained: “Queen Elizabeth was one of the first trusts in the UK to set up an ambulatory service for major shoulder surgery, and has been using ultrasound for regional anaesthetic procedures since 2004, when it purchased a SonoSite MicroMaxx® system. Since then, as the use of ultrasound has increased and the technology continued to advance, further systems have been added, including two SonoSite S-Nerves™ and, more recently, an XPorte.” “The beauty of the X-Porte is its simplicity, particularly for the younger generation of anaesthetists that have grown up with smartphone technology. Its appearance instils confidence, it boots up quickly and the touch screen interface is very intuitive to use; simple plug-and-play operation means that you can literally turn it on, pick up the probe and instantly have the correct settings to generate a functional image. The quality of the image produced is just fantastic, and the resolution is brilliant, giving much clearer differentiation of nerve tissue from other structures. Our ability to pick out small cutaneous nerves has been revolutionised, allowing us to perform more selective regional anaesthesia and enabling patients to mobilise and return home far sooner than would otherwise be possible.” For more information about FUJIFILM SonoSite products: T: +44 (0)1462 341151, E: [email protected] • www.sonosite.co.uk 18 • NEURODIGEST • ISSUE 2 • 2015 Review Rapid and reliable management of early-morning OFF periods in patients with Parkinson’s disease Many physicians who treat patients with Parkinson’s disease (PD) may not be aware that up to half of them could be suffering from treatable early-morning OFF (EMO) periods that can significantly impair their ability to get up in the morning and get on with their day1.The symptoms, dominated by non-motor problems such as anxiety, pain and urinary urgency, often go unreported to the physician unless the patient is specifically questioned and therefore continue untreated, despite easy and effective options being available. EMO periods that occur due to delay in the onset of the first daily dose of levodopa can be due to gastrointestinal (GI) problems, which may themselves go unrecognised, and are known to be common across all stages of PD. EMO periods can be easily managed with therapeutic options that bypass the GI route, such as transdermal rotigotine, but more effectively with subcutaneous apomorphine injection.2,3 PD patients treated with oral levodopa gradually start to experience OFF periods where the administered dose does not adequately control their motor symptoms for the entire period of time before the next dose is taken.4,5 Oral levodopa is considered as the best therapy for the initial management of motor symptoms in PD, however it is recognised that over time, and sometimes seen within two years of starting oral levodopa, the initial long-duration response becomes progressively shorter, leading to increasingly frequent and longer OFF periods. In addition, when a dose of oral levodopa is administered, there may be a delay in the onset of clinical effect – delayed ‘ON’ – which can contribute to an increase in OFF period duration.5 The clinical effect of oral levodopa relies on it being emptied from the stomach effectively and then reaching the small intestine where it is absorbed. Therefore, any delay in gastric emptying will impair delivery of levodopa to the small intestine and result in a delayed onset of its clinical effect to relieve motor symptoms. GI dysfunction is common in PD patients and includes symptoms such as poor control of salivation, dysphagia, delayed emptying of the stomach and constipation.6 Delayed emptying of the stomach, also known as gastroparesis, is frequently found in both early and advanced PD, and may even be present before motor symptoms are apparent, but often goes unrecognised.7 Further studies have confirmed that impaired gastric emptying can alter the pharmacokinetics of an oral levodopa dose and is likely to be a causative factor underlying the delayed onset of effect in PD patients and also dose failure.8,9 EMO periods due to delay in the onset of the first daily dose of levodopa have been reported in up to 50% of patients who have been receiving treatment for several years.10-12 In addition, a recent international, multicentre study has shown that EMO periods not only result in impaired motor function in PD patients but also impact a range of non-motor functions as well, including urinary urgency, anxiety, dribbling of saliva, pain and low mood.13 Unsurprisingly, EMO periods have been reported to have a significant impact on the quality of life (QoL) of PD patients and impact on their independence and ability to get K. Ray Chaudhuri Professor of Movement Disorders, Director of the National Parkinson Foundation Centre of Excellence, Department of Neurology, King’s College and King’s College Hospital, and Kings Health Partners, London, UK E: [email protected] out of bed and go to the toilet, so it is important that they are recognised promptly and managed effectively.14 To avoid the problems associated with delayed gastric emptying, treatment strategies that employ non-oral medications which bypass the GI tract have therefore been investigated with considerable success. Apomorphine is a potent dopamine agonist that can be administered subcutaneously, thereby avoiding the GI route, and has been shown in previous clinical studies to provide fast (within 4–12 minutes) and consistent improvement in motor symptoms of PD.12,15 More recently, interim results from the ongoing Phase IV, multicentre, open-label study – AMIMPAKT: Apokyn for Motor IMProvement of Morning Akinesia Trial – have demonstrated that intermittent subcutaneous apomorphine injection (APO-go PEN) can provide rapid and reliable improvement in ‘time to turn ON’ (TTO) in PD patients who are experiencing EMO.3 The study includes PD patients from 12 centres across the USA and is examining the change from baseline in average daily TTO, recorded in each subject’s diary, when they replace their usual morning dose of levodopa with subcutaneous apomorphine injection. Analysis of data for the first 50 patients found that apomorphine injection resulted in a significant improvement in TTO with an average reduction of 37 minutes compared with levodopa treatment (p<0.0001), and also reduced the number of dose failures. Overall, 95% of patients achieved a significant reduction in TTO. Apomorphine injection was well tolerated and in addition to the motor benefits there were also improvements in measures of QoL. Apomorphine is available as an easy-to-use pen formulation for intermittent subcutaneous injection (APO-go PEN) that provides patients with a convenient way to relieve motor symptoms that occur during EMO periods, restoring them to the ON state quickly and enabling them to continue with their daily activities. REFERENCES 1. Rizos A, Kessel B, Martinez-Martin P, Odin P, Antonini A, et al. (2013) Early morning off periods in Parkinson’s disease: Characterisation of non motor patterns and treatment effect: An international study. 9th International Congress on Mental Dysfunction and other Non-Motor Features in Parkinson’s Disease and Related Disorders. Seoul, Korea. 2. Trenkwalder C, Kies B, Rudzinska M, Fine J, Nikl J, et al. (2011) Rotigotine effects on early morning motor function and sleep in Parkinson’s disease: a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study (RECOVER). Mov Disord 26: 90-99. NEURODIGEST • ISSUE 2 • 2015 • 19 Service development 3. Isaacson S (2014) Apomorphine penject – emerging evidence and treatment strategies for delayed on and off periods in Parkinson’s disease. European Medical Journal Neurology 1: 27-35. 4. Marsden CD, Parkes JD (1976) “On-off” effects in patients with Parkinson’s disease on chronic levodopa therapy. Lancet 1: 292-296. 5. Melamed E, Bitton V, Zelig O (1986) Delayed onset of responses to single doses of L-dopa in parkinsonian fluctuators on long-term L-dopa therapy. | Clin Neuropharmacol 9: 182-188. 6. Pfeiffer RF (2003) Gastrointestinal dysfunction in Parkinson’s disease. Lancet Neurol 2: 107-116. 7. Tanaka Y, Kato T, Nishida H, Yamada M, Koumura A, et al. (2011) Is there a delayed gastric emptying of patients with early-stage, untreated Parkinson’s disease? An analysis using the 13C-acetate breath test. J Neurol 258: 421-426. 8. Doi H, Sakakibara R, Sato M, Masaka T, Kishi M, et al. (2012) Plasma levodopa peak delay and impaired gastric emptying in Parkinson’s disease. J Neurol Sci 319: 86-88. 9. Chana P, Kuntsmann C, Reyes-Parada M, Saez-Briones P (2004) Delayed early morning turn “ON” in response to a single dose of levodopa in advanced Parkinson’s disease: pharmacokinetics should be considered. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 75: 1782-1783. 10. Stocchi F, Jenner P, Obeso JA (2010) When do levodopa motor fluctuations first appear in Parkinson’s disease? Eur Neurol 63: 257-266. 11. Parkinson Study Group (2000) Pramipexole vs levodopa as initial treatment for Parkinson disease: A randomized controlled trial. Parkinson Study Group. JAMA 284: 1931-1938. 12. Dewey RB, Jr., Hutton JT, LeWitt PA, Factor SA (2001) A randomized, double blind, placebo-controlled trial of subcutaneously injected apomorphine for parkinsonian off-state events. Arch Neurol 58: 1385-1392. 13. Rizos A, Martinez-Martin P, Odin P, Antonini A, Kessel B, et al. (2014) Characterizing motor and non-motor aspects of early-morning off periods in Parkinson’s disease: an international multicenter study. Parkinsonism Relat Disord 20: 1231-1235. 14. Chapuis S, Ouchchane L, Metz O, Gerbaud L, Durif F (2005) Impact of the motor complications of Parkinson’s disease on the quality of life. Mov Disord 20: 224-230. 15. Pfeiffer RF, Gutmann L, Hull KL, Jr., Bottini PB, Sherry JH (2007) Continued efficacy and safety of subcutaneous apomorphine in patients with advanced Parkinson’s disease. Parkinsonism Relat Disord 13: 93-100. Focusing on the ‘invisible patients’ Alex Massey engage with the challenge of improving neurological services. For its report The Invisible Patients: Revealing the state of neurology services, the Neurological Alliance carried out a Freedom of Information audit of all CCGs in July 2014. 91% of CCGs responded, but the replies showed that far too many are not carrying out the key processes that enable a strategic approach to service improvement in neurology. For example, as few as 20% of CCGs have ever carried out an assessment of the number of people using neurological services in their area, while fewer than 15% have assessed the costs relating to the provision of neurological services locally. Only a third of CCGs have mechanisms in place to obtain feedback from people living E: [email protected] with neurological conditions locally regarding their experiences The reforms to the NHS introduced by the controversial 2012 of the services they receive. Health and Social Care Act brought about significant changes This represents a major missed opportunity. NHS spending on to key structures and processes in health and social care. For neurological conditions has soared by 200% over the past ten neurology in particular - a historically neglected grouping of years, which also saw a dramatic rise in emergency hospital conditions, which consumes an ever-expanding portion of admissions for neurological conditions, reaching 700,000 in the NHS budget - the reforms represented both a challenge 2012/13. A recent Neurological Alliance survey of just under and an opportunity. Would the creation of a new cohort of 7,000 neurological patients found that almost 40% of people clinical commissioning groups (CCGs) lead to disruption of diagnosed with a neurological condition waited at least a year existing services? Or could the new commissioners lead the for that diagnosis, while over 30% saw their GP five or more development of new and better pathways of care for the 10 times before finally accessing a specialist neurologist. Care million people living with a neurological condition in England? coordination is often very poor, and over 70% of people with Reform of this magnitude will always carry both risks and neurological conditions do not receive a care plan, even though benefits. Clinical commissioners have faced the difficult task of the majority of neurological conditions are long-term. There taking on a swathe of new commissioning responsibilities at a is clear scope to improve outcomes and alleviate pressure on time when funding is stretched and the NHS is grappling with budgets through better designed pathways of care, but only a the challenges of an ageing population.There is little doubt that minority of CCGs appear to be engaging with this challenge. the transition to clinical commissioning has led to disruption This must change. At a time when NHS England is planning which has, in some cases, impeded the NHS’s efforts to develop to expand CCGs’ commissioning responsibilities for neurology more effective, better-integrated services with a stronger to include involvement in specialised commissioning, it has preventative focus. never been more important for local commissioners to At the same time, clinical commissioners find themselves faced actively improve their engagement with and understanding with a huge opportunity to transform care and outcomes for the of neurological conditions. It can no longer be acceptable for people living in their area. With a stronger local presence than people living with these conditions to be ‘invisible patients,’ their Primary Care Trust predecessors, CCGs are well-placed overlooked by the key decision-makers and budget holders to take a strategic approach to service improvement, based on within today’s NHS. We need urgent action now, so that the a better understand of local needs and priorities. Unfortunately, millions of people with neurological conditions receive the care the available evidence suggests that many CCGs are failing to they need and deserve. Alex is Senior Policy and Campaigns Adviser with the Neurological Alliance and is a patient voice representative on the Neurosciences Clinical Reference Group. He previously worked for ACEVO, the charity leaders’ network, where he led their work on public service reform. Prior to joining ACEVO, he worked as a Research Fellow at the think-tank Policy Exchange. 20 • NEURODIGEST • ISSUE 2 • 2015 Neurology Networks Neuroscience Strategic Clinical Networks Introduction The commissioning and provision of neurological services is complex, with responsibilities split across clinical commissioning groups (CCGs), specialist commissioners, community services, acute hospitals, primary care, neuroscience centres and social care. To create alignment in the system across all stakeholders – providers, commissioners and patients – the NHS established Strategic Clinical Networks in England. There are twelve Strategic Clinical Networks (SCNs) and their role is to encourage collaborative working across the boundaries of commissioning and provision, where a whole system, integrated approach is required. One key priority of the Neuroscience SCNs is to raise the profile of neurology by working with commissioners to develop clear pathways of care that identify the following issues: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Impact of neurological presentations on acute services. Mapping of funding responsibility for services, NHS England or CCGs. Best practice integrated pathways to reduce delays in diagnosis, treatment and rehabilitation, to reduce mortality and levels of disability. Identify how and where service provision can be improved to free up capacity in the system e.g. through redesign of clinics and improved primary care symptom management. Improve patient related outcomes and experience through care closer to home. East Midlands East of England Yasmin Akhtar Victoria Doyle - Quality Improvement The Neurology Division of the East Midlands SCN, led by Professor Chris Ward and Helen McCloughry, is currently focusing on two areas where the quality and quantity of services is variable. The first of these is neurological rehabilitation. The Clinical Advisory Group’s agreed priority is to develop commissioning guidance and an exemplar service specification for commissioners. Standards and principles established by the East Midlands Rehabilitation Programme and by the NSF for Long-term Conditions will underpin this work. Coordinated rehabilitation interventions often make the difference between a person being able to remain at home and being admitted to hospital or residential care, and are often essential for continuation of employment and other social and family roles. We distinguish rehabilitation from care, which is required to maintain, rather than to change and improve quality of life. The primary requirement in our model is for service users to have up to date rehabilitation plans alongside their care plans. The cost savings that rehabilitation can achieve depend on effective co-ordination The cost savings that rehabilitation can achieve depend on effective co-ordination and we therefore use a precise concept of what constitutes a team. Key performance indicators (KPIs), especially those that reflect outcomes for service users and their families, are central to our work and we are developing regional consensus on a core set of indicators. We are using existing frameworks, including the NSF, the Neurological Alliance and the Rehabilitation programme as a basis for KPIs which will sample the structure, process and outcomes of community neuro-rehabilitation and also track the dimension of prevention, a crucial but often forgotten dimension of rehabilitation. We welcome enquiries and advice about our work. Please contact: Yasmin Akhtar, email: [email protected] or call 01138 255343. Lead for Neurological Conditions E: [email protected] Dr Max Damian - Neurologist and Clinical Lead for Neurology with the East of England SCN. Mary Emurla - Network Manager for the Mental Health, Dementia, Neurology, Learning Disability and Autism SCN for the East of England Since February 2014, The East of England SCN has been focusing on improving the management of people with epilepsy and improving the rehabilitation of people with a neurological condition causing disability. These priorities were developed from a large region wide stakeholder event in November 2013 as well as direction from the National Clinical Director, David Bateman. The SCN also inputs into the national SCN work around neurology standards, community neuro rehab standards and headache management. In June 2014, the SCN ran a large multistakeholder event on improving the care of people with epilepsy which provided an excellent source of information of what people from around the region thought the gaps were. One of the main themes that arose was education especially within primary care. In response to this, the SCN and key stakeholders have developed two epilepsy eLearning modules for primary care which are due to be launched in summer 2015. Another key theme from the event was improving the management of people within A&E departments.This tied in with the release of the NASH2 study which also highlighted gaps in the treatment of patients within A&E. The SCN and key stakeholders have developed three epilepsy guidelines for improving the management of people with epilepsy which are entitled “First Adult Seizure in an Emergency Department”, “Management of Status Epilepticus” and “Referral to Specialist Epilepsy Clinics” which were launched in spring 2015. The SCN is piloting a telecare link between a neuroscience centre and district general hospital for the management of people presenting in A&E with severe cluster seizures or status epilepticus to improve access to a Neurologist during this critical time. The results of the pilot will be available in summer 2015. In October 2014, the SCN ran a region wide stakeholder Master Class on Commissioning and Contracting for High Quality Neuro Rehab to provide stakeholders with tools to aid them in commissioning high quality neuro rehab services which was very well received. The SCN has engaged all the CCGs within the East of England and has established a region wide advisory group which develop and oversee the work of the SCN. The group consists of commissioners (CCG, local authority and specialised), General Practitioners, Neurologists, Rehabilitation Consultants, Specialist Nurses, voluntary organisations and patients. We would encourage new members to come forward to help us improve the care of people with a neurological condition across the region. Greater Manchester Adam Zermansky - Consultant Neurologist at Greater Manchester Neuroscience Centre. Julie Rigby - Network Manager with the Greater Manchester, Lancashire & South Cumbria SCN. E: [email protected] Improving the management of headache in primary care The current model for neurology services is primarily based around out-patient clinics and for the past two years all neurologist services delivered by specialist centres have been commissioned by NHS England. NHS England has highlighted a significant increase in neurology referrals over the past 8 months leading the organisation to embark on a QIPP initiative to drive improvement and efficiencies in this area of care. Specialised service recommendations to ministers NEURODIGEST • ISSUE 2 • 2015 • 21 Neurology Networks indicate that only 25% of neurology activity is initiated by Consultant-to-Consultant referrals. The remaining activity is initiated from Emergency Departments (EDs) and by GP referrals with up to 33% of patients seeing their GP five or more times about health problems caused by a neurological condition before being referred to a neurological specialist. These data have supported the decision to remove neurology out-patient activity from the service description for adult specialist neurosciences services with the commissioning responsibility for non-specialist neurology to migrate back to CCGs during 2015/16. Since approximately 25% of referrals to secondary care neurology services are for patients with headache, the Greater Manchester, Lancashire and South Cumbria Strategic Clinical Network (SCN) has refreshed previous work piloted in Salford and shared across Greater Manchester in the spring of 2012. This is an updated algorithm to support GPs in the management of headache in primary care, avoiding unnecessary referrals to secondary care. The algorithm is attuned to the NICE guidelines (CG150) published in September 2012 and the APPG review of headache published in 2014. The algorithm has been refreshed by a group led by Dr Adam Zermansky from Salford Royal NHS FT with support from GPs and Consultant Neurologists from around the region, including • Dr Raza Ansari - GPwSI, Lancashire • Dr Steven Elliot – GPwSI , Greater Manchester • Dr Hedley Emsley – LTH • Dr Partha Ganguli – GPwSI, Lancashire • Siobhan Jones - Specialist Nurse, SRFT • Dr Jitka Vanderpol - Cumbria Partnership Trust The next steps for this project are: 1. To get comments from GPs across the footprint about the feasibility of implementation, any specific training needs and highlighting any cost implications for commissioners or providers. Training options could include: a)Educational roadshows approved for CPD by the RCGP providing an opportunity to explain the detail within the guidelines and its role as a tool for diagnosis and management. b)Educational videos c)Power-point shared across the patch 2. Agree measures of success, potentially: GP satisfaction; patient satisfaction; reduction in referrals to secondary care; decrease in number of rejections at triage. In addition to supporting GPs to manage headaches better in primary care, CCGs are being asked to consider other options which could improve service delivery: • Creating a cluster of GP’s with an interest in headache e.g. a Headache Club, who are given more time per patient to see headache referrals from local practices • Identifying GPs from clusters who would like to gain GPwSI accreditation and act as the hub for GP clusters • Ensuring links with secondary care neurology to support ongoing CPD, including decision support • Identifying ESP nurses or physiotherapists who could support the management of headache through e.g. delivery of botulinum 22 • NEURODIGEST • ISSUE 2 • 2015 • toxin injections, improving posture and mobility of the neck, acupuncture, mindfulness programmes etc. Fostering expert patient groups locally to provide support to patients with chronic migraine etc. Finally Bernadette has been working with a North Central London UCL Partner initiative to address causes of emergency admittance for MS – by far the major cause was UTI. The learning from this will inform the NW London programme. Next steps for the SCN are to share the guidelines via CCGs for sign-off through their internal governance arrangements prior to the guidelines, notes and survey being circulated to GPs. 2. Shared learning – common neurological conditions. Presented by Dr Bal Athwal, Royal Free Hospital. London Michael Oates - Neuroscience Network Manager E: [email protected] The Network held its annual stakeholder event in March 2015 to present and discuss its work programme covering April – March 2014 and intentions for the future. Dr David Bateman - National Clinical Director for Neurology provided a national picture. He summarised the national priorities for services to address as local, integrated, organised around the patient and accessible. He highlighted the difficulties for district general hospitals, specifically around outpatient access and its case mix, access to acute care, and access to long term care. Neurology was almost absent and a poor relation to other conditions. The presented data highlighted key areas for development. Most Neurologists were concentrated at neuroscience/neurology centres; only 48% of DGH sites had Neurologists based there and only 13% of those had dedicated neurology beds. 47% of neurology admissions were emergency admissions but only 6.5% were under a Neurologist. The cost of emergency admissions was £975 million out of a £1.4 billion total neurology spend. Dr Bateman concluded with the opportunities for neurology provided by the five year forward view – multi speciality community provider, primary and acute care systems redesign, urgent and emergency care redesign and changes to neurology commissioning. The clinical leads for Network’s workstreams presented their progress and future intentions. 1. Integrated care: 3 projects. Presented by Bernadette Porter, UCLH. A team has been working with NW London integrated care programme to pilot a neurological condition - multiple sclerosis (MS). The pilot involves anticipatory care planning by the GP and patient, self-help and case conference by a multi-disciplinary team for complex patients. Educational tools are being developed to support the use of the pathway. Parkinson’s and epilepsy conditions will be added this year.The MS pilot is in Harrow, and 8 GP practices are involved with the care plan available on NHS 111.The self-help element uses a self-test to exclude a urinary tract infection (UTI) with antibiotics available if positive. We are also looking at the benefits of a neurological specialist attending a social care neurology multi-disciplinary team at Enfield – findings and case studies will be published soon. The project team identified three common conditions that could be mainly managed in primary care: headache, dizzy spells and transient loss of consciousness (TLC). To support GPs a headache pathway with linked short films at key decision points has been produced. The pilot in Kingston and Barnet CCG is reviewing the educational product which can in its entirety be used as a headache educational tool or be accessed for a specific topic to confirm or support a decision. Dizzy spells and TLC will be developed this year. In addition the team has provided input into a headache referral management QIPP (Quality, Innovation, Productivity and Prevention). 3. Acute neurology. Presented by Dr Nick Losseff, Clinical Director of the network. “There are twelve Strategic Clinical Networks (SCNs) and their role is to encourage collaborative working across the boundaries of commissioning and provision, where a whole system, integrated approach is required.” Acute neurology is the major new workstream this year. It arose out of a neurology organisational audit (Quality & safety workstream) of neuroscience/neurology centres and district general hospitals. It found that no hospital in London had a systematic approach for the emergency admission of patients with neurologic conditions directly under the care of a Neurologist. The programme will cover acute neurology standards, acute models and evaluation. Seven trusts have expressed interest in taking part. 4. Borough Based teams (BBTs). Presented by Dr Jenny Vaughan, Ealing Hospital. One of the roles of the network is to advise commissioners on the development of neurological services. BBTs are our approach to engage with CCGs raising local needs and solutions. Each borough has an identified clinical lead, community rehabilitation lead, and a representative from the third sector. Available for participants to view were the neurological data profiles for London and each London CCG and the London neurological website – neuro-signpost. Links to additional information: Organisational audit: http://www.londonscn.nhs. Neurology Networks uk/publication/london-neuro-quality-and-safetyorganisational-audit/ Headache educational tool: http://www.londonscn. nhs.uk/publication/london-agreed-headachepathway-and-podcasts/ London & CCG neurological profiles: http://www. londonscn.nhs.uk/publication/london-neurologyprofiles-by-ccg/ Acute neurology case for change: http://www. londonscn.nhs.uk/publication/acute-neurology-inlondon-the-case-for-change/ Update on our workstreams: http://www. londonscn.nhs.uk/publication/london-neurosciencescn-strategy-update/ Website: http://www.myhealth.london.nhs.uk/yourhealth/neurological-conditions-signpost Thames Valley Eva Morgan - Quality Improvement Lead for Mental Health, Dementia and Neurological Conditions from April 2013-April 2015. In 2013, to help develop their work plan, the Thames Valley Mental Health, Dementia and Neurology Network (MHDN) commissioned the Neurological Commissioning Support (NCS) to assess the state of play of neurology in the Thames Valley and identify any gaps and variances in service provision. Based on the evidence provided by the NCS report and illustrated by the various reports and work undertaken on headaches, the MHDN network proposed a new model for adoption by the CCGs to improve neurological services within Thames Valley, improve patient experience and reduce overall costs to the system. The vision for Thames Valley is to empower patients and GPs such that common neurological problems are expertly self-managed, based on the “House of Care” model; that services, where appropriate, are managed in the community and boundaries between primary and secondary care are abolished; that apps are developed and used by both patients and clinicians to manage GPwSI Pilot • 72 referrals were triaged to BK. Two patients (3%) declined to be seen by a GPwSI (one of whom was himself a GP), 5 (7%) cancelled, 8 (11%) DNA’d, leaving 56 (78%) patients seen. • Cost savings: There was a 33% saving in costs per head in the pilot clinic vs. NHS reference costs for a Neurology OPA (£141 vs. £209). • Only 26.8% required an MRI (vs. two thirds of headache pts in the JR OPD1). • 73.5% were discharged after consultation (vs. 60% in the JR OP1). • There was a near 75% increase in the number of patients who felt able to manage their headache after the consult (15% pre-consult vs. 84.9% post consult). Clinical and patient benefits for the GPwSI pilot their condition and integrated pathways are delivered so that care is seamless and based on patient need. To develop this vision we undertook a number of pilot studies; these included a pilot for developing a GPwSI service in the community and a patient experience survey to understand what blockages exist; Underpinning this work we held our first Thames Valley wide Neurology Strategic Forum with multi-agency stakeholder representation including, CCGs, GPs, Social Care and service users, to provide the strategic direction for the network in 2015/16. So what have been the outcomes for these specific elements of work? • Good engagement with CCGs across Thames Valley with all CCGs now having appointed a GP Lead for Neurology or having set up a small but significant neurology review within the planned board programmes of work • Development of a Parkinson’s pathway with Berkshire East and development of a Neurology Strategy with Berkshire West • Excellent participation in the strategy forum with four key areas identified for further work; - Developing patient centred care based on the “House of Care” model to enable self-management - Clinical information for patients and clinician to understand their condition - Reducing emergency admissions - Delivering integrated pathways. Yorkshire & the Humber (Y&H) Colin Sloane - Quality Improvement Lead David Broomhead - Consultant Physiotherapist working for Northern Lincolnshire and Goole NHS Foundation Trust. E: [email protected] The current includes: SCN Neurology team Dr Helen Ford, Consultant Neurologist at Leeds Teaching Hospitals and joint SCN Clinical Lead; David Broomhead, Consultant Physiotherapist at Goole Hospitals and joint Clinical Lead; Alison Bagnall, SCN Manager for Mental Health, Dementia & Neurology; Sherry McKiniry, SCN Quality Improvement Manager; Colin Sloane, SCN Quality Improvement Lead. The Y&H SCN have prioritised the following projects for Improvement: A) Epilepsy management in primary and secondary care B) Headache management in primary and secondary care • Mapping out of headache services • Headache management audit in the Emergency Dept C) Neuro-rehabilitation, •Current service •Mapping out to identify gaps and concerns •Working with NHSE and other stakeholders to formulate a long term plan which aims to improve access to neuro-rehabilitation within acute and community settings. D) Defined Neuromuscular pathways. E) In conjunction with national leaders and SCNs define neurological service standards. SCN Neurology Groups The SCN has had a successful year engaging with clinicians to understand current service delivery processes and barriers to promoting improvements. A number of clinical groups have been established to facilitate a) information sharing both locally and nationally b) identify service gaps c) disseminate good practice d) develop improved pathways of care e) interpret the data from the Neurology Intelligence Network (NIN). One group instrumental in facilitating service improvement is the Neurology Clinical Expert Group (CEG) chaired by Dr Ford. The aim of this group is to identify areas of good clinical practice, particularly acute presentation and the longer term management of neurological conditions and to facilitate a regional approach to service delivery. Access to neuro-rehabilitation is vital to promoting better outcomes for patients; currently neuro-rehab in the Y&H is being investigated. Some neuro rehabilitation services, other than stroke appear to have evolved from clinical interest and patient need rather than as a result of direct commissioning. The SCN is working closely with rehab experts, NHS England and CCGs to identify what good neurorehab should look like and hopes to develop service models in the future. David Broomhead chairs the neuro-rehab steering group which held its inaugural meeting in July 2014 and meets quarterly. Access to neurorehabilitation is vital to promoting better outcomes for patients. In partnership with clinical leads from the area the SCN has developed a neuromuscular disease pathway, which has been adopted by the NMD campaign and distributed for comment nationally. Access to the pathway can be found at http://www.yhscn.nhs.uk/mental-health-clinic/ neurology-network/work-priorities/Neuro-MuscularDisease.php Helped in part by NHS England’s repatriation of specialised outpatient clinics back to CCGs, the Y&H SCN has been fortunate to secure support from commissioning leaders across the three consortia (North Yorkshire & Humber, West & SouthYorkshire). One challenge is that neurology can struggle to attract attention against all the other commissioning priorities such as cancer, stroke and urgent and emergency care. The SCN held a Neurology commissioning workshop on 13th Nov 2014, which resulted in delegates agreeing the need for an SCN Neurology Commissioning Group. The first commissioning meeting will be held in Spring 2015. This signifies a positive step towards improving neurology services in Y&H through a more formal commissioning structure. NEURODIGEST • ISSUE 2 • 2015 • 23 SERVICE DEVELOPMENT 24 • NEURODIGEST • ISSUE 2 • 2015