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Annual Report and Accounts
2014/15
King's College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
Annual Report and Accounts 2014/15
Presented to Parliament pursuant to Schedule 7, paragraph 25(4) (a) of the
National Health Service Act 2006
CONTENTS
Introduction ....................................................................................... 15
Who we are
15
A year of challenges
15
Chair’s Statement
17
Chief Executive’s Statement
18
Strategic Report ................................................................................ 23
How King’s is Regulated
23
Key operational and performance highlights
25
Ensuring Financial Sustainability
28
Planning for the Future
32
King’s Health Partners Academic Health Sciences Centre
33
King’s Workforce and Values
35
Workforce statistics
35
Caring for the Environment
37
Directors’ Report ............................................................................... 49
King’s People
49
Respecting and Protecting Patient Information
57
Code of Governance
60
Board of Directors
62
Remuneration Report
73
Council of Governors
74
Patient and Public Focus: Listening and Responding .................. 85
Improving Patient Care
85
A Representative Membership
94
IN FOCUS: ALWAYS AIMING HIGHER
97
Quality Account 2013/14 ................................................................. 105
Part 1: Statement on quality from the chief executive of the NHS Foundation Trust
107
Part 2: Priorities for improvement and statements of assurance from the Board
110
Part 3. An Overview of performance in 2013/14 against mandated national key standards
172
Annual Accounts 2014/15 ............................................................... 193
Glossary
ACRONYM/WORD
A&E
ACC
AHP
AHSC
ANS
BCIS
BHRS
BME
BREEAM
BSCN
BSI
BSS
CCG
CCS
CCTD
CCUTB
C-difficile
CDU
CEM
CHD
CHR – UK
CLAHRC
CLINIWEB
CLL
CLRN
CNS
COPD
COPD
COSD
COSHH
CPPD
CQC
CQRG
CQUIN
CRF
CRISP
CT
MEANING
Accident & Emergency
Accredited Clinical Coder
Allied Health Professionals i.e. Physiotherapists, Occupational Therapists,
Speech & Language Therapists etc.
Academic Health Science Centre
Association of Neurophysiological Scientists Standards
Bone Cement Implantation Syndrome
British Heart Rhythm Society
Black and Minority Ethnic
Building Research Establishment Environmental Assessment Method
British Society for Clinical Neurophysiology
The British Standards Institution
Breathlessness Support Service
Clinical Commissioning Groups (previously Primary Care Trusts)
Crown Commercial Service
Critical Care and Trauma Department
Critical Care Unit over Theatre Block
Colistridium Difficile
Clinical Decisions Unit
Royal College of Emergency Medicine
Congenital Heart Disease
Child Health Clinical Outcome Review Programme (UK)
Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Research and Care
The Trust's internal web-based information resource for sharing clinical
guidelines and statements.
Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia
Comprehensive Local Research Network
Clinical Nurse Specialist
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
Cancer Outcomes and Services Dataset
Control of Substances Hazardous to Health
Continuing Professional and Personal Development
Care Quality Commission
Clinical Quality Review Group (organised by local commissioners)
Commissioning for Quality and Innovation
Clinical Research Facility
Community for Research Involvement and Support for People with Parkinson’s
Computerised Tomography
7
DAHNO
DH/KCH DH
DNAR
DoH
DTOC
ED
EDS
EMS
EPC
EPMA
EPR
ERR
ESCO
EUROPAR
EWS
FFT
FY
GCS
GP
GSTS Pathology
GSTT
H&S
HASU
HAT
HAU
HCAI
HCAs
HESL
HF
HIV
HNA
HQIP
HRWD
HSCIC
HSE
HTA
IAPT
IBD
ICAEW
ICNARC
ICO
8
National Head & Neck Cancer Audit
Denmark Hill. The Trust acute hospital based at Denmark Hill
Do Not Attempt Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation
Department of Health
Delayed Transfer of Care
Emergency Department
Equality Delivery System
Environmental Management System
Energy Performance Contract
Electron Probe Micro-Analysis
Electronic Patient Record
Enhanced Rapid Response
Energy Service Company
European Network for Parkinson’s Disease Research Organization
Early Warning Score
Staff Friends & Family Test
Financial Year
Glasgow Coma Scale
General Practitioner
Venture between King’s, Guy’s and St Thomas’ and Serco plc
Guy's St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust
Health & Safety
Hyper Acute Stroke Unit
Hospital Acquired Thrombosis
Health and Aging Units
Healthcare Acquired Infections
Health Care Assistants
Health Education South London
Heart Failure
Human Immunodeficiency Virus
Holistic Needs Assessment
Healthcare Quality Improvement Partnership
‘How are we doing?’ King’s Patient/User Survey
Health and Social Care Information Centre
Health and Safety Executive
Human Tissue Authority
Improving Access to Psychological Therapies
Inflammatory Bowel Disease
Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales Code of Ethics
Intensive Care National Audit & Research Centre
Information Commissioner’s Office
ICT
ICU
IG Toolkit
IGSG
IGT
IHDT
iMOBILE
IPC
ISO
ISS
JCC
KAD
KCH, KING's, TRUST
KCL
KHP
KHP Online
KPIs
KPMG LLP
KPP
KWIKI
LCA
LCN
LIPs
LITU
LUCR
MACCE
MBRRACE-UK
MDMs
MDS
MDTs
MEOWS
MHRA
MINAP
MRI
MRSA
MTC
NAC
NADIA
NAOGC
Information and Communications Technology
Intensive Care Unit
Information Governance Toolkit
Information Governance Steering Group
Information Governance Toolkit
Integrated Hospital Discharge Team
Specialist critical care outreach team
Integrated Personal Commissioning
International Organization for Standardization
Injury Severity Score
Joint Consultation Committee
King’s Appraisal & Development System
King's College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
King’s College London – King’s University Partner
King's Health Partners
King’s Health Partners Online
Key Performance Indicators
King’s Internal Auditor
King’s Performance and Potential
The Trust's internal web-based information resource. Used for sharing trustwide polices, guidance and information. Accessible by all staff and authorised
users.
London Cancer Alliance
Local Care Networks
Local Incentive Premiums
Liver Intensive Therapy Unit
Local Unified Care Record
Major Adverse Cardiac and Cerebrovascular Event
Maternal, Newborn and Infant Clinical Outcome Review Programme
Multidisciplinary Meeting
Myelodysplastic Syndromes
Multidisciplinary Team
Modified Early Obstetric Warning Score
Medicine Health Regulatory Authority
The Myocardial Ischaemia National Audit Project
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus
Major Trauma Services
N-acetylcysteine
National Diabetes Inpatient Audit
National Audit of Oesophageal & Gastric Cancers
9
NASH
NBOCAP
NCEPOD
NCISH
NCPES
NDA
NEDs
NEST
NEWS
NHFD
NHS
NHS Safety
Thermometer
NHSBT
NICE
NICU
NIHR
NJR
NNAP
NPDA
NPID
NPSA
NRAD
NRLS
NSCLC
OH/ORPINGTON
HOSPITAL
OSC
PALS
PbR
PICANet
PiMS
PLACE
POMH
POTTS
PROMS
PRUH/KCH PRUH
PUCAI
PwC
10
National Audit of Seizure Management
National Bowel Cancer Audit Programme
National Confidential Enquiry into Patient Outcome & Death Studies
National Confidential Inquiry into Suicide & Homicide for People with Mental
Illness
National Cancer Patient Experience Survey
National Diabetes Audit
Non-Executive Directors
National Employment Savings Trust
National Early Warning System
National Hip Fracture Database
National Health Service
A NHS local system for measuring, monitoring, & analysing patient harms and
‘harm-free’ care
NHS Blood and Transplant
National Institute for Health & Excellence
Neonatal Intensive Care Unit
National Institute for Health Research
National Joint Registry
National Neonatal Audit Programme
National Paediatric Diabetes Audit
Pregnancy Care in Women with Diabetes
National Patient Safety Agency
National Review of Asthma Deaths
National Reporting and Learning Service
Non-Small Lung Cancer
The Trust acquired services at this hospital site on 01 October 2013
King’s Organizational Safety Committee
Patient Advocacy & Liaison Service
Payment by Results
Paediatric Intensive Care Audit Network
Patient Administration System
Patient Led Assessments of the Care Environment
Prescribing Observatory for Mental Health
Physiological Observation Track & Trigger System
Patient Reported Outcome Measures
Princess Royal University Hospital. The Trust acquired this acute hospital site
on 01 October 2013
Pediatric Ulcerative Colitis Activity Index
PricewaterhouseCoopers
QMH
RCPCH
RIDDOR
ROP
RRT
RTT
SBAR
SCG
SEL
SEQOHS
SHMI
SIRO
SLAM
SLHT
SLIC
SSC
SSIG
SSNAP
SUS
SW
TARN
TTAs
TUPE
UAE
UNE
VTE
WHO
WTE
Queen Mary’s Hospital
Royal College of Paediatric and Child Health
Reporting of Injuries, Dangerous Diseases and Dangerous Occurrences
Regulations
Retinopathy of Prematurity
Renal Replacement Therapy
Referral to Treatment
Situation, Background, Assessment & Recognition factors for prompt &
effective communication amongst staff
Specialist Commissioning Group (NHS England)
South East London
Safe Effective Quality Occupational Health Service
Standardised Hospital Mortality Index. This measures all deaths of patients
admitted to hospital and those that occur up to 30 days after discharge from
hospital.
Senior Information Risk Owner
South London & Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust
South London Health Care Trust. SLHT dissolved on 01 October 2013 having
being entered into the administration process in July 2012.
Southwark & Lambeth Integrated Care Programme
Surgical Safety Checklist
Surgical safety Improvement Group
Sentinel Stroke National Audit Programme
Secondary Uses Service
Social Worker
Trauma Audit & Research Network
Tablets to take away
Transfer of Undertakings (Protection of Employment) Regulations
United Arab Emirates
Ulnar Neuropathy at Elbow
Venous-Thromboembolism
World Health Organisation
Whole Time Equivalent
11
Introduction
Introduction
Queen Mary’s Hospital (Sidcup) and
Beckenham Beacon.
Who we are
King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
has a reputation for providing excellent local
healthcare in the boroughs of Lambeth and
Southwark and, more recently, in Bromley and
Lewisham. It also provides a range of specialist
services for patients across south east England
and beyond.
King’s has been recognised nationally and
internationally for its work in the fields of liver
disease and transplantation, neuro-sciences,
diabetes, cardiac services, haemato-oncology
and fetal medicine. Designated a Major Trauma
Centre and host to two of eight hyper-acute
stroke units in London, King’s also plays a key
role in the education and training of the next
generation of medical, nursing and dental
students.
King’s is also part of the Academic Health
Sciences Centre known as King’s Health
Partners (KHP). Together with academic
partners King’s College London and fellow
foundation trusts Guy’s and St Thomas’ and
South London and Maudsley, KHP brings
together an unrivalled range of physical and
mental health clinical and research expertise.
The combined strengths of this collaboration
benefits patients through breakthroughs in
research and improvements in patient care.
A year of challenges
This year, King’s has been adapting to its new
status as an enlarged organisation, and the
various challenges and opportunities this has
brought with it. In October 2013, the Trust took
over the Princess Royal University Hospital
(PRUH), following the dissolution of South
London Healthcare NHS Trust (SLHT). It also
took over Orpington Hospital, plus services at
Since October 2013, the Trust has made great
progress on a number of fronts, not least in
patient satisfaction at the PRUH, which has
gone up, at the same time as the number of
complaints has come down. The PRUH stroke
unit has moved from unaccredited status to one
of the top 20 units in the country. The Trust has
also revived Orpington Hospital, and turned it
into one of the largest orthopaedic centres in
London, with outstanding patient outcomes, a
Friends and Family score of 100% and a five
star rating on NHS Choices.
However, the historic financial and quality
issues at the PRUH were materially worse than
anticipated during the due diligence process,
and the Trust needed to make investments
quickly to ensure patient safety on the PRUH
site, including increasing the nurse to patient
ratio on the wards. The King’s Board took a
deliberate decision, in consultation with local
stakeholders, to prioritise the quality and safety
of patient care over financial performance. For
example, the necessary use of agency staff - at
an increased cost - to fill vacant nursing
positions while permanent staff were recruited.
This was a major contributory factor to the
challenged financial position the Trust now
faces.
Following an investigation by Monitor, King’s
has committed to the delivery of one and two
year financial recovery plans and a five year
strategic plan for the future. King’s has also
undertaken to work closely with Monitor and
other stakeholders to address the financial and
capacity challenges in the wider South East
London health economy.
This report tells the story of how King’s has
performed during the period 01 April 2014 – 31
15
March 2015 and how the challenges have been tackled by the people who work here. It reflects on this
year’s performance and next year’s priorities for providing quality, patient-centred care whilst
addressing significant financial challenges.
16
Chair’s Statement
I write this statement with
mixed feelings. On 1
April, I will retire as Chair
of King’s, a role I have
always felt honoured to
hold. Of course, I am
excited about what the
future may hold, but I am
also sad to end my formal association with the
Trust as Chair, a position I have held since
2010.
My last year as Chair has been a busy one. I
have been working closely with the Trust
Executive and our other Non-Executive
Directors to get to grips with our status as an
enlarged organisation, and what this means
for our patients.
As Chair, I know how important it is for us to
properly integrate services and bring together
the hospitals we run. This has been a major
challenge since October 2013, when we took
over the Princess Royal University Hospital
(PRUH), Orpington Hospital, and services at
other sites. Our mantra from the outset has
always been ‘one hospital, across multiplesites’, and we are making progress towards
this becoming a reality.
Of course, I am also a doctor, and understand
the importance of making sure we continue to
get the basics right - that is, providing first-rate
care to the patients we treat, every day of the
week. To achieve this – whilst running and
integrating three hospitals, plus services at
other sites – was never going to be easy, and
so this has proved to be. As Tim says
overleaf, the services we provide continue to
be in high demand, which reflects well on our
staff. However, it does mean operational
performance has been challenged, although
we are taking steps to address this.
We’ve continued to engage with those
stakeholders who are local to the hospitals we
run. Many organisations are involved in
delivering healthcare locally, so we have
made a concerted effort to engage with them,
to ensure we work together to improve care
for patients - both in and outside the hospital.
This year, we welcomed a new Council of
Governors, with 74 staff and members of the
public standing for election to 19 posts. The
new ‘intake’ of Governors reflects the varied
and diverse nature of the communities we
serve and they will play a key role in the future
direction of the Trust.
The past year has also reminded us of our
strong links with the local community, plus
those from further afield. In August, the Trust
organised a week of commemorative events
to mark 100 years since the beginning of the
First World War. We took this opportunity to
remember those who died or who were
injured, and our staff who tried to heal them.
The events included a re-dedication of the
Memorial Garden at Orpington Hospital, which
served as a military hospital for Canadian and
British troops during the war. We were
delighted to welcome Deputy High
Commissioner for Canada, Alan H Kessel,
and the representative for Ontario, Aaron
Rosland, who paid us a special visit.
Finally, I believe King’s will always be a
special place to work and be treated, and I
would like to wish everyone all the best for the
future, not least my successor, Lord Bob
Kerslake.
Professor Sir George Alberti
Former Chair
17
Chief Executive’s Statement
Last year’s report covered
our acquisition of the
Princess Royal University
Hospital (PRUH) in
October 2013 following the
dissolution of South
London Healthcare NHS
Trust (SLHT). As well as the PRUH, we also
took over Orpington Hospital, as well as patient
services at Queen Mary’s Hospital (Sidcup) and
Beckenham Beacon.
The historic financial and quality issues at the
PRUH were materially worse than identified in
the due diligence process, and we needed to
make investments quickly to ensure patient
safety on the PRUH site. The King’s Board
took a deliberate decision, in consultation with
local stakeholders, to prioritise the quality and
safety of patient care over financial
performance. For example, the necessary use
of agency staff - at an increased cost - to fill
vacant nursing positions while permanent staff
were recruited. This was a major contributory
factor to the challenged financial position the
Trust now faces.
Operationally, the key issues for us centred
around demand for services locally. Both our
Emergency Departments (ED) have seen high
levels of attendance and admission and this has
led to extended ED waits for our local patient
population. Planned operations have also been
affected by the influx of emergency patients,
leading to a lack of beds, the need to cancel
operations and longer waiting lists.
Throughout the year, we have been working
closely with Monitor, the health regulator,
discussing our operational performance and our
finances, and at the end of the year Monitor
launched a formal investigation with the aim of
finding a solution to these long-standing
18
problems at the Princess Royal University
Hospital. We have been tasked with preparing
one and two year recovery plans and a 5 year
strategy. To help us meet the challenging
financial recovery targets we appointed a
transformation and turnaround director in March
who will be driving cost savings across the
organisation to reduce our deficit.
We are also pleased that Monitor recognised
the need for a system wide solution. This is a
key part of delivering improvements in patient
care, as well as addressing the financial and
capacity challenges in South East London. We
will be working closely with Monitor and other
stakeholders to address the financial and
capacity challenges both in the Trust and in the
wider health economy.
We shouldn’t lost sight of the real achievements
we have made over the last year, despite the
financial and operational challenges. We have
increased staffing levels at the PRUH, and
improved the physical environment people are
treated in. Patient satisfaction has increased,
and the number of complaints is down. The
PRUH stroke unit has moved from unaccredited
status to one of the top twenty units in the
country, and we have revived Orpington
Hospital and turned it into one of the largest
orthopaedic centres in London, with outstanding
patient outcomes, a Friends and Family score
of 100% and a five star rating on NHS Choices.
The pace of change across the organisation
shows no signs of slowing down. At Denmark
Hill, we are also treating more patients than
ever before. Two key projects – a new critical
care facility, and a helipad for the Ruskin Wing
– are now well underway. Both projects are of
strategic importance to the Trust, and are very
visible signs to our patients and staff of our
plans to modernise the site, and provide truly
world-class patient services.
However, our most important asset will always
be our staff. The past year has been rewarding
for me because, despite the challenges outlined
above, staff have really stepped up to the plate,
and continued to do everything within their
powers to deliver high-quality patient care. We
have all welcomed new staff and different ways
of working, and I believe we are a better
organisation as a result.
Finally, I would like to thank Professor George
Alberti, our Chair, for the enormous contribution
he has made to the Trust since taking on the
role in 2010. George retired on 1 April 2015,
and I wish him all the best for the future. His
predecessor, Lord Kerslake, has already started
with us, and we all look forward to working with
him.
I hope you enjoy this report, and find it useful.
*Tim Smart
Chief Executive
*Tim Smart retired as Chief Executive in April
2015, and Roland Sinker, Chief Executive
Officer becoming Acting Chief Executive
19
Strategic
Report
distribution which might reasonably be
expected to be declared or paid for the
period of 12 months However it drew
Monitors attention to the following factors
which may cast doubt on the ability of King’s
to provide Commissioner Requested
Services:
 commissioner funding regime;
 the availability of central funding at the
right time;
 The ability to agree timely repatriation of
patients to their local hospitals; and
 resolution of any issues related to claims
for the acquisition of former SLHT sites
and services.
Strategic Report
How King’s is Regulated
King’s has been a foundation trust since
December 2006. As such its regulated by
Monitor and required to make periodic
submissions pertaining to its strategic plans,
and its audits financial and operational
performance.
These plans and submissions provide the
framework for decision-making and
performance tracking.
As part of King’s annual reporting to Monitor,
the Board of Directors had to assess and
forecast how the organisation would perform
operationally and financially. The Board also
had to self-certify against three statements:
1. General condition systems for compliance
with License Conditions.
2. Continuity of services condition 7 –
availability of resources.
3. How it will perform in relation to the
corporate governance statements outlined
in the licence
On completing a review of its performance
against licence conditions, schedule of
assurance against corporate governance
statements, board assurance framework and
the risk registers, the Board identified and selfcertified that there were risks to achievement of
the following targets for 2014/15:
 RTT 18 Week Admitted;
 A&E 4 hour Waiting Time;
 Cancer waiting times;
 C.Difficile; and
 That a reasonable expectation, was that
King’s would have the required resources
available to it after taking into account in
particular (but without limitation) any
These challenges did not dissipate during the
period and the King’s decided to prioritise
patient care and delivering a high standard of
service by investing in its services in particular
at the PRUH site. Accordingly, King’s welcomed
the regulator, Monitor’s, investigation in March
2015.
Although Monitor recognised that King’s had
made progress in improving services at the
PRUH, this has not been sufficient, as it had
become clear the challenge was greater than
initially anticipated.
Following the investigation, Monitor agreed with
King’s that it will:
 develop and implement an effective shortterm financial recovery plan to deliver the
required improvements at the PRUH that
King’s planned to make when it took over
the hospital; and

develop and implement a longer-term plan
by working closely with other national and
local health care organisations (including
NHS England and local commissioners) to
ensure patient services are improved, and
also provided in a sustainable way for the
future.
23
Table 1: Financial & Governance Performance 2013/14 and 2014/15
2013/14
2014/15
Continuity of
Risk Rating
Governance
Risk Rating
Continuity of
Risk Rating
Governance
Risk Rating
Quarter 1
n/a
n/a
3
Under Review
Quarter 2
n/a
Green
3
Under Review
3
Considering
investigation
2
Under Review Investigation
3
Considering
investigation
2
Red - Under
Enforcement
Action
Quarter 3
Quarter 4
24
Key operational and performance
highlights
During 2014/15 King’s continued to see high
numbers of patients coming into its Emergency
Department (ED) and requiring emergency
admission,following the unprecedented
increase in activity levels in 2013/14.
Consequently, King’s bed occupancy has
remained high at 95% throughout the year on
both acute sites at Denmark Hill and the
Princess Royal University Hospital (PRUH).
This has put considerable pressure on
delivering King’s key performance targets such
as getting patients into hospital quickly enough
and managing infection control trajectories
across the enlarged organisation. King’s is not
alone in these challenges as these pressures
are mirrored across South East London.
Emergency department ‘4-hour wait’
performance
During the period, King’s faced significant
challenges in meeting its 4-hour waiting time
target but has made significant investment on
both its acute sites in the form of additional staff
and extra capacity to ensure optimal
performance in light of the increasing demand.
Medical and surgical assessment units have
been setup during the year to better manage
the flow of emergency patients into the hospital.
Denmark Hill ‘4-hour wait’ performance
Increased numbers of mental health patients
attending the Denmark Hill site ED and the high
numbers of repatriation patients remaining in
beds have restricted patient flow in ED and in
acute beds.
Performance improvements against trajectory
helped be achievement of the 4-hour wait target
in October and November. However continued
failure in each quarter resulted in an overall
failure of the 4-hour target at the Denmark Hill
site during 2014/15.
PRUH ‘4-hour wait’ performance
This failure was also mirrored at the PRUH site
where the 4-hour target was not met during
2014/15.
There were significant performance
improvements at the site in the first six months
of the year but performance worsened going
into Q4 with breaches due to bed availability
being a significant factor. Drivers for this
position included the fact that more acutely ill
patients were attending the hospital, a majority
of whom required treatment in the resuscitation
area of the ED, which was constantly running at
full capacity during the period.
A further driver was the insufficient staff
establishment numbers in ED. Unfilled shifts
resulted in cubicle closure in the ED. King’s
has prioritised treating patients quickly and
safely. However, in the short-term, this led to is
a high degree of reliance on agency staff which
impacted on the financial position. King’s has
prioritised nursing recruitment to reduce the use
of agency staff.
King’s continues to manage emergency
performance at a senior executive level on a
daily basis with the Board and its regulators,
through work with local commissioners and
NHS England to address key issues such as
tertiary and rehabilitation repatriation delays.
The number of patients attending the ED also
increased in December by a further 2% with
1,000 more patients seen compared to
December in the previous year.
25
Patient Access targets
Throughout the year, high levels of emergency
admissions have heavily impacted on the
achievement of 18-week referral to treatment
targets for admitted patients across King’s. The
non-admitted completed pathway and
incomplete pathway targets were achieved
during the period. However, the admitted
completed pathway target was not achieved
during any quarter in 2014/15.
This was anticipated and declared in the
forward plan submitted to Monitor. A strong
focus was maintained on improving
performance in this area with actions to
increase on-site and off-site working using
private providers.
Cancer waiting time targets were achieved with
the exception of the 2-week wait from referral to
date seen target which was not met in quarter
1. The 62-day wait for first treatment target was
not achieved in quarter 2 or quarter 4. This was
consistent with the risk assessment submitted
to Monitor at the beginning of the period.
Denmark Hill access target highlights:
During the period, King’s worked hard to reduce
the backlog of 2000 patients waiting over 18weeks to have their elective procedures carried
out at the Denmark Hill site. The original plan
was to get this down to 1200 by September but
unfortunately, this was not achieved until the
end of November. Factors which impacted on
King’s clearing this backlog included increased
bed pressures and the lack of external private
patient capacity which was lower than forecast.
National waiting time targets for cancer patients
were achieved which ensured that cancer and
suspected cancer patients were treated in a
timely manner throughout the year. It is
however unlikely that King’s will achieve the 62day wait for first treatment target for Q4.
26
PRUH access target highlights
King’s planned to reduce the backlog of
admitted patients waiting over 18-weeks to 450
patients. However, this target was not met due
to the high number of emergency patients
occupying beds at PRUH and the fact that the
levels of private hospital capacity available to
outsource these patients was lower than
planned. A number of equipment failures in the
Day Surgery Unit have also impacted on the
number of patients the Trust could treat.
The 18-week admitted completed target has not
been achieved and the non-admitted completed
target was only achieved in quarter 1. The
incomplete pathway target was achieved in
quarters 2 and 3.
Due, in part, to delays in a number of services
being moved to Beckenham Beacon hospital to
create additional capacity, the 2-week wait from
referral to date seen target was not achieved in
the reporting period. Bed pressures have also
impacted on achievement of the 62 day wait for
the first cancer treatment target. This target was
only met in quarter 1 of the reporting period.
Infection prevention and control
There were 77 C-difficile cases that were
attributed to the Trust in 2014/15, an increase
compared to the 69 cases that were reported
during 2013/14. This is also higher than the
stretch target of 58 cases set by the
Department of Health for the Trust.
All of these cases are subjected to a thorough
review to identify any cases due to “Lapse in
Care” and to put mitigating actions in place. A
“Lapse in Care” is defined in National Guidance
as “a case where evidence exists that policies
and protocols consistent with national
guidelines and standards weren’t followed”.
Seven cases were considered to be Lapses in
Care. These lapses related to antibiotic use,
either an inappropriate type of antibiotic chosen
or a concern with the duration of treatment.
Denmark Hill infection control highlights
The number of cases of C-difficile increased
during 2014/15 with a total of 57 cases which
was above the site quota of 42 cases, and
higher than the 49 cases in 2013/14. Although
no longer a reporting requirement, there were
six cases of Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus
aureus (MRSA) attributed to King’s during the
year. No evidence of cross transmission was
seen on ribotyping tests. There were four cases
declared as lapses in care relating to antibiotic
use.
PRUH infection control highlights
There were 20 cases of C-difficile attributed to
the PRUH during 2014/15, consistent with the
previous year, but higher than the quota of 16
cases. There were no cases of MRSA
attributed to PRUH during the year. Three
cases were declared to be lapses in care
relating to antibiotic use.
King’s continues to monitors other instances of
healthcare acquired infections (HCAI) and this
remains a priority area.
Mortality indicators
In line with guidance from the Department of
Health, King’s has continued to review mortality
based on the Summary Hospital-level Mortality
Indicator (SHMI). The SHMI for 2014/15 is 91,
an improvement on the SHMI of 94 for 2013/14,
and better than the expected index of 100. This
indicates that outcomes continue to be better
than expected.
Stroke Unit
King’s specialist stroke units at the Denmark Hill
and PRUH sites have scored highly in the
Sentinel Stroke National Audit Programme
(SSNAP) for 2014/15 which scores all stroke
units across the country so that they can
monitor their progress against national
standards.
The unit at Denmark Hill has achieved the
highest overall score of all of the units in
London and joint-highest nationally, while the
unit at the PRUH was scored highly for the high
standard of its thrombolysis care, and the
efficiency of its scanning.
Patient Data and System Integration
A key priority for the King’s was to work on
integrating all patient activity data collection into
one patient administration (PiMS) system.
During 2014/15, the Trust has migrated data
from the patient administration systems
historically used on the Sidcup and PRUH sites
to the PiMS system that is being used on the
Denmark Hill site. All patient activity is
therefore now recorded on a single system
across the Trust.
27
Ensuring Financial Sustainability
2014/15 was the first full financial year since the
acquisition of the services and assets of part of
the former South London Healthcare NHS Trust
(SLHT). On 01 October 2013, King’s received
all services provided at PRUH, excluding the
services provided within Green Parks House.
King’s also received all SLHT services provided
at Orpington Hospital; all SLHT services
provided at Beckenham Beacon for a period of
three years, except where otherwise requested
by Bromley Clinical Commissioning Group at an
alternative site once the King’s lease expires;
and all SLHT services provided at the
Sevenoaks site. King’s also received a range of
services provided at Queen Mary’s Hospital
(QMH) in Sidcup, including all dental services,
community midwifery services and
ophthalmology (for an interim period of 22
months). Inpatient elective surgery, endoscopy
and Programmed Investigation Unit/Day
Assessment Unit services provided on the QMH
site for PRUH patients were also received by
King’s, with a view to them being repatriated to
King’s sites as soon as possible.
Over the last 18 months, following the
acquisition of the Princess Royal University
Hospital (PRUH) and services on other sites in
South East London, the Board of King’s College
Hospital NHS Foundation Trust has taken a
series of decisions using good information that
prioritised patient safety, quality and access
over financial performance.
The historic financial and quality issues at the
PRUH were materially worse than identified in
the due diligence process, and the Trust
needed to make investments quickly to ensure
patient safety on the PRUH site, including
increasing the nurse to patient ratio on the
wards. The necessary use of agency staff at an
increased cost to fill these positions while
28
permanent staff were recruited is a major
contributory factor to the challenged financial
position the Trust now faces.
The financial implications of these decisions
resulted in a year end operating deficit of £15.9
million.
After financing costs and asset value
impairments, the total deficit from continuing
operations was £52 million.
In addition to the investments made at the
PRUH a number of other factors added to the
cost pressures facing the Trust:
 A general shortage of capacity, exacerbated
by high levels of emergency demand and
the difficulty in discharging patients fit-fordischarge either back into the community or
to their referring hospital. This led to a
significant proportion of elective procedures
being undertaken offsite in the private
sector or out of hours. Both of these
alternatives cost more than in-house
treatment during normal working hours.

A difficulty in recruiting sufficient numbers of
suitably qualified permanent staff. This led
to a significant increase in expenditure on
temporary staff in order to maintain safe
staffing levels.

A shortfall in the delivery of cost
improvement plans, particularly the delivery
of benefits outlined in the Full Business
Case arising from the new enlarged
organisation.
In order to address these issues the Trust
formulated a series of plans to restrict activity
and designed to reduce expenditure which
Monitor and Commissioners did not feel able to
support. In order to produce a sustainable
recovery plan, the Trust appointed PwC to
assist in identifying savings and productivity
opportunities. This was supplemented by the
appointment of a Transformation and
Turnaround Director in March 2015. Monitor
launched an investigation in February 2015 due
to ‘longstanding issues at the PRUH’. The Trust
welcomed the outcome of the investigation and
that there was a recognition that a system wide
solution was required. As a result of the
investigation, the Board of Directors undertook
to produce a series of recovery plans covering
one, two and five years during 2015.
Liquidity and capital
As a result of the size of the deficit the Trust
has also needed to address liquidity concerns.
Cash flow planning has, with the assistance of
PwC, been enhanced and an interim support
facility of £59m agreed with Monitor and the
Department of Health. More long term support
will be agreed once the five year strategic plan
has been submitted in October 2015. The cash
impact of the deficit incurred in 2014/15 has
affected the ability of the Trust to comply with
the better payment practice code – 79% of
invoices by value being paid within the 30 day
period (53% by volume). The Trust paid £4,000
in the financial year as a result of penalties
assessed under the Late Payment of
Commercial Debts (Interest) Act 1998.
Total capital expenditure in 2014/15 was £49m
– the major schemes being the start of a new
project to expand critical care capacity and the
completion of a new MRI and Cardiac facility.
For future years, the capital programme has
been reviewed to include only schemes that are
already in progress, are essential for health and
safety reasons or directly contribute to the
financial recovery plans.
Going Concern
Due to the materiality of the financial issues, the
Board has carefully considered whether the
accounts should be prepared on the basis of
being a ‘Going Concern’. The Board considered
the advice in the Government Reporting Manual
that “The anticipated continuation of the
provision of a service in the future, as
evidenced by inclusion of financial provision for
that service in published documents, is normally
sufficient evidence of going concern.” After
making enquiries, the directors have concluded
that there is sufficient evidence that services
will be continue to be provided and that there is
financial provision within the forward plans of
commissioners. This provision will also be
dependent on both acceptance and delivery of
the financial recovery plans and continuation of
support from the Department of Health. The
Directors have a reasonable expectation that
this will be the case.
More information on going concern can be
found on pages 226-227 in the Annual
Accounts.
Value for money and improved efficiency
Divisions and corporate departments delivered
£29.9m of cost improvement schemes
representing 56.4% of the planned schemes
during 2014/15, a reduction in the delivery
success compared to previous years. This was
predominantly due to the high levels of
emergency demand adversely affecting plans
for improved productivity in the areas of
nursing, medical staff and theatre utilization. In
order to improve the delivery rate as well as
providing a system to identify, track and
manage the larger portfolio of schemes
required to achieve the recovery plan, the Trust
has established a Programme Management
Office, which, in the first instance, will be
operated by PwC. All savings schemes pass
through a process of identification, verification
29
and quality impact assessment before being
added to the programme. The Quality Impact
Assessment is undertaken by the Medical
Director and Director of Nursing to ensure that
schemes are not proceeded with if there is a
risk to patient safety. The identification of
schemes is being led by the new Turnaround
and Transformation Director. The first year
recovery plan calls for the identification of £86m
worth of savings in order to begin to address
the underlying deficit and further cost pressures
facing the acute sector. Pending the
development of the five year strategic plan later
in 2015, it is currently anticipated that the Trust
will regain financial balance in 2017/18.
During the year, the Trust supplemented its
available capacity, by expanding the activities
of the King’s Orthopaedic Centre at Orpington.
This facility enables patients requiring elective
joint surgery to be seen in a purpose built
facility with dedicated support facilities and
minimises the risk of cancellations due to
emergency pressures.
Non-clinical activities
KCH Commercial Services Limited, the
company established to oversee commercial
operations, continues to diversify income by
expanding commercial activities both in the UK
and overseas. It has now been in operation for
seven years.
During that time, the first of the operating
companies, Agnentis Limited, successfully
established itself as a market leader in patient
costing and benchmarking solutions before
divesting the associated products in 2012. KCH
Management Limited continues to develop a
hospital management and consultancy
business both in the UK and overseas,
predominantly in the Middle East and Africa.
King’s first non-UK operation opened in Abu
Dhabi, UAE in October 2014. KCH
Management owns 49% of the company, the
30
maximum allowable under local statutes,
operating the Clinic. The company also
operates a successful international recruitment
business both for Kings and other healthcare
organisations.
GSTS Pathology, a venture between King’s,
Guy’s and St Thomas’ and Serco plc,
rebranded to become known as Viapath LLP.
Its performance has continued to improve and
the venture delivered a surplus attributable to
Kings in the year of £1.4m. The company
divided its activities between services and
operations during the financial year and,
following a consultation exercise, the Trust
transferred its formerly seconded staff to the
company under the TUPE regulations.
King’s is a public benefit corporation and its
principal purpose is the provision of goods and
services for the purposes of the health service
in England. During the reporting period, income
from the provision of goods and services for the
purposes of the health service in England was
greater than from the provision of goods and
services for any other purpose. Income
received from non-NHS services is directly
invested in the provision of NHS services and
do not impact the services provided to NHS
patients. For the financial year 2014/15, it is
estimated that the surplus reinvested was
approximately £5m.
Changes to accounting policies
There were no significant changes to
accounting policies during the year.
Cost allocation requirements
King’s has complied with the cost allocation and
charging requirements set out in HM Treasury
and Office of Public Sector Information
guidance.
Table 2: Key Financial Implications
Full Year (£’000)
Operating income and costs
Operating income from continuing operations
Operating expenses from continuing operations
Operating surplus
Net finance costs
Share of profit of Associate/Joint Ventures accounted for using
equity method
Gain from transfer by absorption
Corporate tax expense
(Deficit)/surplus from continuing operations
External audit services
Deloitte LLP is King’s external auditor having
been appointed by the Council of Governors in
May 2011 for a period of three years following a
competitive tendering exercise. King’s incurred
£128,000 in audit services fees in relation to the
statutory audit for the year to 31 March 2015
and £27,000 in respect of audit-related
assurance services.
So far, as King’s directors are aware, there is
no relevant audit information of which the
auditors are unaware. King’s directors have
taken all of the steps that they ought to have
taken as directors in order to make themselves
aware of any audit information and to establish
that the auditors are aware of that information.
Borrowing and capital plans
Due to the adoption of International Financial
Reporting Standards, the majority of the Trust’s
reported borrowing represents past expenditure
on the private finance initiative schemes for the
Golden Jubilee Wing and Ruskin Wing at
Denmark Hill and the Princess Royal University
Hospital.
Further borrowing has been undertaken to
finance the construction of the new Critical Care
2014-15
2013-14
1,083,782
892,054
(1,099,712) (871,875)
(15,930)
20,179
(36,642)
(27,250)
the
757
1,278
(250)
(52,065)
65,542
59,749
Facility. At 31 March 2015, loans outstanding to
the Foundation Trust Financing Facility totaled
£70m.
Because of the continuing service provider
relationship that the Foundation Trust has with
NHS England and clinical commissioning
groups, and the way those commissioners are
financed, the Foundation Trust is not exposed
to the degree of financial risk faced by business
entities. The Foundation Trust has limited
powers to borrow or invest surplus funds and
financial assets and liabilities are generated by
day-to-day operational activities rather than
being held to change the risks facing the
Foundation Trust in undertaking its activities.
King’s has low exposure to interest rate risk and
credit risk material for the assessment of the
assets, liabilities, financial position and results
of the entity. Due to the Trust’s 49% holding in
King's College Hospital Clinics LLC (KCHC),
operating in the United Arab Emirates, the Trust
is exposed to limited currency risk in the form of
currency rate fluctuations on interest and capital
repayments of the loan denominated in Emirati
Dirhams (AED).
The foundation trust is currently exposed to
liquidity risk due to its requirement for working
31
capital support. The Trust has secured £59.7m
of Interim Revolving Working Capital Support
Funding from Monitor/DoH but agreement is
required from Monitor regarding the amount
that may be drawn down on a monthly basis.
Further information about these risks can be
found in the financial statements on pages 191257.
The policy of maintaining King’s asset base by
committing capital expenditure on existing
assets at a level broadly consistent with their
rate of depreciation will continue subject to the
criteria regarding capital programme schemes
outlined above.
Full details of financial performance in 2014/15,
the responsibilities of the Accounting Officer
and a statement from the auditors can be found
in the Annual Accounts 2014/15 on pages 191257.
The accounts have been prepared under a
direction issued by Monitor under the National
Health Service Act 2006.
Planning for the Future
The King’s vision is to deliver a health system
built around patient need, offering all our
patients the highest quality of care for mind and
body – and true to the King’s Values. The Trust
aims to be three hospitals in one – a network
rather than a set of buildings:
 A multi-site local hospital providing acute
urgent care and consolidated, rapid access
local outpatient and elective care.
32

A major regional emergency centre for
South East London, Kent and Sussex.

A leading national specialist hospital at the
heart of an Academic Health Sciences
Centre with high impact academic research
and teaching.
As such, King’s provides services to local
residents of Lambeth, Southwark, Bromley,
Bexley and Lewisham. For people across south
east London and Kent, King’s is the designated
major trauma centre, a heart attack centre and
a regional hyper-acute stroke centre. King’s is
recognised across the UK and internationally
for its work in liver disease and transplantation,
neurosciences, diabetes, cardiac services,
haematology and foetal medicine.
The local health system faces a tremendous
challenge - to transform care models to meet
the needs of an ailing and ageing population
and improve quality at a time when finances are
very strained. The south east London health
economy faces a net financial deficit, both in
financial year (FY) 2015/16 and over the next
five years - approximately £1 billion.
Performance for referral to treatment (RTT),
clinical outcomes for key services, and
discharge times need to improve while there is
demographic growth and increasing demand for
services.
King’s 2-year recovery plan aims to ensure
King’s rectifies its budget position, and to
ensure King’s is efficient, highly productive and
fosters innovation in all areas. In addition to a
robust programme of cost improvement, four
transformative strategic options will be pursued
during 2015/16. These will support the financial
recovery and also improve the quality of
services offered and address some of the
pressing needs of the local health system.
However, if King’s is to achieve long-term
sustainability more ambitious changes at King’s
and more joined-up system redesign across the
health economy are required. It is likely that
significant service changes which will need
either increased funding or for significant
strategic choices with impact across the whole
health system to be made and implemented.
King’s is therefore developing a refreshed 5year Strategic Plan which will be submitted to
Monitor by the end October 2015. This detailed
work will consider; demographic trends;
demand for services; local health system
issues; funding and demand management;
competitor effects; clinical policy and regulatory
changes; workforce changes and challenges;
and technology, education and research
developments.
The 5-year strategy will address the continued
development of King’s academic partnership
with King’s College London (KCL) and fellow
foundation trusts Guy’s and St Thomas’ (GSTT)
and South London and Maudsley (SLaM) - the
Academic Health Sciences Centre known as
King’s Health Partners (KHP). This exists to
create a centre where world-class research,
education and clinical practice are brought
together for the benefit of patients, so that the
lessons from research are used more swiftly,
effectively and systematically to improve patient
care. Work is underway to work up detailed
proposals to develop a suite of academic
“Institutes” across the KHP partners and will
form an important part of the future identity of
King’s.
The development of this detailed strategic plan
has already started. Because of its complexity
and wide-ranging impact on people and
organisations, King’s is committed to involve
and engage staff, governors and local
commissioners and stakeholders.
Quality priorities
King’s Quality Account, on pages 103-190, sets
out the priority areas for improving quality in the
coming year, as well as evaluating performance
against last year’s priorities.
King’s Health Partners Academic Health
Sciences Centre
King’s Health Partners (KHP) Academic Health
Sciences Centre was set up in 2009. It brings
together a world-leading research led university
(King’s College London) and three successful
NHS foundation trusts (Guy’s and St Thomas’,
King’s College Hospital and South London and
Maudsley).
KHP launched its five year plan in summer
2014, aimed at transforming health and
wellbeing, locally and globally. Combining its
focus on key underpinning themes of
excellence in education, research translation
and clinical practice, public health, integrated
care, mind and body and value based
healthcare KHP also aims to achieve
internationally competitive standards of practice
in a number of key specialties.
A key part of the KHP’s vision for excellence is
the way in which it continues to align itself with
partners right across the south east London
health care economy. Colleagues from across
KHP have been closely involved in the
development of the ‘Our Healthier South East
London’ strategy and KHP is committed to
supporting and enabling its successful delivery.
Local services
KHP is aware that successful delivery of the six
borough strategy in SE London requires the
ongoing delivery of high quality services right
across the three foundation trusts and wider
partners. To this end, KHP is committed to
seeking continuous improvement of its services,
working closely with partners across the sector
to deliver joined up and effective care for local
people.
Provision of excellent local services remains the
highest priority and KHP is taking significant
strides towards the integration of care:
33



working with local colleagues to develop
and deliver Local Care Networks and GP
federated structures which KHP fully
support as an important step towards better
integrated care.
building on close partnership working
through the Southwark & Lambeth
Integrated Care programme (SLIC) and the
detailed programmes within each of its
providers.
the advent of locality based integrated care
models will be a major contributor.
Specialised Services
People in south east London should have
access to the very best specialist care, as
benchmarked against the best in the world.
KHP believe that a new type of clinical
academic model for south east London (and
stretching across the south of England),
working across sites and campuses, bringing
together the combined strength of the partners,
would provide improved outcomes and
experience for patients and service users whilst
ensuring the delivery of its science and
translational research ambitions. KHP is
currently scoping the feasibility of making
further improvements to its services across
KHP and in doing so is considering the
following points:
 the nature of differing specialties now and in
the future will require bespoke and carefully
calibrated models of delivery, particularly
with regard to clinical pathways across out
of hospital and in hospital care
environments.


34
some specialties may require highly
specialised tertiary diagnostic and treatment
facilities in one place to enable translational
practice. For others the model of care may
require a new focus on localities,
communities and acute hospital pathways.
improved informatics and data sharing will
be crucial – the development of KHP Online
and its planned evolution into the Local
Unified Care Record (LUCR) is a major step
in the right direction.

the collective strength in KiHP’s partner
organisations and leveraging the expertise
of clinical services, research and education
into a more joined up offer.

improved access to the very best specialist
care with the best outcomes for patient and
family experience.

provide networks of care across south east
London/south east England that support
acute, community and primary care.
As set out in the five year plan, KHP is focusing
on achieving internationally competitive
excellence in the seven key specialties of
cancer, cardiovascular, child health, dental,
diabetes, mental health & neurosciences and
regenerative & transplantation medicine
through the establishment of institutes that
bring together clinical service, teaching and
research.
Research
KHP is working hard to speed up the flow of
research into translation to clinical care, from
basic science through to novel therapeutics,
drug discovery, clinical trials and applied
research so that the local population reap the
benefits more quickly.
Education and training
KHP will continue to develop its educational
and training programmes to support the
emerging models of care recognising the
increasing need for healthcare workers that can
work across traditional boundaries and apply
their skills in a range of settings.
Central to everything KHP does will be a focus
on improving outcomes, experience and public
health for patients, service users and local
population. CCG, local government,
stakeholder, locality and patient perspectives
will drive KHP’s thinking. To this end KHP look
forward to hearing views and reflections from
CCG colleagues and wider stakeholders about
how it moves forward and make the changes
needed for patients and service users. KHP is
committed to working with local partners over
the coming months to shape and design the
collective vision for excellence.
King’s Workforce and Values
The five King’s Values were developed by staff
and patients of King’s in 2009 and are now
firmly established as the guiding principles
which underpin how King’s work with patients,
relatives, carers, local communities and our
own colleagues.
Understanding
you
Working
together
More information about how King’s works with
its members and governors to ensure that
hospital services meet the needs of its diverse
community can be found on pages 94-96.
Ensuring that the human rights of patients are
protected is an important part of King’s practice.
King’s policies uphold protocols of the
European Convention on Human Rights, and
recognise the importance of human rights such
as privacy, dignity, liberty and right to life.
Workforce statistics
King’s is a significant employer in the local area
and is committed to the training and
development of its staff.
Always aiming
higher
Making a
difference in
our community
provides examples of the My Promise
standards as they relate to each value. Implicit
in King’s Values and significant factors in King’s
strategic thinking are social, community and
human rights issues. Tackling the health
inequalities prevalent amongst sections of the
local population is an area of focus for both
King’s and KHP.
Inspiring
confidence in
our care
Figure 1: King's Values
Each value is underpinned by four or five
defining statements that set out King’s
approach. King’s has taken its values to the
next step by introducing ‘My Promise’.
‘My Promise’ has been developed in response
to feedback from staff, who told King’s they
wanted to promote positive behaviours and
performance. ‘My Promise’ supports and
develops the King’s Values placing the
emphasis on individual responsibility and
In the table on the next page there is a
breakdown of staff according to age, ethnicity,
gender, recorded disability, sexual orientation
and religion covering the past three years.
During the period the Board of Directors
consisted of ten male directors and 5 female
directors.
More information about King’s workforce and in
particular its approach to equality and diversity
can be found in the directors’ report on pages
49-57.
35
Table 3: Breakdown of staff
Age
0-16
17-21
22+
Ethnicity
White
Mixed
Asian or Asian British
Black or Black British
Other
Unknown
Gender (all staff)
Male
Female
Gender (senior managers)*
Male
Female
Gender (directors)*
Male
Female
Recorded Disability
Yes
No
Not Declared
Unknown
Sexual Orientation
Bisexual
Gay
Heterosexual
Lesbian
I do not wish to disclose
Unknown
Religion
Atheism
Buddhism
Christianity
Hinduism
Islam
Jainism
Judaism
Sikhism
Other
I do not wish to disclose
Unknown
Total Staff Numbers
36
2011/2012
Headcount
%
2012/2013
Headcount
%
2013/2014
Headcount
%
0
50
7177
0%
1%
99%
0
69
7845
0%
1%
99%
0
117
10984
3736
225
1246
1742
137
141
52%
3%
17%
24%
2%
2%
4119
242
1366
1838
154
195
52%
3%
17%
23%
2%
2%
1879
5348
26%
74%
1986
5928
-
-
-
2014/15
Headcount
%
1%
99%
1
109
11658
0%
1%
99%
6148
314
1861
2214
208
356
55%
3%
16%
20%
2%
3%
6356
329
2155
2299
249
380
54%
3%
18%
20%
2%
3%
25%
75%
2641
8460
24%
76%
2771
8997
24%
76%
-
-
10
18
36%
64%
12
11
52%
48%
-
-
-
11
5
69%
31%
10
7
59%
41%
216
6064
215
732
3%
84%
3%
10%
223
6771
216
704
3%
86%
3%
9%
291
9103
888
819
3%
82%
8%
7%
280
9949
839
700
2%
85%
7%
6%
54
74
4449
31
1445
1174
1%
1%
62%
0%
20%
16%
56
97
5141
33
1366
1221
1%
1%
65%
0%
17%
15%
77
123
7596
41
1941
1323
1%
1%
68%
0%
17%
12%
74
161
8830
50
1866
787
1%
1%
75%
0%
16%
7%
444
42
3289
225
258
14
17
29
366
1373
1170
7227
6%
1%
46%
3%
4%
0%
0%
0%
5%
19%
16%
601
52
3705
249
293
12
19
35
397
1334
1217
7914
8%
1%
47%
3%
4%
0%
0%
0%
5%
17%
15%
913
79
5193
336
375
11
24
53
549
2258
1310
11101
8%
1%
47%
3%
3%
0%
0%
0%
5%
20%
12%
1117
139
5925
389
461
14
27
98
619
2201
778
11768
9%
1%
50%
3%
4%
0%
0%
1%
5%
19%
7%
Caring for the Environment
King’s undertakes sustainability reporting in line
with the HM Treasury 2013/14 guidance Public
Sector Annual Reports: Sustainability Reporting
in the Public Sector.
Sustainability reporting is an important element
of King’s performance and the need to minimise
impact on the environment and to operate as a
sustainable and efficient organisation is
recognised.
On 1 October 2013, King's took over
responsibility for the Princess Royal University
Hospital (PRUH) in Bromley, as well as
Orpington Hospital and other satellite buildings
such as the Havens, Beckenham Beacon,
Queen Mary’s Sidcup, etc.
This dramatic increase in the size of King’s
estate has naturally resulted in an increase in
Gas, electricity, water and waste costs and
volumes.
Summary of performance
As a result of the increased estate the King’s
total energy consumption increased by 9%,
carbon emissions by 25% and water
consumption by 51%. The total waste
generated increased by 1,149 in 2014 -2015.
Summary of future strategy
King’s Environmental Strategy details objectives
and targets for the following environmental
themes:
 Improving the patient experience;
 Designing and maintaining the built
environment;
 Waste management and minimisation;
 Pollution prevention;
 Energy and CO2 management;
 Water;
 Sustainable procurement;
 Low carbon transport and travel;
 Staff engagement and ownership;
 Working with our stakeholders; and
 Governance and finance.
A copy of King’s Environmental Strategy
document can be obtained from: [email protected].
Greenhouse gas emissions
King’s has increased its carbon emissions this
year by 25% due to the acquisition of the PRUH
and Orpington hospitals and increased activity
on all sites.
Table 4: Summary of energy performance
Area
Performance 2014 – 15
Greenhouse Gas Emissions (Scope 1, 2, 3 Business
Travel (excluding air and rail travel)
Emissions (000,
tonnes)
33.6
Consumption (kWh)
174,587,056
Expenditure (£)
£6,153,786
Amount (tonnes)
5,357
Expenditure (£)
£1,798,537
Consumption (m3)
307,118
Expenditure (£)
£575,046
Estate Energy
Estate Waste
Estate Water
37
It is increasingly challenging to reduce energy
consumption on site because King’s is a
successful and growing trust which will increase
its energy consumption as it increases in size
and activity increases. Work is well underway
on the design and build of a critical care unit
and helicopter pad at the Denmark Hill site.
Further new buildings will be added to King’s
estate in 2015/16, all of which will be heated
and powered from energy generated
sustainably from King’s Energy Centre. All new
buildings and refurbishments are being
designed by the projects team with energy
efficiency and sustainability as a priority.
As forecast last year the annual energy costs
and consumption increased substantially this
year by 9% and 11% respectively as a result of
the PRUH and Orpington Hospital acquisitions.
Waste management
Overall the total waste generated by King’s has
increased by 1,149 tonnes in 2014 – 2015
compared to 2013 – 2014.
‘Sharpsmart Services’
The Sharpsmart’s sharps containment system
are reusable sharp bins that improve the safety
of healthcare workers when disposing of sharps
and lessens the environmental impact of waste
disposal.
The service was installed at King’s in
September 2010 and rolled out fully in July
2011. This service is currently in operation at
the Denmark Hill site only but it is intended to
extend the system to all Kings Sites.
The benefits of the Sharpsmart reusable bin
service include:
 Prevention of disposable sharps containers
being sent for disposal which has reduced
38



King’s sharps waste output by 242 tonnes
since installation.
An estimated £169,734.15 reduction on
disposal costs resulting for the reduction of
sharps waste sent for incineration during
this period.
1,370 tonnes reduction in CO2 output by
using the Sharpsmart system.
Safe use and reduction in needle stick
injuries overall compared to previous single
use sharp containers in view of its robust
component.
General non-hazardous waste and furniture
items continue to be diverted to materials
recycling facilities and this has continued
improving the recovery of materials for recycling
with high yield recovery percentages
There are currently ongoing schemes to
increase the recycling and recoverable
materials at the satellite sites which will be
reported separately in future reports.
The provision of waste management services is
a fixed annual cost to King’s. Any increases in
costs associated with waste quantities, HM
taxes or gate fees, are at risk with the
contractor. The total cost of waste disposed
was £1,798,537 in 2014 - 2015.
Environmental management system
King’s has successfully operated an
Environmental Management system that
complies with the requirements of ISO 14001
since October 2012. This covers the activities
and responsibilities of the Capital, Estates and
Facilities Department on the Denmark site. The
EMS has been very effective in providing the
architecture to enable effective environmental
risk management by our staff and contractors
and drives continual improvement. Continued
commitment to the maintenance of this
accreditation provides a system of assurance
that the department is compliant with all waste
and environmental legislation.
The Orpington and Princess Royal University
Hospitals are currently outside of the scope of
the EMS. It is the intention to bring these sites
within the remit of the EMS by 2017 and 2019
respectively. King’s has undergone a number
of successful BSI surveillance audits which
raised no non conformities and showed the trust
was making continual improvement. A
recertification Audit will take place in October
2015 towards the end of the 3 year certification
period which, on successful completion, will
reaccredit King’s for a further three years.
All the main partners of King’s are accredited to
an EMS, which shows they take their
environmental responsibility seriously. These
include Medirest (Compass Group), Veolia,
Norland and Sodexo Ltd.
Energy and CO2 management
King’s Environmental Strategy has superseded
the Carbon Management Plan. King’s, for the
time being, continues to work towards a target
to reduce CO2 emissions by 25% by 2015.
With the acquisition of the PRUH and Orpington
hospitals, however, the historic absolute targets
are no longer appropriate to the larger hospital
estate. It will be necessary for King’s to move
away from absolute carbon reduction targets to
relative targets. The new target should be in
place for the new reporting year. In the interim
King’s plans to reduce its carbon emissions by
a further 1% in 2015-2016 compared to this
year.
Energy cost inflation
Gas and Electricity is procured by the trust
through Crown Commercial Service (CCS)
Framework agreements. CCS is an executive
agency and trading fund of the Cabinet Office of
the UK Government. It is the largest buyer of
gas and electricity in the UK which aims to
deliver savings on costs through significant
aggregation.
Since October 2014, there has been a volatile
but generally downward trend in gas and
electricity prices assisted by milder weather
than in previous years. Concern has been
raised about a reduction in large scale gas
storage capacity within the UK and the impact
this may have on gas prices over next year’s
heating season. It is hoped that as CCS has
purchased a large % of gas and electricity in
advance this will lock in some of the cost
reduction benefits over the 2015-2016 financial
year.
The increasing size of the trust estate continues
to have a negative effect on budgets. Total
energy costs have risen to £6,153,786 further
increasing the need for energy efficiency
measures.
Water minimisation
Working closely with Thames Water, a water
reduction strategy is being developed. The first
stage has been to install water meter data
loggers across the Denmark Hill site. This was
completed in March 2015 and now all water
consumption data is available on the fusion
automatic monitoring and targeting system. This
will provide the detailed water consumption data
required to carry out leak detection analysis
later in the project.
King’s is also working with Thames Water to
develop an emergency response plan in the
event of a failure of the mains water supply to
the Denmark Hill site. This will be delivered in 4
stages the first of which, to create an onsite and
surrounding hydraulic model, stared this year.
Water process are set to rise significantly over
the coming years with the building of the
39
Thames Tideway Tunnel resulting in increases
of approximately 25% for all Londoners and
London based businesses.
4. BMS Upgrade Works in order to upgrade
out of date systems and improve control
over heating and cooling systems.
King’s increased water consumption on the
2014/15 figure by 57% as a result of the
acquisition of the PRUH and Orpington
hospitals.
Summary of Benefits:
 Reduce Energy Consumption by 6%
 Reduce Carbon Emissions By 1,892
tonnes
 Reduces Corporate Risk
 Reactive Maintenance reduced
 Payback Period - 11 Years
Energy performance contract
In March 2013, the Trust signed an Energy
Performance Contract (EPC) to deliver £7.8
million of energy efficiency and heating
infrastructure improvements to the Denmark Hill
site. King’s applied to the Department of
Health for a grant in order to deliver the EPC
and were successfully awarded £3m. The EPC
was planned to be delivered over 20 months
and involved upgrading the heating
infrastructure, reducing risk, energy
consumption and carbon emissions at Denmark
Hill. The Energy Performance Contract is an
innovative approach to energy reduction
whereby the ESCO guarantees a reduction in
the Trust’s energy consumption.
The Energy Performance Contract consists of 4
main engineering projects:
1. A District LTHW Heating Scheme. This
uses the free heat from the CHP jackets in
order to supply 5 plant rooms and displace
the use of costly steam.
2. Plate Heat Exchanger Installations. A
large number of Plate Heat Exchangers
(PHXs) were installed across the site and
replaced old, inefficient shell and tube
calorifiers.
3. Thermal Insulation Works were carried
out on extensive areas of steam and hot
water pipework. The benefits of the works
include; reducing heat loss, saving energy
and improving the patient staff environment
by reducing overheating.
40
Improving the patient experience through
behavioural change.
King’s has engaged Global Action Plan to
deliver Operation TLC on 20 wards of the
Denmark Hill Campus. Operation TLC is
behavioural change programme focussed on
creating better environments for patients and
delivering financial and carbon savings. The
programme will engage staff at all levels of the
organisation including nurses, doctors, facilities,
security and cleaning staff in order to deliver
financial savings and environmental
improvements. This project will start in March
2015 and will focus on the following 3 actions:
turning off equipment when not in use, switching
off lights where possible and closing doors and
windows.
Designing and maintaining the built
environment
King’s has targets in place to attain ‘Excellent’
under the Building Research Establishment
Environmental Assessment method (BREEAM)
on all new build projects and ‘Very Good’ on all
major refurbishments.
The key sustainability measures in both the
Centenary Wing and the Critical Care Unit over
the existing Theatre Block (CCUTB) project are:
 25% improvement in water consumption
compared with the notional building.






5 credits under Ene01 with 25% improvements of BER over TER.
Best Practice construction site management.
Best practice construction site waste management.
Measures are specified to minimise Noise and light pollutions.
Resource efficiency and use of materials with low environmental impacts over the lifecycle of the
building.
Some of these projects are outlined overleaf:
41
20092010
20102011
20112012
20122013
20132014
20142015
Non-Financial Indicators
(1,000 tCO2e)
Total Gross Emissions
24.4
25.3
25.3
26
31
36.7
Total Net Emissions
24
21.1
20.7
22
26.8
33.6
Gross Emissions (Scope 1 direct)
Gross Emissions (Scope 2
and 3 - indirect)
8.9
19.7
19.7
18.6
21.7
23
15.6
5.6
5.6
7.4
9.3
13.6
(£s
Financial
Related Energy
million) Indicators Consumption (million
kWh)
Table 5: Greenhouse gas emissions
Electricity (non-renewable)
28.5
10.2
10.1
12.2
9.7
49.9
Electricity (renewable)
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
Gas
48
107
106
116
114
LPG
0
0
0
0
0
Other
0
0
0
0
0
3.5
3.2
3.8
4.1
4.6
Expenditure on energy
Expenditure Accredited
Offsets
42
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
124.6
6.2
n/a
Greenhouse Gas Emissions (1,000 tCO2e)
2008-
2009-
2010-
2011-
2012-
2013-
2014-
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2516
2592
3198
2995
3205
3941
5090
Total
1238
1192
1459
1335
1327
1603
2596
Landfill
909
1032
1158
1070
736
99
100
Reused/
Recycled
369
368
581
590
859
1273
779
Composted
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Incinerated
with energy
recovery
0
0
0
0
283
967
1616
Incinerated
without
energy
recovery
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
904,309
950,338
978,164
1,268,596
1,798,537
Financial Indicators
(£s)
Non - Financial Indicators (tonnes)
Total
Waste
Hazardous
Waste
Non
Hazardous
Waste
Total
Waste
(£s)
N/A
N/A
In 2009/10 revised PFI contract to include total waste management. This is for all waste streams including hazardous chemical waste.
Table 6: Waste
43
Centenary Wing
Construction of the Centenary Wing was
completed in December 2013. It utilises a
modular system of construction whereby
individual modules are assembled at an off-site
factory location with many of the internal
services already installed. There are several
advantages associated with the modular
construction system:
 Energy efficiency due to high levels of
efficient insulating materials integrated into
the modular system assemble in a
controlled off-site factory environment;
 Reduced disruption and noise on site for
patient and staff;
 Reduction in construction and building
related waste; and
 Reduced vehicle movements involved in the
actual construction process including
construction materials and waste removal;
and
 Energy for space heating, domestic hot
water are provided by connecting to the
combined heat and power plant heating
network.
Critical Care Unit over Theatre Block
The new Critical Care Unit over the existing
Theatre Block (CCUTB) has been designed to
support world class care and to achieve
BREEAM Excellent rating in support of the
trust’s aspirations for an environmentally
friendly campus. It has been designed to
achieve optimum energy performance by
designing a high performance building fabric,
low air leakage rates, high efficiency lighting
solutions and energy efficient building services.
Energy for space heating, domestic hot water
and cooling will be provided by connecting to
the combined heat and power plant heating and
cooling network.
44
The south facing aspect of the CCUTB building
has been designed to maximise the use of
natural daylight. A fully glazed curtain wall is
proposed for the south facing rooms which will
maximise natural daylight in these spaces. A
good level of natural daylight reduces the
demand for electric lighting, Saving carbon and
energy but also creates and enhances the
environment for patients, visitors and staff.
Construction of the CCUTB commenced in
2013.
Helipad
Helicopter ambulances have for many years
landed in the local Ruskin Park which is a Civil
Aviation Authority recognised landing site in
order to take emergency patients to King’s
emergency department for treatment. This
involves disruption to the park and requires the
presence of the police to secure the site. The
London Ambulance Service also provides the
ambulances to transfer the patients to the
operating theatre.
King’s has started the construction of a helipad
on top of the Ruskin Wing. This will provide a
safer, more patient-centred approach that would
have the added advantage of reducing the
secondary effects on the police and London
Ambulance Service and the inconvenience to
the public inherent with the aircraft landing in
the park.
The helipad will facilitate landings of helicopters
transferring patients to King’s by shortening
transfer times from the existing landing zone in
Ruskin Park, to the benefit of all patients, and
by removing the existing disruption to the use of
the park and noise and disturbance, to the
benefit of neighbouring residents. The Helipad
is due for completion in December 2015.
Low carbon transport and travel
Work has continued to promote activity and
wellbeing to staff. A staff bicycle user group
remains established and continues to support
and promote cycling to work as an alternative
low carbon means of transport.
In November 2012, King’s was fully registered
for the Transport for London Cycle
Superhighway Workplace Offering and was
awarded credits to exchange for cycle parking,
training or cycle safety checks.
King’s has purchased a tracking system for the
internal transport staff vehicles. This allows us
to monitor driving techniques in relation to fuel
use, hours worked or whether further training
would be required. This may be extended to all
King’s lease cars in order that departments can
monitor fuel and driving behavior.
King’s is also looking at replacing the transport
fleet and has had trials of Toyota hybrid cars for
GP collections. The hybrid Toyota is still the
vehicle of choice with any remaining vans that
we lease being EURO 5/6 to reduce emissions
and save on fuel with stop start technology.
Southwark Council has now formally responded
to Transport for London’s (TfL) consultation into
the route options for the Bakerloo line
extension. The council strongly supports the
development and delivery of a tube extension
via the Old Kent Road and via Camberwell and
Peckham. This would produce opportunities for
a shift to public transport away from car travel
across staff, patients, visitors and students.
conditions from 9 GP surgeries across Lambeth
in growing their own crops, encouraging both
healthy eating and the physical exercise gained
from gardening. The crops will be grown on
King's land and at local GP surgeries. 10 Large
planters for growing vegetables, containing 2
tons of soil each, have been located in the
garden of Jennie Lee House at King’s. These
will be tended by groups of patients led by
experienced group leaders. The Lambeth GP
Food Co-op is a co-operative of patients,
doctors, nurses, and Lambeth residents. It was
recognised by NHS Sustainability Unit and
Public Health England as 'Best sustainable food
initiative in the NHS' 2013. The Lambeth Food
Co-op work is supported by NHS Lambeth
Clinical Commissioning Group and Lambeth
Council. The project at King’s was launched as
part of NHS Sustainability Day – which is a
national day to challenge NHS organisations to
think about how they can better use energy,
resources and their land.
Governance
King’s Environmental Strategy places an
emphasis on the improvement of staff
engagement and ownership, working with our
stakeholders and governance systems to
ensure that King’s continues to evolve to
become a more sustainable and efficient
organisation. The Board of Directors receives
reports on sustainability twice a year.
The strategic report was approved by the Board
of Directors on 26 May 2015 and signed on its
behalf by:
Climate change adaption and mitigation
King’s has a target in place to assess how
climate change may impact the site and to
devise an action plan outlining adaption
measures.
Biodiversity and the natural environment
King’s has a target in place to assess how the
implementation of promoting biodiversity on site
can assist the healing process. This year King's
have been working with the Lambeth GP Food
Co-op to roll out a patient-led gardening project.
It seeks to involve patients with chronic
Roland Sinker
Acting Chief Executive
Date: 26 May 2015
45
Directors
Report
Directors’ Report
Statement of directors’ responsibility
The strategic report, financial statements and
annual report taken as a whole are fair,
balanced and understandable. Together they
describe the development and performance of
King’s throughout the year and the principal
risks and uncertainties ahead. They provide the
information necessary for patients, members,
regulators and other stakeholders to assess
King’s performance, business model and
strategy during the year 2014/15.
King’s People
2014/15 was a year of integrating new sites,
services and people as part of King’s workforce
growth and organisational change initiatives.
The aspiration was to ensure that King’s
embarked on an organisational development
journey which looked to embed the five King’s
Values.
Key organisational development themes
included:
 Leadership and talent management;
 Performance assessment and development;
 Continuing professional and personal
development; and
 Staff engagement.
Already recognised for its culture of continuous
improvement and consistently high levels of
support for staff development, on 07 March
2014 King’s demonstrated that it continued to
meet the requirements of the Investors in
People National Standard at Gold level and now
has ‘Champion’ status as well. King’s has been
a ‘Gold’ standard ‘Investor in People’ since
2010.
Leadership and talent
King’s programmes are designed to be multi
professional, to embrace leaders at all levels,
be available across the enlarged Trust. Where
appropriate the programmes are open to King’s
Health Partners delegates, or they are run in
partnership.
Examples include:
 Front-line leaders: an established
programme at ward manager and service
manager level;
 First-time leaders: developing the leaders
self-awareness aimed at new
leaders/managers;
 A year long Band 6 development
programme for nurses across the PRUH,
Beckenham Beacon, Orpington and Queen
Mary’s;
 Action learning groups for clinical Therapy
staff at Denmark Hill;
 Aspiring ward managers: newly designed
and commissioned for the enlarged King’s,
this programme is aimed at Band 6 nurses
and midwives. It first ran in 2014 and is
running again in 2015
 Coaching for performance aimed at all
managers;
 A robust Preceptorship Programme for all
newly qualified nurses;
 Strategic and operational leaders;
 Action learning sets for matrons run over
2014 and early 2015;
 Combined leadership development
programme for matrons and ward managers
in Trauma, Emergency and Medicine developed specifically for staff based at the
PRUH ended early 2015;
 King’s department of Postgraduate Medical
and Dental Education offers multidisciplinary leadership development for
senior clinicians;
 Leadership for foundation trainees;
 Training Tomorrow’s Trainers: for senior
registrars preparing for their first consultant
appointment;
49


50
Coaching and mentoring focused on
unlocking potential and maximising
performance;
Staff successes also include Institute of
Leadership and Management; and specialist
post-graduate qualifications, including
MBA’s and the NHS Leadership Academy
programmes;

Medical or Dental workforces on any
Agenda for Change pay banding.
Apprenticeship programmes have been
delivered within the Trust using the national
apprenticeship frameworks in business
administration, customer service and health
& social care at level 2 since 2011 and more
recently through a partnership arrangement
with Lambeth Further Education College.
Apprentices can acquire key / functional
skills, a work based qualification
(qualification credit framework / national
vocational qualification), technical certificate
and employee rights and responsibilities.
To address the widening participation
agenda the Trust and Lambeth College
deliver an innovative “Sector Work Based
Academy” over a four week period.
Diploma vocational qualifications for support
staff are provided and there are active
learners across all sites.
Staff successes include Institute of
Leadership and Management; and specialist
post-graduate qualifications, such as MBAs
and NHS Leadership Academy
programmes;
Development sessions for governors have
had positive uptake.
Staff gaining first or second professional
qualifications through secondment, include
healthcare assistants training as nurses and
adult nurses training as midwives.
Performance assessment & development
 A newly designed Kings Appraisal &
Development system (KAD) for non-medical
staff was rolled out Trust-wide from 1st April
2014;
 KAD links individual objectives to King’s
objectives and values, as well as supporting
performance review in line with incremental
progression;
 Since July 2014, we have been developing
a talent management approach with a
difference called King’s Performance and
Potential (KPP) to ensure that all individuals
are fulfilling their potential at work; KPP
does this by identifying talents and
aspirations, then facilitating a range of
stretch learning opportunities; it has been
designed to complement KAD and will be
rolled out Trust-wide during 2015;
 A separate appraisal and revalidation
system for medical and dental staff uses
colleague and patient feedback to support
successful revalidation.

Continuing professional and personal
development (CPPD)
 Education commissioning for the 2014/15
academic year has ensured equal access
for non-medical staff across all King’s sites.
 Health Education South London (HESL)
funding for 2014/15 provided development
funding for Nursing, Midwifery, Allied Health
Professionals, Managerial, Administrative,
Scientific and Informatics and all other non-
Staff health and wellbeing
 Under the Public Health Responsibility Deal,
King’s pledges to actively support staff to
lead healthier lives.
 King’s has secured accreditation against a
set of nationally approved standards known
as a Safe Effective Quality Occupational
Health Service (SEQOHS).
 King’s annual wellbeing event is a popular
opportunity for staff to check out their
lifestyle choices against health indicators.






Muscular skeletal and mental health issues
continue to be the highest causes of staff
absence.
The rate of sickness for financial year 2014/15
was 3.47%. King’s benchmarks well within the
NHS as evidenced by October 2014 data, in
which South London overall reported the lowest
regional rate in England at 3.68% with the
highest national region reporting 5.19%.
Health and Safety Activity
In 2014/15 much Health and Safety activity
continued on major consolidations.
Further integration of South London Hospital
facilities and safety management on several
new sites with three main exercises:
 integration of all health and safety policies,
procedures, incident reporting and recording
systems.
 cross site working arrangements for
committee.
 a new H&S information system was
launched in September 2014 underpinning
risk assessment, monitoring, audit, frontline
department support and document
management with training being rolled out
to all department managers.
 an audit of new occupancies was prepared
for action in 2015/16 to assure fire, first aid,
manager training and coordination with
contractors.
 a wide range of H&S policies and
procedures have been upgraded for the
integrated trust in 2014/15.
 new procedures for hazardous substances
have been prepared in 2014/15 for roll out
in 2015/16.
Incidents
Headline Incident figures are now available
comparing 2014/15 for the integrated Trust with
previous years, based on recorded incidents
per 100 staff.
 The rate of violence reports on the main
database was up 81% for financial year
2014 compared to in financial year 2013.
This is an artefact - a new source of data was
added to the reports database in April 2014. A
digest comparing cohorts is in preparation to
analyse underlying trends.
 Other reported Health and Safety incidents
per 100 Staff were up 4% for the year.
 The main contributors to all H&S incidents
were violence (44% of all) workplace
incidents (19%), Blood borne viruses (11%).
Significant Incidents
 A routine HSE inspection of a small
refurbished microbiology facility at PRUH
revealed some missing safety documents
for pathology autoclaves. In November 2014
an immediate prohibition notice was served,
the autoclaves withdrawn from service and
alternative waste service used temporarily.
Urgent inspection and certification works
resulted in the lifting of enforcement action
in January 2015. A wide ranging trust-wide
review of autoclaves and similar pressure
plant was put in hand reporting to senior risk
committees for completion in 2015.
 Notifiable incidents – (RIDDORs*) are down
from a recorded 40 in 2013/14 to a
projected 32 for 2014/15.
(*incidents notifiable under the Reporting of
Incidents Diseases and Dangerous Occurrence
Regulations 2013)
Accident Investigations
The Operations (Safety) Department conducted
two separate Accident Investigations over the
last 12 months: one connected with a Slips’
51
Incident in Orpington Car Park where a visitor
slipped on ice, resulting in treatment at the
PRUH A&E and the latter, a Slips’ Incident at
Queen Mary’s, Sidcup (investigation still
undergoing).
Training
The H&S team monitor against the Trust target
of 80%. Overall compliance with H&S training
stood at 80.2 % at the end of Q4 2014. Efforts
have been implemented to increase the Trust’s
Statutory Safety compliance to a target of 85%
by introducing an additional training day in
Orpington, as well as extra Mandatory Sessions
in the PRUH. These steps all supplement the
current sessions already in practice in the Trust.
A new course “Managing Health, Safety &
Risk”, designed for those with supervisory
responsibilities in the Trust, is currently being
constructed for use in the latter part of 2015, as
another method to supplement the promotion of
the safety culture in the Trust. This will be a
combination of the following topics:
 Incident Reporting & Investigations
 Violence and Aggression/Stress
 Health Monitoring
 COSHH
Online DATIX Workplace Risk Assessment
The Online Datix Workplace Risk Assessment,
implemented in Sep 14, was designed to assist
the plethora of management within the Trust to
efficiently and effectually conduct valid
Workplace Risk Assessments. The instruction
process is time consuming in that for effective
coverage, the Operations Safety Team must
conduct one-to-one instruction. This time
consuming but necessary training has resulted
in approximately 12% of all staff being
instructed. The overall strategic training
objective for total coverage of the Trust is
anticipated to conclude by mid-2016.
52
Summary
The report highlights the significant amount of
work that has been undertaken during 20142015 to improve the management of H&S in the
Trust. The Operations Safety Department
continues to make progress with revised
inspection and assessment programmes,
streamlined training and the use of Online Datix
Workplace Risk Assessments being
implemented with the sole aim of improving
compliance with statutory requirements and
making H&S management more accessible,
convenient and uncomplicated to staff.
In order to improve the visibility of H&S within
the Trust, the team is undertaking to provide
further bespoke training sessions to all
departments requesting support, so that staff
have access to the most up to date safety
information.
The KPIs highlighted throughout this report
have been identified as pivotal to the
achievement of more robust H&S management
going forward and progress will be reported to
the Board via the quarterly OSC reports.
Reward and recognition
 King’s Commendation: recognises
outstanding contributions to patient care or
hospital services by an individual or team.
24 King’s Commendation Awards were
awarded to teams and individuals in
2014/2015
 King’s Long Service awards ceremony in
April 2015 recognised 100 staff who had
attained 25 or 40 years with King’s in the
last three years;
 Michael Parker Inclusion Award: Gold and
silver awards were presented to staff
exemplars of inclusion at the 2014 AGM;
 Annual awards ceremonies recognise
achievers in education and development
across all disciplines;
Actions taken in the financial year to provide
employees systematically with information
on matters of concern to them as
employees:
 At induction, new staff are introduced to the
Kingsweb intranet and provided with the
necessary tools and training to access
regular corporate communications.
 King’s Daily Bulletin, Kingsdocs, Kwiki and
the Chief Executive’s monthly bulletin are
examples of important information sources
and communication.
 King’s intranet also provides easy links and
access to information about King’s Health
Partners.
 King’s management/ committee structure
and culture of regular team meetings ensure
that key issues are cascaded throughout the
organisation.
 Bi-monthly Joint Consultation Committee
(JCC) involves and informs staff
representatives on matters of significance.
 The JCC nominates a staff side
representative to serve as a stakeholder
governor on the Council of Governors.
Actions taken in the financial year to
encourage the involvement of employees in
King’s performance:
 The 2014 national NHS staff survey
reported King’s ‘above average’ nationally
for good communication between staff and
senior managers and for staff feeling able to
contribute towards improvements at work.
 Challenges and success are regularly
communicated by the Chief Executive in his
monthly brief to staff.
 Despite the managerial challenges of
2014/15, 57% of staff with 12 months or
more service received performance
appraisals.
Actions taken in the financial year to
achieve a common awareness on the part of
all employees of the financial and economic
factors affecting the performance of King’s:
 The Chief Executive maintained a strong
focus on King’s financial position throughout
the year, keeping staff informed through his
monthly brief.
 Emphasis was placed on the importance of
achieving significant cost reductions and the
role of individual staff.
 The JCC received regular updates on the
financial position.
Actions taken in the financial year to consult
employees or their representatives on a
regular basis so that the views of employees
can be taken into account in making
decisions which are likely to affect their
interests:
 Throughout 2014/15, the JCC was regularly
well attended by representatives of
recognised trade unions and staff
associations and senior management.
 The British Medical Association has a seat
at the JCC table but, in practice, specific
matters relating to medical and dental staff
are discussed at the Local Negotiating
Committee.
 The activity of staff-led diversity groups
included invitations to senior King’s staff to
discuss issues of specific interest.
 Kings in Conversation repeated February –
May 2015.
 Staff culture survey repeated February /
March 2015.
 Staff Friends and Family test run quarterly.
A Diverse Workforce
King’s Denmark Hill site is located in one of the
most diverse areas in London. The sites
acquired in 2013 have further added to the
diverse composition of staff and patients.
53
Equality, diversity and inclusion are more
important than ever and must remain front-ofmind as King’s works towards its goal of
‘effortless inclusion’.
Three staff-led diversity groups are active in
taking forward King’s work on the national
Equality Delivery System – the Trust is now
equality objective setting using EDS2. They are
the Cultural Diversity Network, Disability
Inclusivity Network and the Lesbian, Gay,
Bisexual and transgender Forum. Individually
and collectively these groups provide support
and networking opportunities for their members,
whilst at the same time hold King’s to account
on its equality and diversity commitments.
King’s has worked closely with external partners
such as Stonewall. Over 1,300 staff have been
trained on Stonewall’s Train the Trainer
scheme.
King’s commitment
King’s is committed to employing a workforce
that reflects the diverse communities it serves
and delivers great care.
King’s reviewed the way equality & diversity is
managed with a view to ensuring this is
mainstreamed in day-to-day business for both
staff and patients. The Chief Executive provides
the Trust Board with a 6 monthly Inclusion
Report and local equality objective setting is
completed with relevant stakeholders and
monitored via three Board level Trust
committees in line with EDS2 goals and
outcomes.
In 2014/15, the Education and Workforce
Development Committee considered the Annual
Equality and Diversity Workforce Report, which
details information regarding the demographics
of staff. 43% of King’s staff are from BME
54
background and 54% are white (2014/15
Annual E&D Report).
Reviewing and changing policies to reflect
commitment to equality
All existing and planned policies are reviewed
against equality and diversity indicators on a
three year cycle, thereby ensuring that King’s
considers the impact on staff and patients from
different backgrounds. Policies are equality
impact assessed and the assessments are
available via King’s Equality and Diversity
webpage:
www.kch.nhs.uk/about/corporate/equality-anddiversity
Staff have 24/7 access to two support services:
Dignity at Work Helpline, which supports staff in
relation to bullying and harassment; and
Workplace Options, which offers telephone,
online and web-based advice on a range of
matters including legal matters, financial
management, and general counselling.
Kingsflex, King’s flexible working scheme, helps
staff balance family and work commitments.
National initiatives
In addition to the EDS, relevant equality
information is published to ensure compliance
with the Public Sector Equality Duties as set out
in the Equality Act (2010).
We are ‘positively diverse’
King’s is accredited as a nationally recognised
Positive About Disabled People ‘Two-Ticks’
employer and is reassessed on a regular basis.
Equality and diversity training is mandatory for
all new staff and a majority of all staff have
been appropriately trained. This helps ensure
staff have the skills and knowledge to provide
patients with consistently high standards of
care.
Positive about disabled people
King’s has a Disability Charter which sets out its
ethos and a firm commitment to disability
equality. King’s also has a Disability and Deaf
Guide which outlines the responsibilities and
behaviours expected of staff and managers.
King’s recruitment, training and equal
opportunities policies are designed to support
those who declare a disability. Policies apply
from the pre-employment stage, when applying
for vacancies, to supporting those who become
disabled during the course of their employment
and ensure that all staff have equal access to
promotion and development opportunities.
To help improve the experience of those
working at King’s with a disability, staff are
signposted to relevant support provided through
the Occupational Health & Wellbeing service
and Disability Inclusivity Network. Training is
also provided for staff working with people who
may have learning disabilities, and there are elearning programmes available which relate to a
range of diversity issues, plus an introductory
British Sign Language e-learning programme.
Listening to Staff
A listening organisation
Each year King’s takes part in the national
survey of NHS staff. In 2014 the annual survey
was complemented by the introduction of the
Staff Friends & Family Test.
Staff Friends & Family Test
Staff FFT was introduced nationally from 1st
April 2014 and is run on a quarterly basis. Staff
are asked their opinion on two broad areas;
would staff recommend the Trust as a place to
receive treatment and would they recommend
the Trust as a place to work.
In each survey quarter, the response from
King’s staff has been well above the national
average for both of these.
In Q3 the Trust was in the top 20% nationally
for both as recorded in the National Staff
Survey.
National Staff Survey
The 2014 response rate to King’s participation
in the national NHS staff survey was down to
30%, which was attributed to the introduction of
Staff FFT which affected response rates
nationally. Response rates at the PRUH have
also been low in previous years.
King’s scored well for overall staff engagement.
A score of 3.78 placed King’s ‘better than
average’ nationally.
Of the 29 national key findings, King’s ranked in
the top 20% for 7; and in the worst 20% for 10.
See the figure 2 on page 56 and table 7 and on
page 57.
55
Most Favourable Comparisons with Other
Trusts
King’s recorded the following as the most
favourable Key Findings compared to other
Trusts:
 Staff agreeing their role makes a difference
to patients.
 Staff reporting errors, near misses or
incidents in the last month.
 Staff experiencing physical violence by
other staff in the last 12 months.
 Staff recommending the Trust as a place to
work / receive treatment.
 Agreeing feedback from patients / service
users is used to make informed decisions in
their directorate/department.
action plans developed. These action plans with
associated enabling works were taken forwards
under one umbrella workstream called ‘All
Together Better’.
‘All Together Better’ is King’s transformation
programme. The three areas of focus:
 Doctors, nurses and managers working
effectively together.
 Empowering staff to take confident
decisions.
 Promoting positive behaviours and
performance.
This cultural survey has been repeated in
February / March 2015 and the results are
currently being analysed.
Action plans to address the findings of the
national Staff Survey will be devised in line with
the findings of the Trust’s Culture Survey and
implemented throughout 2015.
Staff engagement
King’s has initiated a number of key activities
designed to improve understanding of what
matters to staff.
King’s in Conversation was launched as part of
King’s response to the Francis Report and its
recommendations. The project engaged in
dialogue with 1,420 staff and patients across all
sites in 2013/14 and this work is being repeated
between February – May 2015.
An anonymous staff cultural survey was rolled
out across all sites towards the end of 2013 with
the aim of assessing King’s cultural ‘baseline’
post acquisition, using an academic behavioural
engineering model.
Action plan for 2014/15
The feedback obtained as part of King’s in
Conversation and the cultural survey was
analysed and clear priority areas emerged and
56
Figure 2: National Staff Survey Response Rates
Table 7: National Staff Survey Rankings
2013 / 14
King’s
Staff experiencing discrimination at work
Having well-structured appraisals
Appraised in last 12 months
Witnessing harmful errors, near misses or
incidents in last month
Feeling pressure in last 3 months to attend
work when unwell
Agreeing that their role makes a difference
to patients
Recommending King’s as a place to work
or receive treatment
Reporting errors, near misses or incidents
witnessed in the last month
Experiencing physical violence from staff in
last 12 months
Agreeing feedback from patient’s / service
users is used to make informed decisions
in their directorate / departments
2014 /15
King’s
17%
40%
78%
35%
Nat.
Average
11%
38%
84%
33%
24%
20%
28%
65%
40%
Nat.
Average
11%
38%
85%
34%
Improvement/
Deterioration
3% deterioration
12% deterioration
13% deterioration
5% deterioration
28%
36%
26%
8% deterioration
92%
91%
92%
91%
No Change
4.08%
3.68%
3.88%
3.60%
0.2 deterioration
88%
90%
99%
90%
2% improvement
2%
2%
1%
3%
1% improvement
N/A
N/A
66%
56%
N/A
Respecting and Protecting Patient
Information
The Information Governance Steering Group
(IGSG) is responsible for reviewing the
effectiveness of King’s information governance
systems and processes. It reports directly to the
Quality and Governance Committee and
receives reports from the Patient Records
Committee and the Data Quality Steering
Group.
The IGSG is chaired by King’s Senior
Information Risk Owner (SIRO) and members
include the Caldicott Guardian, Director of ICT,
Information Security Manager, Freedom of
Information Lead/Deputy SIRO, Information
Governance & Records Manager and Patient
Records Service Managers. The IGSG agenda
is driven by Information Governance Toolkit
requirements. It works to ensure the highest
practical standards and systems for the
confidential handling of patient information and
personal data within King’s.
During the year 2014/15 there were five serious
incidents related to a confidentiality breach, the
details of which and the actions taken are
summarised in figure 3 overleaf.
57
Incident 1
required.
Description: On 11 August 2014 a computer was
discovered to be missing presumed stolen from the
Day Surgery Unit, Denmark Hill campus. Computer
was password protected and policy in place that
data not saved to local drive. Potential risk that data
was saved onto local drive, not known how many
individuals might be affected, possibly < 500.
Incident 4
Action taken by the Trust: reported to ICO.
Recommendation made to bring forward a project to
prevent data being saved on local computer drives
and for local management to improve security
measures including Kensington locks, locks on office
doors and swipe card restrictions.
Further action required by ICO: o/s
Incident 2
Description: Three sets of interview notes (1 fully
identifiable, 2 partially identifiable) have been lost
from the KCH site of a joint KCH/KCL research
project. 3 people affected.
Action taken by Trust: Full investigation and search
carried out, it is considered that the lost information
is likely to have been put in the confidential waste.
Study protocols have been reviewed. Sensitive
information is no longer stored on site; now taken to
the study main office at end of each day. All of the
study’s staff have taken HSCIC training modules:
Introduction to Information Governance and
Information Governance: The Beginner's Guide.
They have also taken HSCIC’s module on Secure
Handling of Confidential Information.
th
Description: On 14 September 2014 five desktop
computers were stolen from a paediatric research
area at Denmark Hill campus. Number of people
affected not known, but possibly <100.
Action taken by Trust: The incident was reported to
the police and to the ICO. Physical security
measures were reinforced and the project to prevent
data being saved on local computer drives
commenced, with priority given to areas where
incidents have occurred previously.
Further action required by ICO: No further action
required
Incident 3
th
Description: On 26 September 2014 patient
handover sheets were left in a public area at the
Princess Royal Hospital, Bromley, found and handed
in promptly by member of the public. Repeat of type
incident within 12 month period. <30 people
affected.
Action taken by Trust: Reported to the ICO.
Caldecott Guardian identified the locum responsible
and spoke to his agency regarding refreshing his IG
training. He then followed up with Trust-wide
Communications and specific discussion in the
Junior Doctor Forums.
Further action required by ICO: No further action
58
Further action required by ICO: o/s
Incident 5
Description: Near miss; blood test results for 120
patients faxed in error to another hospital via NHS
mail’s secure faxing service. Error immediately
identified by other hospital and originator informed.
Fax went to secure area at receiver Trust and was
immediately contained, reported and securely
destroyed thus preventing any disclosure of
confidential information.
Action taken by Trust: Review of protocols and
guidance about the use of fax. Corporate risk
register entry review.
Further action required by ICO: o/s
Note:
An incident was identified in year and reported to the
ICO as a level 2 incident. This involved the posting
of code to an external website. However, after a risk
analysis it was concluded that the incident should be
downgraded and this was communicated to the ICO.
The ICO required no further action.
Figure 3: Serious incidents involving
information loss or confidentiality breach
Information Governance Toolkit attainment levels
King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust’s score for 2014-2015 for Information Quality and
Records Management, assessed using the Information Governance Toolkit was 73%, which equals
satisfactory compliance. 80% of the toolkit requirements were level 2, the remaining 20% were all level
3.
59
Code of Governance

Statutory framework
King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
received foundation trust status on 01
December 2006. The Trust is a public benefit
corporation and its principal purpose is the
provision of goods and services for the
purposes of the health service in England.
Governance framework
King’s College NHS Foundation Trust has
applied the principles of the NHS Foundation
Trust Code of Governance on a comply or
explain basis. The NHS Foundation Trust Code
of Governance, most recently revised in July
2014, is based on the principles of the UK
Corporate Governance Code issued in 2012.
King’s meets all the main principles of the code
especially those relating to the development
and management of patient services,
information provision and accountability for the
use of public resources.
The Trust has agreed to take steps to reduce
waiting times for patients and improve its
financial position, following an investigation by
Monitor.
The regulator carried out an investigation at
King’s in March 2015 after the trust was unable
to resolve long-standing problems at the
Princess Royal University Hospital (PRUH),
which it took over in October 2013.
Although Monitor recognises that King’s has
made progress in improving services at the
PRUH, this has not been sufficient; as it has
become clear the challenge is greater than
initially anticipated.
Following the investigation, Monitor has agreed
with King’s that the trust will:
 develop and implement an effective shortterm recovery plan to deliver the required
improvements at the PRUH that King’s
planned to make when it took over the
hospital; and
60
develop and implement a longer-term plan
by working closely with other national and
local health care organisations (including
NHS England and local commissioners) to
ensure patient services are improved, and
also provided in a sustainable way for the
future.
King’s governance framework comprises its
membership body, the Council of Governors
and the Board of Directors.
The Trust’s membership is drawn from patients,
staff and individuals from the local
constituencies it serves. More information about
recruiting and involving members in the life of
King’s can be found on pages 94-96.
The Council of Governors is elected by the
membership or appointed by various
organisations in accordance with the Trust
Constitution and the ‘fit and proper’ persons test
described in the provider licence.
The Council of Governors is responsible for
representing the interests of members and
stakeholders in the governance of the King’s.
The Council of Governors exercises statutory
powers, such as the appointment or removal of
non-executive directors, appointing the external
auditor, approving mergers, acquisitions and
significant transactions, holding the nonexecutive directors individually and collectively
to account and representing the interests of
members and the public.
The Council of Governors meets formally four
times per year to discharge its duties. The
matters specifically reserved for the Council’s
decision are set out in the Trust’s Constitution.
More information about the Council of
Governors, including its composition and terms
of office, can be found on pages 77-82.
Led by the Chair, the Board of Directors sets
King’s strategy, determines objectives, monitors
performance and ensures that adequate
systems are maintained to measure and
monitor effectiveness, efficiency and economy.
It decides on matters of risk and assurance and
is responsible for delivering high quality and
safe services. It provides leadership and
effective oversight of King’s operations to
ensure it is operating in the best interests of
patients within a framework of prudent and
effective controls that enables risk to be
assessed and managed.
Further information about King’s internal
controls and approach to clinical and quality
governance can be found in the Annual
Governance Statement on pages 193-195.
The Board of Directors comprising the Chair
non-executive directors and executive directors
are collectively responsible for the success of
King’s. All directors meet the ‘fit and proper’
persons test. The terms of office and voting
rights of each director is recorded in table 8 on
page 63-70.
The Board considers that all of its nonexecutive directors (NEDs) are independent in
character and judgement, including Professor
Ghulam Mufti, who was the representative from
the Medical School at King’s College London
throughout the reporting period. NEDs bring a
breadth of expertise to the Board and provide
objective and balanced opinions on matters
relating to King’s business. The independence
of NEDs are tested at interview and at their
annual performance review.
The Board meets regularly and has a formal
schedule of matters specifically reserved for its
decision. The Board delegates other matters to
the executive directors and other senior
managers.
The Board of Directors and the Council of
Governors meet together periodically to discuss
topical and strategic matters.
The Trust’s Constitution sets out the roles and
responsibilities of the membership body,
Council and the Board. It also details the
resolution procedures for resolving any disputes
between the Council of Governors and the
Board of Directors.
To develop an understanding of the views of
members and governors, Board members
attend meetings of the Council of Governors
and its sub-committees, the Annual Members
Meeting and community events.
Management framework
The Board of Directors is responsible for the
management and governance of King’s. It is
responsible for ensuring compliance with the
Trust’s provider license, constitution, mandatory
guidance issued by the independent regulator,
Monitor, and with relevant statutory
requirements and contractual obligations.
Commercial opportunities and activities are
subject to scrutiny by the Board of Directors and
the minutes of commercial companies Board of
Directors meetings, to ensure that benefits
derived from non-NHS income are channeled
into supporting King’s core NHS activities
without incurring significant financial or
reputational risk. Information about King’s
services outside the UK can be found in the
strategic report on page 30.
Information, development and evaluation
Directors and governors are supplied with
information in a timely manner in an appropriate
form and quality to enable them to discharge
their duties. The information needs of the
Board of Directors and Council of Governors
are subject to periodic review.
The performance of the Board of Directors, its
committees and individual directors are subject
to regular review, as outlined on page 70.
Company directorships and other significant
interests and commitments
King’s maintains a register of interests for its
directors and governors. Arrangements to view
the register can be made by contacting the
Foundation Trust Office on [email protected]
Board members and governors are asked to
declare any interests and to self-certify that
he/she meets the eligibility criteria set out in the
Trust’s Constitution. In addition, governors and
directors are subject to a disclosure and barring
61
service investigation (formerly the criminal
records bureau).
auditors are aware of that information.
Accountability and audit
The Council of Governors reappointed Deloitte
LLP as King’s external auditor on 11 December
2011 for a further two years. In addition, the
Board of Directors maintains a sound system
for evaluating and continually improving
effectiveness of its risk management and
internal control processes. King’s re-appointed
KPMG to undertake a comprehensive internal
audit, the plan for which is discussed with
executive directors, non-executive directors and
the Audit Committee.
Board of Directors
The Board of Directors ensures effective
scrutiny of financial and operational matters
through its designated committees and regular
reporting to the Board by presenting a balanced
and understandable assessment of King’s
position and forward plans. Information about
King’s financial, quality and operational
objectives and performance, including clinical
outcome data, is published to allow members
and governors to evaluate its performance.
Within this annual report, information about
King’s future plans and likely future
developments, for example, the development of
King’s Health Partners is recorded in the
‘Planning for the Future’ section of the strategic
report.
Information about the financial risk
management policies, use of financial
instruments and plans for capital projects can
also be found in the strategic report in the
section entitled ‘Ensuring Financial
Sustainability’.
Information about greenhouse gas emissions
can be found in the ‘Caring for the Environment’
section.
So far as King’s directors are aware, there is no
relevant audit information of which the auditors
are unaware. King’s directors have taken all of
the steps that they ought to have taken as
directors in order to make themselves aware of
any audit information and to establish that the
62
Executive directors are full time King’s
employees. Non-executive directors are
appointed by the Council of Governors on a four
year fixed term contract. The Council of
Governors also has the power to remove nonexecutive directors. Executive directors manage
the day-to-day running of King’s whilst the Chair
and the non-executive directors provide
strategic and board level guidance, support and
challenge. The members of the Board boast a
wide range of skills and bring experience
gained from NHS organisations, other public
bodies and private sector organisations.
The skills portfolio of the directors, both
executive and non-executive, is wide-ranging
and includes accountancy, audit, education,
management consultancy, law, engineering and
medicine. This broad coverage of knowledge
and skills strengthens the effectiveness of the
Board of Directors giving assurance that the
Board of Directors is balanced, complete and
appropriate to supporting King’s in meeting its
objectives.
There have been changes to the Board in the
period which are illustrated in table 8 on
overleaf. These changes include Professor Sir
George Alberti retiring as Trust Chair in March,
Marc Meryon resigned from his post has nonexecutive director. The Trust also said goodbye
to Tim Smart who retired from his role as Chief
Executive. The Trust was delighted to welcome
Lord Kerslake who took on the role of chair in
April 2015 and the recruitment process to find a
new NED and Chief Executive is currently
underway. The current Board members can be
found on page 65.
12
7
Remunerations &
Appointments
Committee
2
11
Quality &
Governance
Committee
Strategy
Committee
Board Integration
Committee
5
Finance &
Performance
Committee
11
Education &
Workforce
Committee
Number of meetings held
Audit Committee
Board of Directors
Term of Office
Table 8: Board of Directors - Meetings, Attendance, Committee Memberships
4
1
Membership/Attendance
Attendee





Chair (1)
 (10)
 (5)





 (1)
2011-2015
 (10)
 (4)

Chair


 (1)
Marc Meryon
Non-Executive Director
2014-2015
 (09)
 (5)

Chair



 (1)
Professor Ghulam Mufti
Non-Executive Director
2012-2016
 (10)


Chair

 (1)
Sue Slipman
Non-Executive Director
2012-2016
 (09)


Chair
 (0)
Christopher Stooke
Non-Executive Director
2011-2015
 (11)
Chair (5)
Chair



 (1)
Tim Smart
Chief Executive
Retired 2015
(09)
Attendee




Professor Sir George Alberti
Chair
Retired 2015
Chair
(10)
Lord Kerslake*
Chair (voting)
01/04/2015
1
Faith Boardman
Non-Executive Director
2012-2016
Graham Meek
Non-Executive Director

63
Board Integration
Committee
Education &
Workforce
Committee
Finance &
Performance
Committee
Quality &
Governance
Committee
Strategy
Committee
 (10)





Mr Michael Marrinan
Medical Director
Currently
 (10)





Roland Sinker**
Acting Chief Executive
Simon Taylor
Chief Financial Officer
Dr Geraldine Walters
Director of Nursing & Midwifery
Jane Walters (non-voting)
Director of Corporate Affairs & Trust Secretary
Pedro Castro (non-voting)***
Interim Director of Strategy
Trudi Kemp (non-voting)
Director of Strategic Development
Ahmad Toumadj (non-voting)
Interim Director of Capital & Estates
Steve Leivers
Director of Transformation & Turnaround
Jeremy Tozer
Interim Chief Operating Officer
Current
 (10)




Current
 (11)




Current
 (10)



Current
 (11)




Resigned
 (3/3)




10/2014
 (5/5)




02.2015
 (1/1)
N/A



02/2015
 (0/0)
N/A



04/2015
 (0/0)
N/A



Attendee

Attendee

Remunerations &
Appointments
Committee
Board of Directors
Current
Audit Committee
Term of Office
Angela Huxham
Director of Workforce & Development
*During the period Sir Bob Kerslake attended meetings of the Board at Committees as part of induction process.
** Roland Sinker was the Chief Operating Officer who took over the role of Acting Chief Executive due to the absence of the Chief Executive
***Until September 2014 the Substantive Director of Strategy Jacob West was on secondment. See Remuneration Report on pages 73-74 for more information.
64
65
Directors’ biographies
Non-Executive directors
Professor Sir George Alberti (Chair)
Internationally renowned for his work in the field
of diabetes, George has also been instrumental
in shaping recent healthcare policy towards the
management of urgent care and major
emergencies. He served as a non-executive
director of the Trust before being appointed as
Trust Chair in December 2011. George was
knighted in 2000 for services to diabetic
medicine, and is a member of the World Health
Organisation’s expert advisory panel on
diabetes. He is a past Dean of Medicine at the
University of Newcastle upon Tyne and a
former President of the Royal College of
Physicians. He was the Government’s National
Clinical Director for Emergency Access from
2002 to 2009, and was the author of the
influential Emergency Access – Clinical Case
for Change. George’s retired as Chair and his
term ended 31 March 2015.
Faith Boardman
Faith lives in Lambeth, and brings 40 years of
public service at both the local and the national
level. She has a proven track record of
delivering service improvements in large public
sector organisations that are dealing with
substantial change, and significant financial,
performance and customer challenges. She has
been Chief Executive of the Child Support
Agency (1997-2000) and more recently of
Lambeth Council (2000-05).
She is Chair of Trustees for Vauxhall City Farm,
and also works with the Metropolitan Police in a
non-executive capacity, as an independent
adviser to the Mayor's Office for Policing and
Crime. Faith also took on the role of Trustee on
the Trust’s Charity in April 2014.
66
Faith joined the Trust Board in March 2012. Her
term currently will end in March 2016.
Graham Meek (Vice Chair)
Graham is a trustee of the British
Cardiovascular Society and a non-executive
director of Filtronic plc and Capital Gearing
Trust plc. He was previously chairman of two
other listed companies, ICM Computer Group
plc and SPI Lasers plc. During his career as an
investment banker with Wood Mackenzie, Smith
New Court and Merrill Lynch, he advised a
broad range of UK companies on capital
raising, mergers and acquisitions and corporate
strategy. Graham joined the Trust Board in
December 2011 and his current term of office
will end in November 2015.
Marc Meryon
Marc Meryon is a partner and Head of Industrial
Relations of international law firm Eversheds
LLP. Marc specialises in employment law and is
recognised in the legal directories as an expert
in industrial relations. He frequently comments
on this area in both broadcast and print media.
Marc acts for a large number of household
names in a wide range of sectors including
manufacturing, transport/logistics and
healthcare, advising on effective organisational
change in a unionised environment, as well as
managing and resolving industrial disputes. In
the healthcare sector he has advised Trusts on
equal opportunities law, the application of the
working time directive and pay protection for
junior doctors. Marc was a non-executive
director of the Trust from August 2010 until
his resignation with effect from 31 March
2015.
Professor Ghulam J Mufti
Professor Mufti has worked at King’s since
1985 when he was appointed as a senior
lecturer/consultant haematologist. His current
appointment is Professor of Haemato-oncology,
Clinical Director of Pathology and Head of the
Department of Haematology, one of the largest
in Europe. Ghulam is internationally renowned
for research and treatment of myelodysplastic
syndromes (MDS) and other pre-leukaemic
diseases, and has published over 400 original
papers in medical journals. He is founding
member of the International MDS foundation
Board, Chair of the UK MDS Forum and
Member of GSTS Members Board. He was
formerly a member of the scientific committee of
Leukaemia & Lymphoma Research. He has
been a non-executive director of the Trust since
December 2012; his term will end in December
2016.
the role of Director of Corporate Responsibility
before becoming Director of Communications.
She has been Chair of the Financial
Ombudsman Service, has held a number of
non-executive positions in the private and public
sectors, including Thames Water and was most
recently a trustee of NEST Corporation, the
pension scheme set up by government to
support auto-enrolment.
Christopher M Stooke
Christopher graduated in economics from
Durham University and started his accountancy
career at PwC. He was made partner in 1990
and was responsible for the audit of a number
of blue chip companies in the UK and Europe,
mainly in the financial services sector. From
2003 to 2009 he was Chief Financial Officer of
Catlin Group, the FTSE 350 insurer. He is now
a non-executive chairman of two companies, a
non executive director at a third company and
one charity, in addition to King's. He has lived in
south London almost all his life and is now
based in Dulwich. Chris joined the Trust Board
in November 2011 and his current term of office
will end in October 2015.
Before joining the NHS, Tim had a 30-year
career in the commercial sector, first with Shell
and latterly with BT. He brings with him a wealth
of experience in customer service and
satisfaction, developing commercial
partnerships, and team and people
development.
Sue Slipman
Sue was the founding Chief Executive of the
Foundation Trust Network, the national trade
association for authorised and aspirant
foundation trusts in the NHS. She was also
director of the campaigning charity, The
National Council for One Parent Families and
ran the Gas Consumer Council. She was an
executive director at Camelot where she held
Executive directors
Timothy Smart (Chief Executive)
Since 2008, when he joined the Trust, Tim has
brought a renewed focus on improvements in
patient experience, service quality, and partner
and stakeholder relationships.
He has worked in the Middle East, the
Netherlands and the US. He also has
experience as a non-executive director of a USlisted financial services company and as a
Trustee of two national charities. He is an
elected member of the Foundation Trust
Network Board. Tim is also on the KHP
Partners' Board, and the members' boards of
GSTS and the London Cancer Alliance. Tim
has a passion for equality and inclusiveness.
He is proud of the fact that the Trust is now a
safer hospital and that it is increasingly
reflective of and integrated with the local
communities it serves. He is also proud that the
focus on closing the local health inequality gap
and involvement in King’s Health Partners, is
attracting more talent to the area, and has also
resulted in the growth of employment and
67
career opportunities for the local population, not
least through the innovative volunteers’
programme. Tim retired as Chief Executive
Officer on 30 April 2015.
Angela Huxham (Director of Workforce
Development)
Angela’s career in people management began
in manufacturing during a period of industrial
unrest. Experience in insurance, retail and local
government were followed by a move to health
in 2002 as HR Director of a leading teaching
hospital. She joined the King’s Board in her
current role in 2009. Within the NHS she has
engaged nationally in various reforms of
national terms, conditions and pensions, latterly
chairing the 2014 negotiations to design a new
contract for doctors in training. Angela is a
Chartered Fellow of her professional institute
and holds an MSc in Human Resource
Leadership
Mr Michael Marrinan (Medical Director)
Michael graduated in business studies before
commencing his medical degree. He then
trained as a Cardiothoracic Surgeon, primarily
in London and the US. He was appointed as
trust Medical Director in February 2010 having
been Deputy Medical Director since 2008.
Michael has been a Consultant at King’s for
over 20 years, and has been heavily involved in
clinical, educational and managerial
improvements through the Trust.
His overriding responsibility, with others, is to
ensure that the quality of care for our patients is
of the highest order. In keeping with this he is
chair of the Patient Safety Committee, chair of
the Serious Incident Committee and vice-chair
of the Patient Outcomes Committee and a
member of the Patient Experience Committee.
In addition he is the Trust lead for research and
is heavily involved in ungraduated and post
graduate education and training. He is a
68
member of the KCL committee supervising
development of the new medical undergraduate
curriculum. He is currently a leader in the
integration of the Princess Royal University
Hospital within King’s College Hospital and the
development of a 21st century system of highquality networked care.
Roland Sinker (Chief Operating Officer)
Roland joined the Trust in 2005 as Director of
Strategy for King’s and worked latterly as Joint
Director of Strategy for King’s and Guy’s and St
Thomas’. He was appointed Director of
Operations in July 2009 and Chief Operating
Officer in April 2012. Prior to joining the NHS,
Roland worked as a lawyer and management
consultant. Roland is a Director and Company
Secretary of KCH Commercial Services and is
on the Board of GSTS, the pathology joint
venture.
Simon Taylor (Chief Financial Officer)
Simon has worked at King’s for over 20 years
holding positions as Financial Controller and
Director of Finance before becoming Chief
Financial Officer in 2002. He is also responsible
for Information Services, Capital Estates &
Facilities and overseeing King’s commercial
developments. Simon is a director of KCH
Commercial Services and its subsidiaries,
Agnentis Ltd and KCH Management Ltd.
Jeremy Tozer (Interim Chief Operating
Officer)
Jeremy (Jez) is a qualified pharmacist. After
becoming a Chief Pharmacist early on in his
career, moved into various areas of general
management before taking first Board Position
9 years ago. Since then he has been part of
several Trust Boards up and down the country
in the position of Chief Operating Officer and
has a specific focus on delivering sustainable
operational performance and introducing
systems of performance management.
Dr Geraldine Walters (Director of Nursing
and Midwifery and Director of Infection
Prevention and Control)
A cardiac nurse by background, Geraldine has
held a number of executive nurse director posts
in acute NHS Trusts in London. Geraldine is
Visiting Professor at both Buckinghamshire
New University and the Florence Nightingale
School at King’s College London. Geraldine is
an advisor to the Florence Nightingale
Foundation, a member of the National Advisory
Group on Clinical Audit and Enquiries and a
trustee of Trinity Hospice. She served as a
member on the Morecambe Bay Inquiry Panel.
Geraldine worked in a variety of hospitals in her
early career, including King’s, and subsequently
gained a PhD and an MBA.
Jane Walters (Director of Corporate Affairs
and Trust Secretary)
Jane has worked at the Trust since 1992,
holding positions as Business Manager and
Head of Corporate Services before being
appointed as Director of Corporate Affairs and
Trust Secretary in 2004. Her earlier career was
in local government, where she worked in a
variety of senior roles in the fields of corporate
governance, communications and quality
assurance.
Jane holds a Masters in Social Policy from the
University of Cranfield, and leads King’s
Patient Experience and Volunteering
Programmes. She is also responsible for
corporate and clinical governance and
communications and marketing. She is a
director of KCH Management Ltd. Outside of
the Trust, she is Vice Chairman of St
Christopher’s Hospice, Sydenham.
Trudi Kemp (Director of Strategic
Development)
Trudi joined King’s in October 2014. Prior to her
appointment she was Director of Strategic
Development at St George’s Healthcare NHS
Trust, having joined as a consultant in Public
Health Medicine in 2002.
Qualifying in Medicine in 1986, she holds
masters degrees in Medical Law and Ethics and
in Public Health. She is a Fellow of the Faculty
of Public Health and an educational supervisor
for specialist trainees in public health.
Trudi is responsible for developing and
implementing the Trust's strategy, ensuring our
service developments meet the needs of the
populations we serve.
Ahmad Toumadj (Interim Director of Capital,
Estates and Facilities)
Ahmad was born in Iran and educated in the
UK. He holds a master’s degree in Architecture
from University College London and is a Fellow
of The Chartered Institute of Building.
After working in the construction industry he
joined the NHS in 1979, where he has worked
as a Technical Officer and Director of Capital,
Estates and Facilities in a number of
organisations. During his 34 years in the NHS
he has been responsible for the commissioning
of the Chelsea and Westminster Hospital and
the master planning of St George’s Hospital in
south west London.
Ahmad has been employed by King’s since
1997. He has overseen its modernisation and
the commissioning of its flagship Golden
Jubilee building. Ahmad remains integral to
King’s, where he currently works as Director of
Business Development with a special remit for
projects in the Gulf States. In March 2015 he
was invited to join the Executive Team again as
Interim Director of Capital, Estates and
69
Facilities, until a permanent appointment is
made.
Steve Leivers (Director of Transformation
and Turnaround)
Steve Leivers is a highly skilled director of
transformation and turnaround with a successful
track record of delivering sustainable financial
balance in challenging situations. Over the last
decade he has led a number of major NHS cost
reduction programmes, QIPP initiatives, clinical
transformation projects and turnaround
programmes.
Steve has a strong clinical background as a
chief nurse and has had a successful career in
operations management in the NHS and the
commercial sector.
Over the last ten years Steve has personally
developed and implemented initiatives which
have delivered savings in a variety of NHS
Trusts including acute, mental health and
community. These programmes have all been
developed using a protocol which requires a
comprehensive assessment of clinical risk to
ensure that patient care cannot be
compromised in favour of CIP delivery. This
ensures that executive directors are able to
assure trust boards that services remain robust
and fit for purpose as well as delivering good
value for money.
Pedro Castro (Interim Director of Strategy)
Pedro is the Interim Director of Strategy at
King’s. He has a background in Strategy and
Healthcare consultancy and he has worked
extensively over the last 10 years across all
health sub-sectors internationally. In the UK, he
has worked with a large number of NHS
organisations including providers,
commissioners and regulators. Pedro’s
contract came to an end in July 2014.
70
Evaluation and development of the Board
Executive directors hold a weekly meeting to
monitor and respond to current issues,
particularly in relation to quality, performance
and finance. The Chair and non-executive
directors hold informal meetings on a regular
basis to discuss matters relating to the running
of King’s without the executive directors
present.
Collectively the Board holds development
sessions periodically throughout the year to
allow for deeper discussion and investigation of
key topics. In addition, The Board used the
evaluation of the Board conducted by the
internal auditors, KPMG, to inform a Board
Development Programme which included a
3600 appraisals, 1:1 interviews and a facilitated
development day. The programme was
delivered by Personal Best International Ltd.
Personal Best has no former connection with
the Trust.
Board members also undertake personal
development on an on-going basis.
All executive and non-executive directors have
an annual performance appraisal and personal
development plan, which forms the basis of
their individual development.
The performance of executive directors is
reviewed by the Chief Executive and
considered by the Remuneration and
Appointments Committee. Annual performance
appraisals were completed in June 2014 and
are next due in June 2015.
The process for evaluating the performance of
the Chair and non-executive directors has been
agreed in consultation with the Council of
Governors.
Board meetings and committees
The Board of Directors met regularly throughout
the year. The Board also has seven
Committees which also meet regularly and are
each chaired by a non-executive director.
The Board of Directors approve the terms of
reference which detail the remit and the
delegated authority of each committee. Each
committee completes an annual review and
self-assessment which is then presented to the
Board of Directors.
In addition to regularly reporting to the Board of
Directors, committee minutes are a standing
item on each Board agenda.
Table 8 on pages 63-64 records the
membership of each Board committee.
Audit Committee
The Audit Committee is responsible for
monitoring the externally reported performance
of King’s and for providing independent
assurance to the Board of Directors in a range
of areas including internal control, risk
management, external assurance of risk
management processes, internal and external
audit and financial reporting. King’s also has a
zero-tolerance policy towards fraud and bribery
and this committee is responsible for
overseeing the work of the counter fraud team.
It continues to closely monitor the effectiveness
of internal control and audit processes on behalf
of the Board of Directors.
The committee is chaired by Christopher
Stooke who brings a wealth of financial
expertise to the Committee. The internal and
external auditors regularly attend committee
meetings in addition to the Chief Financial
Officer, Chief Executive and the Director of
Corporate Affairs, although they are not
members of the committee. The Trust Chair and
other members of the executive team attend
meetings of the committee by invitation. The
broad knowledge and skills of the members and
attendees strengthens the effectiveness of the
committee. King’s is satisfied that the
committee is sufficiently independent.
During the reporting period the committee
considered reports from internal and external
auditors around significant issues including data
quality, assurance and security, divisional risk
management, data migration and integration,
medical appraisals and revalidation, nursing
staff levels, procurement, core financial systems
and reporting, CIPS, bank and agency staffing
and effectiveness of divisional meetings. It also
received reports on counter fraud investigations
and recommendations.
In May 2014 the committee fulfilled its oversight
responsibilities with regard to monitoring the
integrity of the financial statements, the annual
accounts and the annual governance statement
(formally known as the statement of internal
control), before submission to the Board.
The Audit Committee met with the external
auditors and considered the significant risks
they identified in both their audit plan and
subsequent conversations. The Committee
ware in agreement that these represent the
significant risks to the Trust. Further details of
these risks and the External Audit findings and
conclusions can be found as part of the
External Auditor’s Opinion on the Accounts on
page 204-208.
Independence of the external auditor
King’s external auditors, Deloitte, have
communicated the following matters to the Audit
Committee:
 The principal threats, if any, to objectivity
and independence identified by the auditor,
71




including consideration of all relationships
between King’s, directors and the auditor;
Any safeguards adopted and the reasons
why they are considered to be effective;
Any independent partner review;
The overall assessment of threats and
safeguards;
Information about the general policies and
processes for maintaining objectivity and
safeguarding independence when
undertaking non-audit work.
Deloitte is not aware of any relationships that
may affect the independence and objectivity of
the team, and which are required to be
disclosed under auditing and ethical standards.
Board Integration Committee
The Board Integration Committee was
established to support the work around the
acquisition of sites and services from the former
South London Healthcare Trust and to oversee
the integration process.
This committee was disbanded in March 2015
so that the Board could give focus to the key
elements in its forward plan to tackle the
financial challenges facing the Trust.
Education and Workforce Development
Committee
This Committee is responsible for providing
assurance to the board on the Trust’s strategy
and plans for its entire workforce focusing on
education learning and organisational
development, workforce information, planning,
resourcing and deployment and staff
engagement, reward, recognition, health and
wellbeing.
Finance and Performance Committee
This committee is responsible for reviewing and
monitoring King’s operational and financial
performance against core targets and indicators
72
and for ensuring that King’s remains compliant
with Monitor’s financial and governance risk
ratings.
Quality and Governance Committee
This committee is responsible for overseeing
the three key dimensions of quality: patient
safety, patient experience and patient outcomes
as well as organisational safety, risk
management and compliance and information
governance. Patient complaints and/or video
stories are a regular item on the agenda.
Strategy Committee
This committee is responsible for overseeing
the development of King’s strategy and vision. It
also reviews progress against King’s strategic
objectives, discusses major strategic issues and
monitors external political, economic and social
factors which influence the hospital’s business.
Remuneration and Appointments Committee
On behalf of the Board of Directors, this
committee agrees executive directors’
remuneration and terms of service.
Together with the Chief Executive, committee
members form a panel for the appointment of
executive directors.
More information can be found in the
remuneration report on pages 73-74.
Remuneration Report
The remuneration and terms of service of the
Chair and non-executive directors (NEDs) are
determined by the Council of Governors, taking
account of market and survey data from
relevant benchmark sources which can include
the Foundation Trust Network and the Trust’s
NHS peer group. More information about this
process and the role of the Council of
Governors’ Nominations Committee can be
found on page 76.
Remuneration for the King’s most senior
managers (directors accountable to the Chief
Executive) is determined by the Remuneration
and Appointments Committee, which comprises
the Chair and the non-executive directors. See
table 8 on pages 63-64 for committee
membership and meeting attendance.
The work of the Remuneration and
Appointments Committee is informed by
relevant benchmark data, periodic assessments
conducted by independent remuneration
consultants and by salary awards and terms
and conditions applying to other NHS staff
groups. The work of the committee is supported
by the Director of Workforce Development who
is not a member of the committee.
Prior to King’s acquisition of sites and services
from the former SLHT on 01 October 2013, the
Remuneration and Appointments Committee
had reviewed the directors’ pay and reward
framework involving recognised job evaluation
tools, external comparators and independent
advice. Post acquisition, executive pay was
reassessed in the light of organisational
expansion and the consequent changes in the
scale and complexity of director responsibilities.
The Committee agreed to reflect the significant
challenges faced by the enlarged organisation
and to adjust director salaries in two stages.
The first stage was effective from the date of
acquisition and the second from 1 April 2014.
King’s strategy and annual planning processes
set key business objectives which, in turn,
inform individual and collective objectives for
senior managers. Individual performance and
that of King’s as a whole is closely monitored,
discussed throughout the year and forms part of
the annual appraisal as outlined on page 70.
Details of senior employees’ remuneration can
be found on pages 236-237 of the annual
accounts. Note 4.7 on page 238 sets out
accounting policies for pensions and other
retirement benefits.
The only non-cash element of the most senior
managers’ remuneration packages is pension
related benefits accrued during membership of
the NHS Pension Scheme. Contributions into
the scheme are made by both the employer and
employee in accordance with the statutory
regulations
The Medical Director is a medical consultant
within the Trust, whose role is undertaken on a
fixed term, three-year contract, renewable by
agreement. The contract was reviewed in
February 2013 and extended for a further three
years. Additional paid programmed activities
are provided in the Medical Director’s job plan
to enable the performance of these additional
responsibilities. As an executive Board member
the Medical Director also receives a pay
supplement. All other directors are substantive
employees of the Trust employed on openended employment contracts which can be
terminated by the Trust with contractual notice.
Until September 2014, the substantive Director
of Strategy was, with the agreement of the
Board, seconded into a regional role until
73
leaving King’s to take up a Harkness
Fellowship. An interim Director of Strategy was
in post throughout quarter one. A new
substantive Director of Strategy joined the
Board on 1 October 2014.
Compensation in the event of early termination
for substantive directors would be in
accordance with contractual entitlements as set
out in the Agenda for Change national terms
and conditions of service.
Signed:
Roland Sinker
Acting Chief Executive
Date: 26 May 2015
Council of Governors
Following the acquisition of new sites and
services in outer south east London from the
now dissolved South London Healthcare Trust
the Council of Governors had a transitional
composition. The transitional arrangements
were in place during the period until the new
Council commenced its term on 01 December
2014.
The council of governors is made up of elected
and appointed stakeholders. Elected governors
make up the majority of the council and
appointed stakeholder governors include
representatives from clinical commissioning
groups and local councils, which play an
important part of stakeholder relations.
Governors are elected by the members of the
Trust. The membership constituencies include
patients, staff and residents from Bromley,
Lambeth, Lewisham and Southwark.
74
The composition of the Council, names of
individual governors and their terms can be
found in the tables on pages 78-82.
Governor elections
During the period the Trust held elections in the
patient, staff, Lambeth and Southwark
constituencies.
17 candidates stood for governor in the Patient
constituency, 19 in the staff constituencies and
17 in the Lambeth constituency and 21 stood in
the Southwark constituency. Further information
can be provided on the elections by contacting
the Foundation Trust Office at [email protected]
Function and meetings of the Council of
Governors
The Council of Governors met four times during
the reporting period. The attendance of
individual governors at these meetings, which
were held in public, is detailed in tables on
pages 78-82.
All directors are invited to attend Council
meetings. Individual directors, executive and
non-executive, regularly present items at
Council meetings, in accordance with the
planned agenda. Each governor sub-committee
has an appointed executive lead and one or two
affiliated non-executive directors.
The Council of Governors has two key
functions, which are to hold non-executive
directors to account for the performance of the
Board and to represent the interests of
members and the public.
The Council of Governors also has specific
responsibilities, which include the appointment,
remuneration and removal of the Chair and
other non-executive directors.
The term of office for governors is four years.
During the reporting period, the Council of
Governors:
 Received and considered the Trust Annual
Report and Accounts and the auditor’s
report on the accounts;
 Received regular updates on King’s
business planning process and provided
comments which were duly incorporated
into King’s forward plan and submitted to
Monitor in May 2014;
 Approved changes to the Trust Constitution;
 Received regular information on and
discussed the financial and performance
challenges facing the Trust in particular the
Monitor investigations and results; and
 Appointed the new chair.
Governors receive regular reports on the Trust’s
finances and performance.
Governors in the community
Governors are active within the community,
helping to facilitate communication between
King’s, members and the local community.
Governors are pivotal to sharing King’s vision
and performance with key stakeholders.
As guardians of the community interest, the
Council of Governors ensures that the needs of
members are considered in the planning of
future services.
Further information about governor engagement
can be found on pages 85-96.
Governor sub-committees
The Council of Governors has sub-committees
which provide the opportunity for governors to
delve deeper into issues that are of interest to
members, patients and the local community.
All governors are eligible to sit on governor sub-
committees, with the exception of the
Nominations Committee for which governors
stand and are elected.
Membership and Community Engagement
Committee
This committee monitors membership
recruitment and reviews the engagement and
experience strategy ensuring that membership
continues to be representative as well as
identifying ways in which the membership can
be more actively involved.
Committee members are encouraged to provide
feedback about the engagement activity they
have been personally involved with, both within
and outside King’s, and opportunities for
facilitating communication between governors
and the membership are explored. More
information about these opportunities can be
found on pages 85-96.
Patient Experience and Safety Committee
This committee acts as a reference group for
King’s planned activity around patient
experience and safety.
This year a particular focus has been King’s
response to the Francis Report and
recommendations.
Committee members are involved with a range
of initiatives to improve patient experience and
safety and to monitor progress against King’s
quality priorities.
Strategy Committee
This committee reviews King’s strategy and
annual forward plan, and feeds back to the
Council of Governors.
It considers external factors and the climate in
which King’s operates, such as revised
commissioning structures.
75
Nominations Committee
This committee is responsible for determining
and administering the selection process for the
appointment and remuneration of the Chair and
non-executive directors, and recommending the
preferred candidates to the Council of
Governors for appointment. This includes
consideration of the structure, size and
composition of the Board. It also monitors the
performance of non-executive directors and
makes recommendations to the Council of
Governors for the reappointment or removal of
individual non-executive directors.
The members of the committee are detailed in
table 11 on page 82. The committee met three
times during the reporting period. It also makes
recommendations to the Council on the
remuneration and terms and conditions of nonexecutive directors.
Governor development and engagement
King’s is committed to providing on-going
support and training for governors and
opportunities to engage with staff, directors,
member and one another.
Governors were invited to participate in
workshops at which topical issues selected by
governors themselves were presented by
directors and other senior members of staff.
Three governor development days were
organised in-year, one of which was delivered
to governors from all three foundation trusts
within King’s Health Partners by the Foundation
Trust Network.
Governors have also received presentations
from external speakers invited to sub-committee
meetings and workshops in order to give
different perspectives on relevant issues.
76
The process to develop a full business case for
the acquisition of sites and services from South
London Healthcare Trust was a key feature of
discussions throughout the reporting period. A
number of opportunities were organised for
governors to hear more about the developing
plans, regulatory requirements and implications
for King’s.
Governors, members and directors came
together to share ideas about King’s vision and
future plans at community events and the
Annual Members Meeting. There was also an
annual joint meeting of the Board of Directors
and Council of Governors and all governors are
invited to attend Board of Directors meetings.
Governors also participated in ward-based
initiatives such as collecting patient stories and
the King’s in Conversation project. More
information about these involvement activities
can be found on pages 85-96.
Governors are provided with a secure remote
resources centre through which they can
access information relevant to their role. Some
governors attended external events hosted by
the Foundation Trust Governors’ Association
and the Foundation Trust Network during the
reporting period.
Company directorships and other significant
interests and commitments
King’s maintains a register of interests for its
governors, which is open to the public.
Arrangements to view the register can be made
by contacting the Foundation Trust Office on
[email protected]
77
Table 9: Council of Governors and Attendance at Meetings 01 April - 30 November 2015
Term
CONSTITUENCY
78
MEETINGS
1
2
Derek
Cookson
01/12/2011 - 30/11/2014
Patient
Patient
x
x
Thomas
Duffy
01/12/2011 - 30/11/2014
Patient
Patient
x

Patti
Kachidza
01/12/2011 - 30/11/2014
Patient
Patient


Pida
Ripley
01/12/2011 - 30/11/2014
Patient
Patient


David
Sullivan
01/12/2011 - 30/11/2014
Patient
Patient
x
x
Jan
Thomas
01/12/2011 - 30/11/2014
Patient
Patient


Eniko
Benfield
01/12/2011 - 30/11/2014
Public
Bromley
x

Paul
Corben
01/12/2011 - 30/11/2014
Public
Bromley


Penny
Dale
01/12/2011 - 30/11/2014
Public
Bromley


Anoushka
01/12/2011 - 30/11/2014
Public
Bromley


Michael
de AlmeidaCarragher
Robinson
01/12/2011 - 30/11/2014
Public
Lambeth Central

x
Godwin
Ubiaro
01/12/2011 - 30/11/2014
Public
Lambeth Central
x

Fiona
Clark
01/12/2011 - 30/11/2014
Public
Lambeth North


Christopher
North
01/12/2011 - 30/11/2014
Public
Lambeth North
x

Nandakumar
Ratnavel
01/12/2011 - 30/11/2014
Public
Lambeth South


Alan
Hall
01/12/2011 - 30/11/2014
Public
Lewisham


Pam
Cohen
01/12/2011 - 30/11/2014
Public
Southwark Central


NOTE
Term
CONSTITUENCY
MEETINGS
NOTE
Barbara
Pattinson
01/12/2011 - 30/11/2014
Public
Southwark Central


Barrie
Hargrove
01/12/2011 - 30/11/2014
Public
Southwark Council
N/A

Resigned
Catherine
McDonald
01/12/2011 - 30/11/2014
Public
Southwark Council

N/A
Resigned
Andrew
McCall
01/12/2011 - 30/11/2014
Public
Southwark North


Joe
Onabaworin
01/12/2011 - 30/11/2014
Public
Southwark North


Stuart
Owen
01/12/2011 - 30/11/2014
Public
Southwark South


Michelle
Pearce
01/12/2011 - 30/11/2014
Public
Southwark South


Michael
Pedro
01/12/2011 - 30/11/2014
Staff
Administration and Clerical

x
Phyllis
Barnett
01/12/2011 - 30/11/2014
Staff
Allied Health Professionals


Rachel
Burman
01/12/2011 - 30/11/2014
Staff
Medical and Dentistry


CV
Praveen
01/12/2011 - 30/11/2014
Staff
Medical and Dentistry


Carolyn
Campbell-Cole
01/12/2011 - 30/11/2014
Staff
Nurses and Midwives
x
x
Nicky
Hayes
01/12/2011 - 30/11/2014
Staff
Nurses and Midwives


Helen
Mencia
01/12/2011 - 30/11/2014
Staff
Nurses and Midwives
x
x
Ahmad
Toumadj
01/12/2011 - 30/11/2014
Staff
Support Staff

x
Robert
Evans
16/12/2013 - 15/12/2016
Stakeholder
Bromley Council

x
Jim
Gunner
05/03/2014 - 05/03/2017
Stakeholder
Bromley CCG


Diane
Summers
06/10/2013 - 05/10/2016
Stakeholder
Guy's & St Thomas' Hospital
NHS Foundation Trust

Constituency no
longer exists

79
Term
CONSTITUENCY
MEETINGS
Phidelma
Lisowska
01/09/2013 - 30/08/2016
Stakeholder
Joint Staff Committee


Chris
Mottershead
01/07/2012 - 30/06/2015
Stakeholder
King's College London

x
Sue
Gallagher
01/01/2013 - 31/12/2015
Stakeholder
Lambeth CCG


Warren
Turner
29/01/2013 - 28/01/2016
Stakeholder
London South Bank University


Jim
Dickson
01/03/2012 - 28/02/2015
Stakeholder
Lambeth Council


Richard
Gibbs
09/05/2011 - 08/05/2015
Stakeholder
Southwark CCG

x
NOTE
Constituency no
longer exists
Table 10: Council of Governors & Meeting Attendance - 01 December - 31 March 2015
CONSTITUENCY
80
MEETINGS
ATTENDED
Anoushka
de AlmeidaCarragher
30/01/2014 - 30/01/2017
Public
Bromley

Eniko
Benfield
30/01/2014 - 30/01/2017
Public
Bromley

Paul
Corben
30/01/2014 - 30/01/2017
Public
Bromley

Penny
Dale
30/01/2014 - 30/01/2017
Public
Bromley

Alan
Hall
30/01/2014 - 30/01/2017
Public
Lewisham

Fiona
Clark
01/01/2015 - 30/11/2018
Public
Lambeth

Christopher
North
01/01/2015 - 30/11/2018
Public
Lambeth

NOTES
CONSTITUENCY
MEETINGS
ATTENDED
Nandakumar
Ratnavel
01/01/2015 - 30/11/2018
Public
Lambeth

Grace
Okoli
01/01/2015 - 30/11/2018
Public
Lambeth

Barbara
Pattinson
01/01/2015 - 30/11/2018
Public
Southwark

Pam
Cohen
01/01/2015 - 30/11/2018
Public
Southwark

Andrew
McCall
01/01/2015 - 30/11/2018
Public
Southwark
x
Victoria
Silvester
01/01/2015 - 30/11/2018
Public
Southwark

Jo
Millett (nee Artus)
01/01/2015 - 30/11/2018
Staff
Nurses and Midwives

Nicky
Hayes
01/01/2015 - 30/11/2018
Staff
Nurses and Midwives

CV
Praveen
01/01/2015 - 30/11/2018
Staff
Medical and Dentistry

Cornelius
Lewis
01/01/2015 - 30/11/2018
Staff
Allied Health Professionals

Roger
Engwell
01/01/2015 - 30/11/2018
Staff
Administration and Clerical

Helen
Ahmet
01/01/2015 - 30/11/2018
Patient
Patient

Derek St Clair
Cattrall
01/01/2015 - 30/11/2018
Patient
Patient

Thomas
Duffy
01/01/2015 - 30/11/2018
Patient
Patient

Catriona
Ogilvy
01/01/2015 - 30/11/2018
Patient
Patient
x
Pida
Ripley
01/01/2015 - 30/11/2018
Patient
Patient

Jan
Thomas
01/01/2015 - 30/11/2018
Patient
Patient
x
NOTES
81
MEETINGS
ATTENDED
CONSTITUENCY
Gunner
16/12/2013 - 15/12/2016
Stakeholder
Bromley Clinical
Commissioning Group
Robert
Evans
05/03/2014 - 05/03/2017
Stakeholder
Bromley Council
Diane
Summers
06/10/2013 - 05/10/2016
Stakeholder
Guy's & St Thomas' Hospital
NHS Foundation Trust

Phidelma
Lisowska
01/09/2013 - 30/08/2016
Stakeholder
Joint Staff Committee
x
Chris
Mottershead
01/07/2012 - 30/06/2015
Stakeholder
King's College London

Sue
Gallagher
01/01/2013 - 31/12/2015
Stakeholder
Richard
Gibbs
09/05/2011 - 08/05/2015
Stakeholder
Jim
Dickson
01/03/2015 - 30/04/2018
Stakeholder
Lambeth Council
Kieron
Williams
Stakeholder
Southwark Council
N/A
Roger
Pafford
Stakeholder
South London and Maudsley
NHS FT
N/A


Lambeth Clinical
Commissioning Group
Southwark Clinical
Commissioning Group
Table 11: Membership of the Nominations Committee
Members
Term
82

Jim
02/01/2015 - 01/01/2018
NOTES


Constituency
Prof Sir George Alberti, Committee Chair
Member during 01 April 14 – 31 March 2015 (Retired)
Lord Kerslake, Committee Chair
Member from April 2015 (Current)
Nanda Ratnavel , Vice Chair
Member during 01 April 14 – 31 March 2015 (Current)
Public Governor
Fiona Clark
Member during 01 April 14 – 31 March 2015 (Current)
Public Governor
Thomas Duffy
Member during 01 April 14 – 31 March 2015 (Current)
Patient Governor
Rachel Burman
Member during 01 April 14 – 31 March 2015 (No longer Governor)
Staff Governor
Pam Cohen
Member from January 2015 (Current)
Public
Andrew McCall
Member from January 2015 (Current)
Public
Reappointed
Joined on
02/01/2015
Patient
& Public
Focus
Patient and Public
Focus: Listening and
Responding
Improving Patient Care
King’s is committed to addressing
healthcare inequalities and responding to
the needs of the local population. This is
one reason why the majority of foundation
trust members and the governors who are
elected to represent them are drawn from
the London boroughs of Lambeth,
Southwark, Lewisham and Bromley. Other
members have an association with King’s
because they are patients, staff or affiliated
to partner organisations. More information
about membership constituencies can be
found on pages 94-96.
This year, we welcomed new Governors to
the Council of Governors as well as new
members from across our patient, public
and staff constituencies.
During the year 2014/15, members and
governors have continued to play an active
role in helping to improve services and
ensuring that they meet the health needs of
the diverse community served by the
hospital.
Council of Governors: representing the
patient voice
As outlined on pages 74-75, the key
functions of the Council of Governors are to
hold non-executive directors to account for
the performance of the Board and to
represent the interests of members and the
public.
In order to meet these responsibilities
governors ensure that the patient voice
remains at the forefront of King’s work by
providing lay representation and an external
perspective on a range of committees and
working groups. These include:
 End of Life Care Group;
 Older People's Committee;
 Maternity Services Liaison;
 Nutrition Support Steering Group
 Patient Experience Committee.
Governors also have their own committees,
which focus on strategy, patient experience
and safety, membership and community
engagement.
More information about governors and their
sub-committees can be found on 75-76.
Patient experience
Both governors and members continue to
volunteer to help with a range of projects
aiming to improve the experience of
patients. Some of these projects are
outlined below.
PLACE assessments
Governors and members have joined multidisciplinary teams to take part in our annual
Patient Led Assessments of the Care
Environment (PLACE). Teams of assessors
go into all our hospitals to assess how the
environment supports patients’ privacy and
dignity, food, cleanliness and general
building maintenance. The focus is entirely
on the care environment, not clinical care
provision or staff competency.
Improving Patient Food Service
Governors and Members have continued to
take part in patient food service audits on
our wards to help to improve the quality of
patient food. These audits include
interviews with patients about different
aspects of patient food.
85
King's in Conversation
This year, the trust has run another series of
King’s in Conversation events to gather
feedback from patients, visitors and staff
about their views of King’s. Governors have
again played a crucial role in gathering
views through formal group discussions or
via 'pop up conversations' held in corridors,
offices and the canteen.
Annual Members Meeting
On 25 September 2014 governors and
members gathered for the Annual Members
Meeting. The event was well attended and
members were offered the chance to have
routine health checks such as blood
pressure and blood sugar. There were also
information focussing on fundraising for our
helipad, volunteering, King’s one year on
from joining forces with the PRUH and, a
stand on King’s and World War 1.
A review of the past year was presented by
the Chief Executive, Timothy Smart; Chief
Financial Officer, Simon Taylor presented a
financial review; and Tom Duffy, reported to
members on the activities of the Council of
Governors during the year and how they
have discharged their responsibilities. The
formal part of the meeting was followed by
break-out sessions on three of King’s key
services: Dental services, orthopaedics and
ophthalmology.
Service improvements following staff or
patient surveys or comments and Care
Quality Commission reports
Care Quality Commission (CQC)
During the reporting period Chief Inspector
of Hospitals, Professor Sir Mike Richards,
identified 18 trusts that would be among the
first to be inspected by the end of 2013
under the new inspection regime.
86
The now dissolved South London
Healthcare Trust appeared on the list as
‘high risk’. On 02 December a team of
inspectors arrived at the PRUH. They were
provided with information about the
acquisition process and as part of their
inspection spoke with members of staff,
patients and carers and individual directors.
King’s was invited to participate in a Quality
Summit to discuss the outcome of the
inspection and the draft report, then on 06
February 2014 the final report was
published highlighting areas of good
practice and areas requiring improvement.
King’s was asked to respond outlining the
actions that would be undertaken to meet
these essential standards.
National patient surveys
This year, results were published for the
annual CQC inpatient survey and a national
A&E survey. The Department of Health
also commissioned a national cancer
patient experience survey.
Inpatient survey
Results for the 2014 National Inpatient
Survey were not published by the time the
Annual Review went to press
National A&E survey
The results of the national A&E survey were
published in December 2014. This is the
first time that both acute sites based at
Denmark Hill and PRUH were included in a
national survey.
King’s was rated amber – the same as
expected for all sections apart from
‘environment and facilities’ which was rated
red – worse than expected.
In summary, there was a small drop in
overall score from 2012 but improvements
in some areas including questions about
waiting times. The lowest performing
section was about patient’s perceptions of
their ‘Care and Treatment’ with DH site
scoring 6% higher than the PRUH. Based
on comparable questions.
DH has increased by 1 point from 7.4 to 7.5
between 2012 and 2014. PRUH scores
have decreased by 1 point between 2012
and 2014 from 6.9 to 6.8. Performance fell
compared to London Peers. Response rate
of 30% compared to 34% nationally
Department of Health national cancer
survey 2013/2014
This survey seeks the views of patients
aged 16 and above with a primary diagnosis
of cancer admitted as an inpatient or daycase patient and discharged discharged
between 01/9/12 and 30/11/13.
1,204 King’s patients from both Denmark
Hill and PRUH were sent a survey and 632
completed surveys were returned - a
response rate of 56% compared to 64%
nationally
National results published on Friday 26th
September 2014.
Although there was good improvement in
some areas of patient experience, the
results remain disappointing.
Ten out of sixteen sections show
improvement in scores with good
improvement in patient experience of:
• Finding out what was wrong with you
• Deciding the best treatment
• operations
• Information before discharge
• Hospital care as outpatient /day case
Performance in four sections deteriorated
including patient experience of cancer
research where there was a drop nationally.
There has been significant work to improve
the experience of patients with cancer and,
following the survey results, further work is
planned over the coming year, focussing on:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Trust-wide focus on cancer patient
experience with improving cancer
patient experience as one of the Trust’s
two patient experience quality priorities
included in our Quality Account
Continued formal monitoring of the
MDTs progress re improving patient
experience – via peer review
Work in partnership with Macmillan for
service improvement related to the
patient
Quality improvement programme for
Clinical Nurse Specialists
Information hubs to be developed at the
PRUH Chartwell outpatient unit and
around the hospital
A rolling programme of HOPE courses
(‘moving forwards’ course)
Introduction of complementary therapy
service
Patient Experience Surveys
‘How are we doing?’ patient surveys
The ‘How are we doing?’ (HRWD) patient
feedback programme, incorporating the
Friends and Family Test, continues to be
used to drive improvement in the quality of
patient experience.
HRWD inpatient Survey
This is the first year where we have had a
full set of results for both the Denmark Hill
(including Orpington) and Princess Royal
sites.
At Denmark Hill, the year started well with
an overall satisfaction score of 87, one
above our target. Performance dipped from
87
May to December but recovered at the end
in the last quarter of the year to 87.
Orpington wards have achieved excellent
patient satisfaction ratings, with Bodington
Ward exceeding the target score over the
whole year. Overall the PRUH has
performed slightly below the Denmark Hill
site reaching one below target for three
months of the year.
How are we doing? outpatient survey
On the Denmark Hill site, performance has
been good with the overall target score met
or exceeded in seven months of the year.
King’s was an early implementer site for the
Friends and Family Test for outpatients and
day case. A How are we doing outpatient
survey, incorporating FFT, was launched at
the Princess Royal and other Bromley sites
on 1st October 2014.
The Friends and Family Test
The NHS-wide Friends and Family Test
(FFT) is an important opportunity for
patients to provide feedback on the care
and treatment that they have received in
order to improve services.
Introduced nationally for inpatient and
emergency patients on 01 April 2013 and
for maternity patients on 01 October 2014,
the FFT asks patients whether they would
recommend hospital wards, emergency
departments and maternity services to their
friends and family if they needed similar
care or treatment. This means every patient
in these wards and departments is able to
give feedback on the quality of the care they
receive, giving hospitals a better
understanding of the needs of their patients
and enabling improvements.
King’s was an ‘early implementer’ site for
Friends and Family for outpatients and day
case patients and launched on 1st October
2014 across all our sites and satellite units.
88
From April 1st 2015, the Friends and Family
Test will be extended to all services
including patient transport services.
Following a review of the Friends and
Family Test during 2014, the scoring for
FFT was changed in October 2014. The
‘nett promoter’ score was replaced with a
score based on the percentage of patients
who would recommend a service against
the percentage of patients who would not
recommend a service. New guidance to
support the Friends and Family Test was
published in July 2014.
FFT: inpatients
Overall, King’s wards have performed well
over the year with the Friends and Family
score for the trust reaching a high in
January of 96% of inpatients recommending
King’s as a place to be treated. This placed
Wards across all of King’s sites above both
the London and national average scores.
This performance continued into February
with the Trust exceeding the London
average and equalling the national average
score of 95%.
There have been some very good results
amongst wards across King’s. For
example, at Orpington Hospital, Bodington
Ward has achieved 100% satisfaction for
seven of the last twelve months. In
February, 99% of our neurosciences
inpatients at the Denmark Hill site said that
they would recommend King’s and, at the
PRUH, 100% of our paediatric inpatients
said they would recommend the PRUH.
Over the year, the number of survey
responses at the PRUH has been growing
and across the trust, we have met our
response rate targets linked to CQUIN
funding (Commissioning for Quality and
Innovation).
FFT: emergency departments
FFT performance in the emergency setting
is more variable against a background of
unprecedented activity and pressure on
emergency departments nationally.
At the Denmark Hill, scores have dropped
slightly over the year but remain two to
three percentage points below the national
average. At the PRUH, the year started
well with improving scores and reaching
parity with the DH site in July 2014 with a
score of 85% of patients who would
recommend the department. However,
scores deteriorated with a higher number of
patients than average who would not
choose to recommend emergency services
at the PRUH.
The trust remains on track to meet CQUIN
targets linked to FFT response rates.
FFT: maternity services
The maternity FFT is structured so that
women are given the opportunity to provide
feedback on care received at different
points along their maternity journey.
It is continuing to prove challenging to
achieve robust response rates, particularly
for the antenatal and community midwifery
stages. We have introduced new delivery
methods for obtaining feedback including
volunteer support and the use of iPads.
Overall, results are positive with King’s
performing well compared to other London
hospitals. The PRUH Oasis birthing unit, in
particular, has had very positive results over
the last year.
FFT: Outpatients
Friends and Family was launched in
outpatients as part of the overall trust How
are we doing? Outpatient survey. At the DH
site, the outpatient survey has been in place
for a number of years and the PRUH and
other Bromley sites went live on 1st October
2014.
The remainder of trusts nationally launched
FFT for outpatients and day case patients
on 1st April 2015 and results will be
published for all trusts later in the year.
A key challenge for us will be to gather good
numbers of surveys so that we can be
confident that the feedback we receive
represents the views of our outpatients.
Service improvements
Below are some examples of improvements
that have been introduced as a result of
feedback from our patients:
Our Child Health wards have started a
Health: ‘Shh noise at night campaign’ on
children’s wards to reduce noise on the
wards
Medical 4 ward at the PRUH has introduced
self-closing bins to reduce noise
disturbance for patients.
Surgical Wards 1 and 2 at the PRUH now
use King’s Volunteers to help patients
complete their ‘this is me’ document. At the
DH site, Coptcoat Ward have introduced a
staff rota for cleaning checks and on
Matthew Whiting, nurses now have a
presence on ward rounds.
At our Musculoskeletal Service based at
Queen Mary’s Sidcup, the team have
improved wait times in clinic by almost 15%.
They have also introduced whiteboards to
display any delays in Clinic so that patients
know how long they may have to wait if
there are delays.
As part of our work to improve discharge for
patients, we’ve put a number of actions in
place on some of our wards including, post
89
discharge phone calls to patients and a new
‘Home for Lunch’ leaflet.
Patient experience priorities
Detailed information about the work
undertaken this year around patient
experience quality priorities can be found in
the Quality Account on pages 103-190.
Patient experience reports continue to
provide integrated monthly data on
complaints, contacts with the Patient Advice
and Liaison Service (PALS) and the Friends
and Family Test survey.
King’s Volunteers
Our in–house hospital volunteering scheme
has gone from strength to strength this year.
The number of volunteers at our Bromley
sites has more than doubled since October
2013, and we now have a grand total of just
over 1,700 volunteers across all of our
hospital sites. Our Hospital 2 Home
scheme, which involves volunteers meeting
patients on the ward, assisting them through
the discharge process, and providing short
term befriending visits once they are at
home, has also continued to thrive.
To date, this scheme has performed 167
community visits and over 350 telephone
calls to vulnerable and elderly patients.
“The volunteer is a lovely young lady and so
helpful. It’s nice to know I haven’t been
forgotten after being sent home. I think all
hospitals should have this service. It really
makes my day” Patient discharged from
Annie Zunz Ward.
The volunteering service has launched
several new initiatives this year. Our Home
Hamper scheme, which began in November
2013 and has already received nearly 50
referrals, offers patients in need a small
food parcel to take home with them upon
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discharge. Our hampers are predominantly
targeted at those who have been long-term
inpatients and may not have much in their
cupboards upon return home, those who
are being discharged to a new home
environment, and those who face other
hardships.
To provide additional support to patients
whilst in hospital, we have also launched a
volunteer-led day club on Saturdays . Social
clubs seeks to provide stimulation and
alleviate boredom for inpatients who are
medically well enough to leave the wards.
The range of activities which patients have
the opportunity to participate in goes from
film afternoons to bingo sessions, to arts
and crafts and reminiscence activities.
Following a successful pilot at our Denmark
Hill site, our Home Hamper and social club
initiatives will be rolled out to the Princess
Royal Hospital over the course of the next
year.
Our volunteers have continued to have a
highly positive impact on patient experience.
Those who had access to a volunteer
between January 2013 and August 2014
scored the Trust on average 3.63 points
more highly on our Friends and Family Test
comparative to patients who did not.
Additionally, those with access to a
volunteer were 2% more ‘extremely likely’ to
recommend the Trust to friends and family.
concerns and problems, which last year
handled 8,363 enquiries, an activity
increase of 35% from 2013/14.
Responding to complaints
King’s received 586 complaints during
2014/15 concerning the Denmark Hill site
which is a 23% reduction on the number of
complaints received in 2013/14 (758). A
total of 399 complaints were made during
the reporting period concerning the Princess
Royal University Hospital and other sites in
Bromley for which King’s is now
responsible. This is an 8% reduction in
complaints from the previous year. As an
enlarged organisation, overall we recorded
985 for the year, a 17% reduction compared
to 2013/14.
Within year we made some changes to the
way we handle complaints from the point at
which they are received and this has
impacted on our activity levels particularly in
the second half of the year. We increased
our focus on dealing with complaints from a
service user perspective and wherever
possible found immediate support in
remedying problems and ensuring dialogue
is established between the complainant and
the service/clinical staff. This approach has
been positively received both by our
patients and staff, and complements the
established role of PALS in resolving
The profile of complaints has broadly
remained the same as in past years, in that
half of all our complaints relate to some
aspect of clinical treatment. Alongside
these, are concerns relating to outpatient
appointment arrangements, discharge
decisions, staff attitude and our
communication about care plans and
treatment. The organisational pressures on
inpatient beds due to emergency and
trauma care, impacted on the number of
complaints we received that concerned a
cancelled admission for elective surgery.
Just over 50% of complaints responded to
were upheld.
We invite complainants to tell us about their
experience in making a complaint and
review the results from this survey through
the Serious Complaints Committee, chaired
by a non-executive director, to continuously
assess our complaint handling and to
measure the impact of changes we have
made. Just over 100 members of staff
have attended training this year to support
their writing skills when responding to a
complaint.
As an organisation we welcome complaints
as a means of improving performance and
learning from complaints is ongoing and is
often linked with outcomes following clinical
incident investigations. Complainants and
patients have participated in meetings with
staff and also in listening events, patient
video stories, and contributed to a number
of general improvements across the
organisation.
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Stakeholder relations
The Board of Directors recognises the
importance of effective communication,
dialogue and engagement with a wide range
of stakeholders across a broad
geographical area which includes six local
authorities who scrutinise our services via
Health Overview and Scrutiny Committees
to which we report when consulting on
quality priorities or when potential changes
to the provision of services are proposed.
The Trust attends and engages with the
Health and Wellbeing Boards in order to
assist with informing commissioning
priorities and defining the strategic direction
of local health and social care services.
Throughout the year, the Trust holds a
series of stakeholder events to share
emerging thinking in relation to our strategic
development and options with Trust
membership and to ensure that the views of
governors and members are communicated
to the Board and are reflected in our work
going forward.
Through the year, King’s engages with local
Healthwatch in a number of ways.
Healthwatch take part in our annual Quality
Account Stakeholder events which bring
together key stakeholders to help us
develop and agree our quality priorities for
the coming year. In the last year, Lambeth
Healthwatch hosted a joint meeting for the
Healthwatch for Southwark, Lambeth and
Bromley with patients and members of the
public to discuss service reconfiguration
linked to King’s acquisition of the PRUH,
specifically elective orthopaedic surgery at
Orpington Hospital and elective
gynaecology services at the PRUH. These
meetings are part of our regular programme
of quarterly meetings with Healthwatch.
Healthwatch also attend our annual
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Stakeholder events held for both the
Denmark Hill and Bromley sites.
The Annual Members Meeting is a key
event in the King’s calendar and an
opportunity to communicate with members,
in addition to regular written communication
and events for members. A series of
community meetings are held annually to
enable members to feed into King’s annual
strategic planning process and to ensure
that the views of governors and members
are clearly communicated to the Board.
Southwark and Lambeth Integrated Care
King’s is committed to working with partners
across local boroughs to integrate services
at a local level to improve patient care. One
example of an on-going project which
involves working alongside key
stakeholders is Southwark and Lambeth
Integrated Care (SLIC).
King’s is a founder member of SLIC, along
with South London and Maudsley and Guy’s
and St Thomas’. SLIC is a movement for
change that aims to genuinely shift how
care services are delivered so that they are
coordinated around the needs of people,
treating mental health, physical health and
social care needs holistically.
SLIC is governed by a federation of the
leading commissioning and provider
organisations across Southwark and
Lambeth. This includes the two local
authorities, the two local clinical
commissioning groups, representation from
local medical committees, three foundation
trusts (encompassing acute and community
services and physical and mental health),
as well as the King’s Health Partners and
Guy’s and St Thomas’ Charity.
In practice SLIC has fulfilled two main
functions: it provides a neutral space where
partners come together to work through the
difficult practical challenges associated with
leading system transformation; and it
supports the rapid testing and
implementation of specific interventions
aimed at improving the value of care
received by the frail and elderly.
Work to date has built an ever deepening
shared understanding of the issues, a
commitment to action, and an
understanding of the options to reduce
avoidable emergency admissions, speed up
delays in discharge, improve mental and
physical health liaison, and reduce
admissions to residential care.
To make fundamental changes in the care
system, King’s will need to work closely with
commissioners and partners to transform
how care is commissioned, paid for and
provided. This work will:
 Identify if and how health and social
care budgets are brought together to
fund services for specified segments of
the population;
 Recommend different financial
mechanisms and incentives to help
providers focus on preventing avoidable
activity and providing care in the right
place at the right time; and
 Establish ways in which the various
providers can come together across the
full value-chain, either in formal or virtual
organisations and networks, to manage
contracts and sub-contracts for the
provision of coordinated care.
This type of transformation is well aligned
with the Call to Action endorsed by NHS
England, Monitor and the CQC.
However, it is widely recognised that such a
transformation will require a fundamental
change in the way that resources, including
people, buildings and infrastructure, are
utilised within the whole health economy.
Patient information Brochures
All King’s patient information, produced to
support consent, follows a set template to
ensure that all necessary information is
included and that it is written in jargon-free
English. Braille versions are available on
request, as are translations for those
patients whose first language is not English.
Brochures are available in printed formats,
on the hospital intranet for use by staff and
on the external website for download by
patients and carers.
Following the integration of Princess Royal
University Hospital (PRUH) in Oct 2013, we
began the process of replacing the online
patient information system at PRUH,
Orpington Hospital, Beckenham Beacon
and Queen Mary’s Hospital with that of
King’s. Working with staff at the sites we
have been able to update a significant
quantity of the brochures and will look to
complete this task by the end of 2015.
Key achievements
During the year we developed the Maternity
Records and Maternity Care Books to be
given our ladies expecting babies at King’s.
Maternity Records would combine all
documentation acquired during the stages
of pregnancy into one publication. This
would avoid loose sheets, different titled
booklets and scraps of paper and allow
notes to be written and added when
required. It would be light, robust and
durable as it needs to be carried by mums
and act as a reference to their journey to the
birth of their baby. The Maternity Care
Book aims to help
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Expectant mums make the right choices
before, during and after their pregnancy –
for them and their baby.
Both books are widely used and have been
very well received. They replace and
enhance Department of Health booklets
which had been phased out.
Websites
King’s is committed to providing online
information that is accessible to the widest
possible audience, regardless of technology
or ability, including disabled people, people
with visual impairments and those with
motor and cognitive disabilities. The King’s
website conforms to the World Wide Web
Consortium (W3C) Web Content
Accessibility Guidelines 2.0 at the AA
standard, making it more user friendly for
everyone.
Enhanced quality governance reporting
The Quality Account on pages 103-190
outlines King’s quality priorities and
processes for monitoring progress in
achieving them. In addition King’s Board of
Directors has regard for Monitor’s Quality
Governance Framework, principally through
the work of the Quality and Governance
Committee and its reporting committees
which focus on the three dimensions of
quality: patient outcomes, patient safety and
patient experience.
The reporting structures and processes for
the governance of quality are well
embedded across the Trust. These
processes operate across the organisation
to ensure that patient outcomes, patient and
organisational safety and patient experience
King’s is integrated within an existing and
established quality governance monitoring
framework and robust performance
management infrastructure.
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The Board of Directors continues to receive
a monthly performance report and
performance scorecard which provides up
to date information on key quality indicators
and highlighting current quality and safety
issues and action being taken. A suite of
other reports are received on a quarterly
basis including a comprehensive integrated
quality and governance report. This report
includes updates on quality priorities and
driving improvement across the quality
dimension. The Quality & Governance
Committee reviews the adequacy of and
progress against action plans.
More information about the Quality and
Governance Committee can be found on
page 72.
Further detail about King’s quality
governance processes can be found in the
Annual Governance Statement within the
annual accounts on pages 195-203.
A Representative Membership
A strategy for membership development is
incorporated within King’s Engagement and
Experience Strategy. It outlines the
approach to ensuring that it has a
membership reflective of local communities,
how the membership is involved in the work
of King’s and how King’s can make a
difference in the local community.
King’s membership is split into three
constituencies: public, patient and staff.
Public membership - anyone who is 16
years old or over and lives within the
London Boroughs of Lambeth, Southwark,
Bromley or Lewisham is entitled to become
a public member.
Patient membership - anyone who is 16
years old or over and lives outside the four
boroughs but has been a patient of King’s in
the last six years, or has been the carer of a
patient of King’s in the last six years, is
entitled to become a patient member.
Staff membership - All staff that have
employment contracts lasting more than 12
months are automatically opted into
membership. They have the option to opt
out should they wish to. King’s Volunteers
and full time employees of King’s
contractors are also eligible to become
members, though they have to opt in to
become a member.
In 2013/2014, in accordance with the
revised membership development strategy,
a target of maintaining a patient and public
membership of between 9,800 and 11,100
members was set.
King’s currently has 11,065 Patient and
Public Members and 10,966 staff members.
This totals as 22,031 Members across
King’s.
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King’s continues to work hard to ensure that
its membership is representative of the local
community, and takes steps to ensure that
membership is accessible to all who are
eligible, irrespective of age, gender, race or
social background. Demographics of the
membership are monitored using the King’s
membership database and any gaps can be
addressed with targeted recruitment.
King’s has focused on building Membership
engagement during the period.
An involved membership
A number of initiatives were undertaken to
involve members with activities at King’s.
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Regular publication of @King's
magazine to update members on news
and events, as well as opportunities to
get more involved, along with notification
of all Council of Governor activities;
Programme of Member Health talks on
public health and how services are
structured and delivered across both
acute sites at the DH and PRUH;
Member’s E-Bulletin is sent once a
month. This contains information about
upcoming Health Talks, involvement
events and opportunities and
information from HealthWatch partners.
A Members Survey was conducted over
the summer, 89% of respondents were
satisfied with their level of involvement
with King’s;
The Trust held two community events
for members to share the Trust’s
strategic plans for the future with the
membership and to give them an
opportunity to share their views with
King’s. One was held at Denmark Hill
and one in Bromley. 158 members
attended the two events.
The Annual Public Meeting again proved
popular with over 140 members and
around 50 members of staff and the
public attending. The evening began
with health checks including Blood
Pressure, Glucose and BMI and an
opportunity to look at information stands.
After the formal part Members were
invited to attend 3 different health
information seminars on the topics of
Ophthalmology, Dentistry and
Orthopaedics.
Members have continued to play a role
in improving the patient food service.
For the last four years members have
taken part in daily food service audits on
our wards at Denmark Hill and talked to
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patients about all aspects of the food
service.
Patient Led Assessments of the Care
Environment (PLACE). PLACE is a
collaboration between staff and
patient/member assessors, with
patients/members making make up at
least 50 per cent of the assessment
team. Governors, Members and
Healthwatch stakeholders were also
involved in this year’s PLACE
assessments both at the PRUH,
Denmark Hill and Orpington Hospitals.
Goldfish Bowl Events are an opportunity
for patients or carers to feedback to staff
members that have been involved in
their care about aspects that worked
well or could have been improved.
King’s is working with both Bromley and
Lambeth Colleges to engage with
younger members and the wider
community. Students have also
attended several of the Member health
talks
Members and Governors have attended
Dementia training to help them gather
important patient feedback on the
elderly care/ dementia wards.
Members and Governors have
continued to help on the wards at both
Denmark Hill and the PRUH helping
patients, especially on the elderly wards
complete feedback surveys about their
experiences.
King’s held its Open Day for the first
time on the Princess Royal University
Hospital site on Sunday 6 July 2014.
Governors engaged with the public
talking to them about the King’s,
Membership and the role of the
Governors. They also took short videos
stories about people’s experiences and
helped to sign up new Member’s. Over
1,500 Members, patients and members
of the public attended the event.
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A digest of the Trust Annual Report,
called the Annual Review, published in
the summer; and
Members’ section on the website with
useful up-to-date information, news and
more information on how they can get
involved.
Contacting the membership team
If you have any queries regarding
membership, please contact the
membership team:
Membership Office
King’s College Hospital
FREEPOST NAT 7343
London SE5 9BR
Email: [email protected]
Telephone: 020 3299 8785
IN FOCUS:
ALWAYS AIMING HIGHER
We have seen considerable
strengthening of research and
development activity at King’s
College Hospital in the past year,
in line with the National Institute
for Health Research (NIHR)
strategy and with best practice.
Our goal is to contribute fully to the
NIHR mission to support and
conduct leading-edge research
focused on the needs of patients,
their families and the public.
Through our research we strive to
improve the quality of the patient and
family experience in our services, offer
opportunities to receive the latest
therapies being tested in the NHS, if
patients and their families wish, and
improve the effectiveness and costeffectiveness of treatments we provide.
Progress in offering patients the
opportunity to be involved in
research
In the financial year 2014/15 Kings
College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
recruited 12,489 patients to NIHR
portfolio studies (both commercial and
academic). This is a 57% increase in
raw recruitment to NIHR portfolio studies
during the last year. There were 232
academic portfolio studies that recruited
at least one patient. Kings College
Hospital NHS Foundation Trust was
ranked in the top 10 performing Trusts in
England for raw recruitment numbers to
NIHR portfolio studies within the
2014/15 Financial Year.
This improvement in performance builds
on earlier progress. Kings College
Hospital NHS Foundation Trust have
steadily increased recruitment to NIHR
Portfolio studies in the last five years –
see figure – with a 290% increase in
annual recruitment from 2010/11
baseline to the current 14/15 recruitment
level. These studies provide excellent
opportunities for our patients to be
offered the best in research. Being
included in the NIHR portfolio is a quality
mark of research studies, as it shows
they have had sound external peer
review and are important to the NHS.
This is also good for our staff, as it
provides networks and links to the best
centres in the country. The studies boost
training, as trainee doctors and nurses,
are exposed, first hand, to the potential
therapies of tomorrow.
Working with commercial partners to
discover and test ways to improve care
for patients and families, Kings College
Hospital NHS Foundation Trust opened
75 commercial studies during 2014/15.
64 of these studies were NIHR portfolio
badged. We increased our recruitment
into NIHR commercial portfolio studies a total of 481 patients were recruited in
2014/15 financial year. The graph below
highlights this excellent commercial
recruitment performance, and the
particular improvement seen in 2014/15.
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Kings College Hospital NHS Foundation
Trust also participated in 59 academic
non portfolio studies (not student) and
63 student projects in the last financial
year.
However, a key challenge for Kings
College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
for the future is to offer our patients and
families the opportunity to take part in
more intervention studies. These are the
studies that test new treatments, such
as medicines or models of care. This is
critical for advancing health care. Our
strategy going forward is to prioritise and
strengthen our support for the NIHR
portfolio intervention studies (noncommercial and commercial), and widen
the opportunities for patients and
families to take part, if they wish.
Meeting our targets
A vital component of delivering research
is to ensure that studies are opened and
conducted efficiently and safely. The
Research Office plays a major role in
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helping this process, advising staff and
the requirements of research and
helping to monitor studies. The NIHR
sets targets on how quickly the
Research Office has to process studies,
and also how quickly investigators have
to recruit the first patient. We have
considerably improved how we meet
NIHR targets in the last year and are
now proud to be among the upper
quartile of performing large trusts in
England. In the latest 70 day report (Q3)
Kings had improved performance from
the previous quarter by 19%. Kings
College Hospital has a 4 day median for
obtaining NHS permissions - a regional
top three performance.
Progress with Patient and Public
Engagement
Patient and public engagement is a core
part of how we wish to plan and conduct
research. We would like to highlight here
one of our exemplar projects – CRISP.
CRISP is a Community for Research
Involvement and Support for People with
Parkinson’s (CRISP). It is a patient and
public involvement group in line with
INVOLVE, an NIHR government
initiative to empower patients and the
public to involve their views in research
and actively take part in translating
current research into treatment.
Hosted at King’s College Hospital and
led by Professor Ray Chaudhuri,
CRISP, reviews, advises and enables
“real life” research in Parkinson’s (see
picture).
Research Highlights
The most important aspect of research
is how it discovers new treatments, tests
ways to improve care for patients and
their families, or increases our
understanding of the conditions. It is
impossible to include all the aspects of
our achievements in this – but below we
provide some highlights.
Future Developments
In a time of economic constraint,
research and development become
even more important. If the NHS is to
meet the challenges of the ageing
population, the growth in chronic
disease – all good challenges brought
about by advances in treatment, care
and health – it must improve the
effectiveness and cost effectiveness of
care. Only research can do this properly.
Therefore, at King’s we will play our role
in this, working with our partners,
especially colleagues within our
Academic Health Science Centre, King’s
Health Partners, with local hospitals,
and across King’s College London, to
discover and provide the very best
innovation and research to improve the
health, care and wellbeing of our local
population.
prioritise the high quality NIHR portfolio
adopted commercial and noncommercial studies, to ensure that we
can provide the very best. We will foster
the development of our clinical
investigators and the many research
nurses and support staff who contribute
to these programmes. We will increase
patient and public involvement in our
studies, to improve the quality. We will
also ensure that we have a financial
model to deliver high quality research
through support, grants and money
awarded from the NIHR, research
councils, charities, our commercial
partners, the university and its partners,
as well as the individual donors and
philanthropists, who all do so much to
improve patients and family care.
PARKINSONS DISEASE
King’s led the multicentre European Collaborative
study (EuroInf), which was successfully completed
and published. It was the first study of its kind to
compare Apomorphine and Duodopa treatments for
advanced Parkinson’s and their effect on non-motor
symptoms of Parkinson’s.
Using the same European collaboration network
(EUROPAR), a study assessing prevalence and
characteristics of Early Morning Offs (EMO) in
Parkinson’s was completed and published, including
320 patients and 9 international centres.
Clinically the team have seen their status as an
International Centre of Excellence being renewed,
and are now part of the Parkinson’s UK Excellence
Network owing to their innovative care delivery.
We will ensure that the research office,
that supports our investigators and
studies, provides the very best service,
efficiently and effectively. We will
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INNOVATING @KINGS – from bench to bedside
REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH AND
CHILDBIRTH
Kings College Hospital NHS Foundation
Trust is the top recruiting Trust in England
in the NIHR Reproductive Health and
Childbirth Specialty Group. This is
predominantly due to the First Trimester
cfDNA Testing Study (Clinical
Implementation of Cell Free DNA Testing
in Maternal Blood in the First-trimester of
Pregnancy) led by Professor Kypros
Nicolaides which has recruited a total of
6,265 patients in the 2014/215 financial
year.
MALIGNANT HAEMATOLOGY
The King’s haematology research unit has
played a major part in the evaluation of new
treatments for chronic lymphocytic leukaemia
(CLL), the commonest blood cancer in the
western world. Over the last 3 years a total of
28 patients have been recruited to these
studies with impressive results (e.g.: N Engl J
Med. 2014;371:213–223). Many of the
patients entered into these studies had failed
multiple lines of treatment
and would otherwise have had a very poor
prognosis. Kings were recently the first site
outside of the US to recruit to a phase 2 study
of ACP 196, a novel Bruton’s tyrosine kinase
inhibitor and are currently the highest
recruiters in Europe to this trial.
CLINICAL RESEARCH FACILITY
Our fully functional Clinical Research
Facility (CRF) provides considerable
improvements in how we offer treatment
related studies to patients and perform
investigations. The Clinical Research
Facility supports over 100 studies. It has
highly specialised equipment and projects
range from mental health disorders to
diabetes.
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WORLD FIRST PROJECTS
We have opened several world first
projects. For example our new trial OPTCARE Neuro. This NIHR funded
trial is a unique collaboration between
neurology and palliative care services,
to test the early palliative care
integrated with neurology for patients.
The Cicely Saunders Institute of
King’s College London and King’s
College Hospital is leading this 5
centre study involving King’s,
Nottingham, Cardiff, Liverpool,
Brighton.
INNOVATING @KINGS – from bench to bedside
BETTER QUALITY OF LIFE, EVEN IN
THE FACE OF RESPIRATORY
DISEASE
King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
pioneered a new Breathlessness Support
Service (BSS). Refractory breathlessness is
found in many conditions, such as respiratory
disease, heart failure and cancer, is very
distressing and often causes hospital
admission.
The service was developed collaborating
between palliative care, respiratory medicine,
physiotherapy and occupational therapy. It
aimed to give patients with severe refractory
breathlessness a single point of contact where
their breathlessness could be assessed and
supported.
The BSS was evaluated in a randomised
controlled trial recruiting 105 local patients, with
funding won from NIHR, and published in The
Lancet Respiratory Medicine (2014;2(12):97987). The BSS significantly improved quality of
life, in particular mastery of breathlessness, and
significantly improved survival for those who
received it, compared to best standard care.
Importantly, the research also found that the
BSS did not increase overall costs to the NHS,
social services or patients and families.
Expansion of a unique research team working
across many acute specialties – critical care,
anaesthetics, injuries and accidents and
trauma.
The research team are currently supporting an
increased portfolio of 34 studies - both
academic and commercial.
Extended research staff cover (from 8am8pm) has resulted in increased recruitment,
particularly to complex, time critical studies.
Since July 2014, 42% of recruitment to Crash
3 and Halt It studies has come through
extended research cover to 8pm.
King’s is In an ideal position to take advantage
of the current £60million investment in critical
care which will result in Kings having the most
ICU beds in the UK
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INNOVATING @KINGS – from bench to bedside
INVESTIGATING THE BEST WAY TO
MAKE TRIED AND TESTED
TREATMENTS AND SERVICES
ROUTINELY AVAILABLE
The NIHR supports the South London
Collaboration for Leadership in Applied
Research and Care (CLAHRC), for which
we are the host lead Trust. The CLAHRC
aids many clinical areas, as it aims to help
translate and implement the best research
findings into practice. The new Professor
of Implementation Science, Professor Nick
Sevdalis, has now joined us and the
CLAHRC has established a centre for
implementation science. Many projects
are underway across South London
including: diabetes care, stroke, palliative
care, infection, maternal and women’s
health, alcohol and public health
(http://www.clahrcsouthlondon.nihr.ac.uk/). The CLAHRC is
holding open meetings so that local people
can influence the research, as well as
working with commissioners of services.
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DIABETES
Diabetes Research at King’s College Hospital
was honoured this year by being awarded 3 of
the named lectureships at the annual Diabetes
UK conference – the Mary McKinnon Lecture
was given by Carol Gayle and Khalida Ismail
representing 3 Dimensions of Care for Diabetes
(3DFD), an innovative programme harnessing
medical, mental health and social support to
improve diabetes outcomes. The Arnold Bloom
lecture was given by Mike Edmonds, talking
about new treatments for diabetic foot disease
and the Dorothy Hogdkin Lecture was given by
Peter Jones, a collaborator of our human islet
transplantation for intractable hypoglycaemia
programme.
The year also saw the conclusion of the NIHR
Programme Grant “Non-pharmacological
interventions to improve diabetes outcomes”,
including the highly successful piloting of a new
intervention to reduce severe hypoglycaemia
risk in the most vulnerable patients; completion
of a detailed metabolic phenotyping of recently
diagnosed type 2 diabetes in the Black West
African population of South London, and the
start of a new collaboration around both islet
transplantation and diabesity with Dresden and
Rome. The group published over 20 papers in
2014 from established work in hypoglycaemia
avoidance, to use of technologies in glucose
sensing and insulin delivery, diabetic foot
disease and the new work in metabolic surgery.
Quality
Account
King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
Quality Account 2013/14
Presented as part of the “Annual Report and Accounts 2014-2015” to
Parliament pursuant to the Health Act 2009 and supporting regulations, e.g.
the National Health Service (Quality Accounts) Regulations 2010 and
Amendments Regulations 2011, 2012 and 2013.
Part 1: Statement on quality from
the chief executive of the NHS
Foundation Trust
King’s continues to put quality and safety at
the forefront of everything that we do. Our
values are deeply embedded in our culture
and we will ensure they remain so. Over the
last 18 months, we have asked staff at all our
sites, through various surveys and listening
events, what they think about working at
King’s. One of the things staff told us was that
they want to see us promote positive
behaviours and performance. So now, we are
taking the next step by introducing ‘My
Promise’: aspirational examples of how we
want everyone at King’s to genuinely live our
values.
My Promise is linked to the King's Values, and
guides us when we have to consider the
feelings of others and use our judgement to
make difficult decisions. As an organisation
which continues to develop and grow we do
not underestimate the ongoing pressure on
our staff and aiming for high staff engagement
and compassionate leadership as everyday
business will be an integral part of our Trust
strategy
We do not under-estimate the continued
challenges associated with our acquisition of
parts of the former South London Healthcare
Trust and the financial status of our
organisation. Acquisition and integration work
continues and we have demonstrable success
stories. In April this year, we had our planned
CQC inspection and the organisation rose to
the challenge and initial comments from
inspectors praised our warmth and welcome.
The next year will be challenging but if we
continue to work together as well as we have
done over the last 12 months, I am confident
that we will achieve the necessary changes
and continue to improve the quality of care
across the boroughs we serve.
Quality Priorities
Our stakeholder engagement around the
setting of quality priorities this year has been
carried out across two patient catchment
areas; we have had discussions with key
stakeholders representing Bromley in addition
to Lambeth and Southwark, to reflect our
presence at the PRUH and other new sites.
In 2013/14 we chose 6 very ambitious quality
priorities. Decreasing our number of inpatient
falls was achieved and whilst we have seen
improvements in the remaining 5 areas, 12
months has not been long enough to see the
amount of improvement we would like so we
will be continuing with 5 of last year’s priorities
Our quality priorities for 2015/16, as devised
and agreed with local stakeholder groups
include:
 Maximising King’s contribution towards
preventing disease e.g. smoking and
alcohol
 Improving the care of patients with hip
fracture
 Improving experience and coordination of
discharge
 Improving the experience of cancer
patients
 Medication Safety
 Safer Surgery
There are a number of inherent limitations in
the preparation of Quality Accounts which
may affect the reliability or accuracy of the
data reported. These include:
 Data is derived from a large number of
different systems and processes. Only
some of these are subject to external
assurance, or included in internal audits
programme of work each year.

Data is collected by a large number of
teams across the trust alongside their
main responsibilities, which may lead to
differences in how policies are applied or
interpreted. In many cases, data reported
reflects clinical judgement about individual
cases, where another clinician might have
107
reasonably have classified a case
differently.

National data definitions do not
necessarily cover all circumstances, and
local interpretations may differ.

Data collection practices and data
definitions are evolving, which may lead to
differences over time, both within and
between years. The volume of data means
that, where changes are made, it is
usually not practical to reanalyse historic
data.
We further recognise that there are limitations
around our data sets around referral to
treatment targets and diagnostic waits and
these were highlighted as part of the external
audit findings but also in an earlier review we
commissioned or internal auditors to carry out.
There were some stark revelations about our
data tracking and the evidence we maintain
and the we now have plans to redress these.
The Trust was recently granted a reporting
holiday so it can address its data issues and
the accuracy of the information in its systems.
Our governors also chose 6-week diagnostics
waits as the Trust was an outlier to be tested
as part of the external audit review. It has
since become evident that there are some
ongoing training requirements to address
what are very simple clerical errors which
impact the validity our data keeping.
The Trust and its Board have sought to take
all reasonable steps and exercise appropriate
due diligence to ensure the accuracy of the
data reported, but recognises that it is
nonetheless subject to the inherent limitations
noted above.
Following these steps, to my knowledge, the
information in the document is accurate with
the exception of the matters identified in
respect of the 18-week referral to treatment
incomplete pathway.
108
Structure of this report
The following report summarises our
performance and improvements against the
quality priorities and objectives we set
ourselves for 2014-2015. It also outlines those
we have agreed for the coming year (20152016). The Trust acquired the new sites and
services on 01 October 2013 and we are not
able to fully consolidate all data due to
ongoing Information technology developments
therefore PRUH and Denmark Hill site data
are included separately where appropriate.
We have outlined our quality priorities and
objectives for 2015-2016 under the same
headings: patient safety, clinical effectiveness
and patient experience. We have detailed how
we decided upon the priorities and objectives
and how we will achieve and measure our
performance against them. The regulated
Statements of Assurance are included in this
part of the report.
We have also provided other information to
review our overall quality performance against
key national priorities and national key
standards. This includes the 2014/15
requirement to report against a core set of
indicators relevant to the services we provide;
using a standardised statement set out in the
NHS (Quality Accounts) Amendment
Regulations 2013. We have also published
the Statements from Clinical Commissioning
Groups, NHS England, Health Overview and
Scrutiny Committees, and Healthwatch that
outline their response to this Quality Account.
Having had due regard for the contents of this
statement to the best of my knowledge, the
information contained in the following Quality
Account is accurate.
To the best of my knowledge, the information
contained in the following Quality Account is
accurate.
Signed:
Roland Sinker
Acting Chief Executive
Date: 26 May 2015
109
Part 2: Priorities for improvement and statements of assurance from the Board
Our 2014/15 Quality Priorities and Objectives
Patient Experience
Clinical Effectiveness
The table below summaries the six priorities for quality improvements the Trust focused on in 2014/15. These priorities were ratified by the Board of
Directors in February 2014 our Board of Directors reflecting on the comments and feedback we had from our governors, stakeholders and employees.
110
Priority
Key Objectives (Outline)
Measure
1. Working to reduce
preventable ill-health

Increase assessment of patients to identify whether they want help with reducing the likelihood of harm
caused through smoking and alcohol.
Increase the number of staff trained to provide brief interventions for smoking and alcohol.
Increase the number of referrals for specialist smoking and alcohol support.
Increase the number of smoking ‘quitters’.
Identify opportunities to promote exercise and healthy eating.
Outcome/
Process




2. Improve outcomes of
patients following hip
fracture






Improve pain relief.
Reduce time before surgery.
Increase physiotherapy to help people recover sooner.
Reduce length of stay in hospital.
Increase the number of patients who are discharged to their own home.
Increase the % of patients who have a bone health and falls assessment, and thereby reduce the
likelihood that patients will fall and incur further injury in the future.
Outcome/
Process
3. Improving experience
and coordination of
discharge: elderly, renal
and surgery




Reduction in ‘unsafe’ discharges as reported by primary care, community and social work colleagues.
Improvement on 2013-14 discharge audit results (elderly care, surgery and renal).
Positive qualitative feedback from stakeholders and users.
Increase of 5 points in ‘How are we doing?’ survey combined scores for questions relating to discharge
and reduction in comments about the discharge process.
Better experience for elderly and vulnerable patients with timely discharges and more seamless
transfers and cross agency working.
Outcome/
Process

RAG
Priority
Key Objectives (Outline)

Patients and their families receiving better information and explanations in regard, to the discharge
process, medications and any ongoing concerns they may have.

Process/
Outcome




Increase the number of clinicians who have undertaken the National Advanced Communication Course
across the organisation.
Ensure patient have a Holistic Needs Assessment (HNA) undertaken.
Patients are receiving appropriate information at the right time.
More patients having improved access to the trust e.g. Cancer Helpline.
Provide education for ward nurses to improve their understanding of cancer patients’ needs.
5. Improving the
identification and
management of patients at
risk of falling in hospital



Reduction in falls with moderate and major to <3 per month.
Reduction in falls by age band.
Appropriately assessed pre fall.
Process/
Outcome
6. Safer surgery



Zero never events.
Effective use of surgical checklist.
Completion & situational awareness.
Process/
Outcome
4. Improving the experience
of cancer patients
Patient Safety
Measure
14/15 PRIORITY 1:
RAG
Working to reduce preventable ill-health
What we aimed to do
 Increase assessment of patients to identify
whether they want help with reducing the
likelihood of harm caused through smoking and
alcohol
What we achieved
Over 80% of patients are screened for smoking and harmful alcohol use, and then given evidence-based
brief advice and interventions, in the acute surgical and medical units plus other key wards at Denmark Hill
(DH) and the Princess Royal University Hospital (PRUH), and this is being rolled out to our maternity
services.

Increase the number of staff trained to provide
brief interventions for smoking and alcohol.
Over 230 clinical and support staff have been trained in how to offer very brief advice and onward referral to
smoking cessation and referrals for smoking cessation have tripled in the first 3 quarters of this year
compared to 2013/14.

Increase the number of referrals for specialist
smoking and alcohol support.
The Denmark Hill site went 100% smoke-free on 12 January with PRUH set to follow suit shortly.
111

Increase the number of smoking ‘quitters’.

Identify opportunities to promote exercise and
health eating.
14/15 PRIORITY 2:
improve outcomes of patients following hip fracture
What we aimed to do
 Improve pain relief.
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We have worked with the providers of the hospitals’ food to ensure that menus are healthy and they have
explained to us how they are reducing salt, have eradicated the use of trans fats and are providing
improved information to support patients and staff in making healthier choices.

Reduce time before surgery.

Increase physiotherapy to help people recover
sooner.

Reduce the length of stay in hospital.

Increase the number of patients who are
discharged to their own home.

Increase the proportion of patients who have a
bone health and falls assessment, and thereby
reduce the likelihood that patients will fall and
incur further injury in the future.
What we achieved
The key improvement actions for 2014-15 have been on the Denmark Hill site, and:
 More people are having their surgery within 36 hours of arriving at hospital.
 Post-operative pain relief has improved.
 Average time to discharge home from the orthopaedic ward is 3 days shorter.
 All our patients get a falls assessment.
 96% of people are getting geriatric assessments within 72 hours.
Denmark Hill’s performance in achieving all 9 nationally-identified criteria of best practice has improved
significantly in the past year:
 Q1: 28.3%
 Q2: 40.63%
 Q3: 45.65%
Areas in which there is still work to do include:
 Physiotherapy support.
 Further improve time to surgery.
 Improve along the entire care pathway at both of our acute hospital sites, DH and PRUH.
14/15 PRIORITY 3: Improving experience and coordination of discharge: All elderly care wards, renal inpatient wards and
surgical wards
What we aimed to do
Increase of 5 points for ‘How are we doing?’
combined scores for questions relating to
discharge and reduction in negative comments
about the discharge process.
What we achieved
DENMARK HILL SITE
How are we doing evaluation:
113
To support further improvement in patient experience we also:
 Piloted a day after discharge telephone call
The scripts for the first 6 months have now been analysed and the data will be used to feedback to staff and
action plan for further improvements. The following questions are asked:
 How are you feeling since you left hospital yesterday?
 Did we give you any medication to take home with you? Are you experiencing any problems at all?
 Is there anything I can explain about your medication?
 Do you have a follow-up appointment with us in outpatients? Are you happy that you know when the
appointment is?
 If you have any further questions over the next few days do you know who to contact?
 Is there anything else you would like to ask me at all?
114

Did you find this conversation useful? Was it helpful being called after you were discharged home?
Thematic analysis demonstrated that the majority of patient’s had a good experience in hospital and
appreciated the phone calls. An example of one ward, Mathew Whiting (orthopaedics), results are below:
Safer and better experience for elderly and
vulnerable patients with timely discharges and
more seamless transfers and cross-agency
working measured by decrease in quality
alerts/adverse incidents.
Responses and queries contribute to overarching themes providing the ward managers areas to develop and
improve with staff when planning discharge and providing information to patients:
Use of supporting agencies

Hospital to Home volunteer service:
This is a new service launched over the last year over specific wards initially but service is expanding as
more volunteers are recruited and trained.
 The Hospital to Home service has now performed;
115



140 community visits to patients post-discharge
Assisted 51 unique patients
Made over 250 phone calls to patients post-discharge
Whilst the Hospital to Home scheme is predominantly a befriending service, our volunteers have helped
patients do the following with many other things. For example, helping with rent arrears, arranging
appointments with other services in addition to onward referrals to other agencies such as SAIL and stroke
care
The Home Hamper Scheme is a volunteer-led initiative to provide small food parcels to patients discharged
from hospital. This service will receive referrals for any patient identified as having a need by ward staff,
particularly targeting those who are vulnerable either due to age, social isolation or homelessness. All food
has been charitably donated and this service is cost-neutral to the Trust.

Medihome
Increasing usage with associated increase in saved bed days and good engagement from our quality
account wards
116

Homeless team
A Multi-Disciplinary team based across KCH and GSTT, with a SLaM service launching in January 2015. At
KCH, a needs assessment was completed in December 2013 and the service was launched in January
2014.
We have had just over 500 referrals in one year, with 183 of these referrals coming from A&E/CDU.
Discharge coordination for this group of patients is often complex but the team have helped to manage this
and avoid unnecessary readmission. Many had extremely complex immigration status. The team have
helped to register patients with GPs, engage with primary care (including nursing clinics) and held a number
of network meetings around frequent attenders at A&E, as well as assisting with housing interventions and
linking people with social care, legal aid and the voluntary sector.
A new transfer of care programme has been established on the Denmark Hill site to enhance the discharge
process and patient experience in relation to hospital discharges. Part of the programme is building better
117
communications and relationships with community partners- in this respect a Safer Faster Compassionate
Discharge event was held in November which was very well attended by hospital staff and community
partners. In addition work progressing to enhance the information provided to staff about discharge partners
and processes which includes updating Kings web and ward based resource folders.

Governance
Community services are based within our partner trust Guys and St. Thomas’s and historically there was no
robust governance system to ensure incident reports around discharge were being investigated and learnt
from effectively
KCH and GSTT partners have now agreed:
 GSTT to develop a clear way for identifying and collating all discharge adverse incidents (AIs)
supported by the GSTT governance team.
 These AIs will then be passed to a central point at KCH who will put these onto the KCH AI system
(as appropriate).
 These AIs will then be processed through the normal governance channels for investigation.
 On a monthly basis a report will be supplied examining lessons learned, themes and actions which
can be shared with GSTT.
 The same report will also be used to highlight and action themes at the Out of Hospital meeting.
Patients and their families receiving better
information and explanations about the discharge
process, medications and any ongoing concerns
they may have.
Discharge coordinators and the MDT ensuring that they are entering discharge planning information on to the
discharge summary for complex patients. This provides valuable information to GP’s patients, their carers
and families.
Launch of the ‘Leaving Hospital’ discharge leaflet in January 2015 which is mandatory to be provided for all
patients being discharged. The leaflet provides valuable information about who to contact if they have any
issues or concerns including: their estimated date of discharge, how to prepare for leaving the hospital,
information about their medications, equipment and social services contacts.
Launch of Medicines Information for Patients service: This is a web-based subscription service which
provides bespoke information leaflets on medicines in easily-understandable language. It is available to all
staff.
118
Improvements in discharge audit results. For
2014/15, we will use the same tool to be able to
see improvement but will plan to improve the
audit tool to give more detail going forward.
Initial audits were conducted between February and May of 2014- targeting elderly care, renal and surgery.
These audits demonstrated the need to improve compliance with use of the discharge checklist, providing
information to patients and GP’s about their discharge plans, and ensuring the community received the right
referrals. Wards have action plans and have had support to improve the quality of discharge planning for
patients, under 5 key headings: Discharge checklist, discharge summaries, Leaflets/written information,
transfer letters/referral letters, verbal/written communication.
Repeat audits demonstrate improvements:
SURGERY:
 Significant improvement in the issuing of patient leaflets with regard to their conditions and treatment.
 Significant improvement in the staff educating patients and providing written information regarding
their medications.
 Improvement in the use of the discharge checklist- but this will require further action plans .
*Of note many patients in the data set did not require a district nurse or use of the wound care plan
119



Significant improvement in the utilization of the discharge checklist- * note none of the patients
audited required the complex discharge checklist to be completed
Significant improvement in the issuing of patient leaflets with regard to their conditions and treatment
Significant improvement in the staff educating patients and providing written information regarding
their medications
RENAL
In addition to this work there has been continued effort to make day after discharge phone calls to patients
which although not recognized in this audit tool- further enhances the discharge experience for patients
leaving your wards
120
HEALTHCARE OF THE AGING UNITS (DENMARK HILL)
 Improvement in the evidence that patients were being given leaflets with regards to their treatment
and conditions.
 Improvement in the evidence that there was a discussion and/or written information given to patients
regarding their medications.
 Needs to be further action planning regarding the use of the discharge checklist as usage has
declined rather than improved.
121
PRINCESS ROYAL UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL SITE
Discharge improvements remain a high priority at the PRUH. there are many work streams associated with
improvements. Early audit information carried out via the Commit 2 Care programme has highlighted that the
majority of wards are flagging as RED. The approach to this audit is to look at written evidence from the
Nursing and Medical Notes, also set patient questions around their involvement with planning discharge and
behind involved in the decision to discharge. The introduction of Medihome in December has had little impact
on the wards due to capacity of the team and the criteria of patients’ needs further work. The number of
discharge co-ordinators within the PRUH site has now increased and currently in a transition phase in which
a clear role definition is being worked up.
122
14/15 PRIORITY 4: Improving the experience of cancer patients
What we aimed to do
Patients continue to highlight a number of areas
where we need to make improvements including:
 How we communicate;
 Lack of access to key staff such as the Clinical
Nurse Specialist and Doctors;
 The information that we provide regarding any
proposed clinical care and the support available;
 Involving patients in decisions about their care
and ensuring that they understand their care
plan; and
 Lack of confidence and trust in ward nursing
staff.
What we achieved

30 clinical staff (Consultants, AHPs and CNSs) undertook the National advanced communication skills
training.

A Full time welfare advice service solely for cancer patients commenced across both sites in November.

The Macmillan Information centre attained the maximum excellent quality rating in the Macmillan
Quality Environment inspection in January.

The number of patients supported via the Macmillan Information Centre continued to increase
( increase of 78% since 2012 with 575 attendances in Nov 2014).

The Trust’s cancer helpline (9-5 Mon – Fri service) was used more extensively and roll out to the PRUH
site commenced following the introduction of PIMs at the PRUH.

>30 % increase in the number of HNAs undertaken by the CNS teams, with designated HNA clinics
undertaken weekly at the Macmillan Information Centre.

A series of semi-structured interviews were undertaken as part of a listening in action exercise. Further
areas for improvement were identified and actions implemented.

Patient information leaflets were revamped.

An annual programme of internal peer review for each MDT was commenced with MDTs being held to
account for the patient experience.

A review and improvement of the oral chemotherapy patient pathway was undertaken with all patients
now having chemo nurse review and support.
123
14/15 PRIORITY 5: Reducing the number of falls in hospital for patients
What we aimed to do
Reduce the number of inpatient falls
Review the falls risk assessment documentation to
ensure it is fit for purpose and that the same
approach to falls risk is consistent across sites
Make falls prevention training mandatory for all
nursing staff.
Progress in recruitment process of a pool of staff
who will be available to provide immediate 1:1 care
to patients who are deemed at high risk of falls.
Develop falls metrics (such as injurious patient falls
per 1000 bed days by age range, patient falls by
ward by month) to enable tracking of performance at
Trust, Divisional and ward level.
Review the root causes of moderate and serious
patient falls at the Safer Care Forum to identify
common themes and develop safety improvements.
What we achieved
Rate of falls per 1000 bed days has reduced at DH & PRUH from 5.3 and 6.7 (Oct-Dec 13) to 4.8 and 5.7
(Oct-Dec 14) respectively. Patient falls with moderate harm (or above) reduced from 36 to 25 (DH) and
increased from 35 to 40 (PRUH). The reduction in falls cross-site occurred against an increase in activity
and patient acuity. In 2014, there were 289 fewer patient falls at DH and 160 fewer patient falls at PRUH
compared to 2013.
“Specials” team to assist with 1:1 nursing at DH - phase 2 recruitment underway (phase 3 to be completed
by April 15). “Specials” risk assessment developed and currently being piloted. RN nursing levels reviewed
& increased cross-site.
Safer Care Forum is used effectively to triangulate safety data and identify areas where improvement work
can be done, for example, medical wards have a multi-disciplinary working group to look at fundamentals of
dignified care to decrease falls and toileting related harms – impact not available until mid-2015.
Training:
 Improved falls prevention training rates amongst nursing staff through continued face-to-face training by
Falls Team, promotion of e-learning training and development of an e-learning “app”. Falls training is
,mandatory and percentage of staff trained has gone from March 2014 – 78% to March 2015 – 86%.
Improving Documentation:
 Reviewed and updated inpatient nursing documentation and now have consistent use of falls risk
assessments.
Leadership & Engagement:
 Extending Executive Nursing leadership & engagement to additional wards in 2015/16.
 Improve patient engagement through rollout of Falls Passport across sites.
Benchmark Performance:
 Benchmarked KCH performance against comparable Trusts according to Shelford methodology.
 Rollout of ward accreditation scheme (Commit to Care) at DH
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14/15 PRIORITY 6: Safer Surgery
What we aimed to do
Increase assessment of patients to identify and
develop a standard operating procedure for SSC use
at King’s.
Develop an audit tool and audit programme to
assess the quality of SSC use across all surgical
environments.
Audit effectiveness of policy revisions from 13/14
and compliance.
Ensure all relevant policies and procedures are in
date or reviewed.
What we achieved
Draft policy currently being discussed by the Safer Surgery Improvement Group (SSIG) with a view to
publication in April 2015.
Annual full site audit was completed July – Sept 2014. A request has been submitted for funding for 4 KCL
students to undertake the audit again in Summer 2015. A Theatre Audit Nurse has also been appointed by
CCTD and she is undertaking regular audit. The anonymous survey has is also being re-done across all
sites including all interventional areas. The SSIG meeting has now been expanded to include the PRUH,
Orpington and QMS sites. A PRUH Surgical Safety Lead has been identified.
Both the surgical count and surgical site marking policy have been reviewed and revised in response to
incidents via the Safer Surgery Improvement Group.
Audits have covered both the quantitative (completion of checklist) and qualitative (quality of checks)
components of the use of the SSC.
Improve the standard of completion of SSC.
Empower staff need to challenge SSC noncompliance.
Implement learning from Root Cause Analysis of
never events in 13/14
Video indicating support from Medical Director and Chief Nurse shown at theatre mornings and Mortality
meetings. Surgical Safety Screen saver and Poster Campaign. Memo from the Medical Director and
Director of Nursing to all staff. Training re: Never Events and reporting incidents occurs regularly at theatre
audit mornings.
Conduct monthly audits of SSC compliance (as per
audit tool and programme above) and publish
results on monthly divisional scorecards.
Action plans from the Never Events continue to be reviewed on a monthly basis at the SSIG. Where Trust
wide pre-emptive action in other areas/specialties is identified, the group oversees actions in relation to this.
This learning was also shared with KHP colleagues at a Safety Connections Conference.
Extend audit tool for evaluation of pre-operative
process (which has been successfully trialed in
vascular surgery) to other surgical specialties.
It has not been possible to include the qualitative compliance audit data in the divisional scorecards yet.
Resources to undertake monthly surveillance of each interventional area to be identified.
Develop a surgical safety website on Kwiki.
A pre-assessment working group has been set up, led by Divisional Manager for CCTD to standardise and
improve our pre-operative assessment processes.
125
Continue to monitor surgical specialty compliance
with SSC via presentation at the Safer Surgery
Improvement Group.
Develop an electronic SSC on the theatre system
(Galaxy) ready for pilot by the March 2015.
Surgical Safety Website has been established. It includes links to relevant policies and learning from local
never events.
There is a monthly schedule for specialty feedback. This has been re-prioritised based on findings from the
2014 SSC Audit.
There has been no further progress on the development of an electronic SSC. Work on standardising the
approach to SSC on all sites has been prioritised. Once standardised across multi-site specialties, then
electronic options will be re-visited.
126
Our 2015/16 Quality Priorities and
Objectives
This section of the Quality Report summarises
our patient safety, clinical effectiveness and
patient experience objectives for 2015/16,
how these were developed, and how these
will be achieved and measured.
The six priorities for quality improvements the
Trust will take forward in 2015/16 are outlined
below. These priorities were ratified by the
Board of Directors in February 2015.
The Trust takes a holistic approach to
developing its quality priorities and
accordingly the Board ensures it reflects on
the comments and feedback our governors,
stakeholders and employees.
In a busy acute hospital like King’s, there are
always several quality improvements going on
at any given time. The wider range of
improvements to patient care happening
across King’s will not stop or slow down, but
we have honed a clear set of priority
objectives. These act like a set of promises
that everyone at King’s commits to meet or
exceed this year. From our various
consultations, we know they are clear and
meaningful to you as our key stakeholders.
We would like you to support our agenda for
continuously improving our high quality patient
care and to hold us to account.
The process for developing priorities involved
collaborating and communicating with our
stakeholders in the following ways.
A long-list of priorities were identified with the
executive chairs and leads of each of the
committees which focus on the three
dimensions of quality, namely Patient Safety,
Patient Outcomes and Patient Experience.
External stakeholders’ perspectives were
collected in prioritising the long list of potential
areas for improving patient safety, clinical
effectiveness and patient experience at the
two stakeholder events. Each stakeholder
was given the opportunity to comment on the
draft report. We also attended the parallel
discussions at our Academic Health Science
Centre partners, GSTT. This has involved
discussions with the patients and public who
highlighted and helped select the Trust’s
priorities.
Frontline teams/subject matter experts were
consulted about the work planned to meet
these quality improvements, to shape feasible
improvement objectives. The Performance
Directorate was closely involved to ensure
alignment with the emergent CQUIN
framework.
Learning from the past
We have also learnt that organisation-wide
quality improvements may warrant the profile
and attention over a period longer than 12
months. We have therefore reflected on how
we build on our success to sustain and
continue improving. The diagram below
summarises our quality objectives and
priorities over the last four years.
Reflected on our progress with the current
year’s quality priorities.
We reviewed this at the Board Quality and
Governance Committee, as well as the
Stakeholder Engagement Events in January
2015 for Lambeth, Southwark and Bromley
stakeholders.
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Patient Safety
2011/12
2012/13
2013/14
2014/15
Reduced hospital acquired
infection
Improve identification and
escalation of acutely ill
patients
Management of the cutely
unwell patient
Reduction in falls
Minimise harm acquired in the
hospital
Surgical Safety Checklist
Surgical Safety
Improve end of life care
Improve outpatient
experience
Reducing mortality
associated with alcohol
and smoking
Improve diabetes care
Improve patient experience
of discharge
Improve outcomes of
patients with hip fracture
Improve responsiveness to
inpatients personal need
Dementia
Improve experience of
cancer patients
Chronic obstructive
pulmonary disease
Improve experience of
discharge for patients
Reduce avoidable death,
disability and chronic ill health
from venous thromboembolism
(VTE)
Patient Experience
Patient Outcomes
Improve medication safety
128
Improve end of life care
Improve diabetes care
Improve the consistency of
positive inpatient experience
Improve cleanliness of the
hospital environment
Clinical Effectiveness
2015/16 Quality Priorities
Priority
Key Objectives (Outline)
1. Maximising King’s
contribution towards
preventing disease e.g.
smoking and alcohol
Develop KCH and PRUH as ‘health promoting hospitals’, continuing the
culture change that started in 2014/15 to make health promotion
mainstream.
Increase assessment of patients to identify whether they want help with
reducing the likelihood of harm caused through smoking and alcohol.
Increase the number of staff trained to provide brief interventions for
smoking and alcohol.
Increase the number of referrals for specialist smoking and alcohol support.
Increase the number of smoking ‘quitters’.
Identify opportunities to promote exercise and healthy eating.
Improve pain relief.
Reduce time before surgery.
Increase physiotherapy to help people recover sooner.
Reduce length of stay in hospital.
Increase the number of patients who are discharged to their own home.
Increase the % of patients who have a bone health and falls assessment,
and thereby reduce the likelihood that patients will fall and incur further
injury in the future.
Across all sites:
Improvement on 2013-14 discharge audit results (elderly care, surgery and
renal).
Positive qualitative feedback from stakeholders and users.
Better experience for elderly and vulnerable patients with timely discharges
and more seamless transfers and cross agency working.
Patients and their families receiving better information and explanations in
regard to the discharge process, medications and any ongoing concerns
they may have.
Increase the number of clinicians who have undertaken the National
Advanced Communication Course across the organisation.
Ensure patient have a Holistic Needs Assessment (HNA) undertaken.
Patients are receiving appropriate information at the right time.
More patients having improved access to the trust e.g. Cancer Helpline.
Provide education for ward nurses to improve their understanding of cancer
patients’ needs.
Increase reporting rate of mediation errors
Reduce medication errors with high risk medications
Reduce errors of wrong drug/wrong patient
Ensure nursing staff are competent in medication associated calculations
2. Improving the care of
patients with hip
fracture
Patient Experience
3. Improving
experience and
coordination of
discharge
4. Improving the
experience of cancer
patients
Patient Safety
5. Medication Safety
6. Safer surgery
Zero never events.
100% compliance with completion of safer surgical checklist
>75% compliance with quality checks performed
CQ*
Y
N
N
N
N
N
*CQ=Part of our CQUIN framework of national and locally agreed targets
129
15/16 PRIORITY 1:
Working to reduce preventable ill health
Preventing ill health is a key priority for the NHS and King’s made excellent progress in 2014-15 with our quality priority in this area. There is much to
be done, however, and along with our stakeholders we have decided that the focus on preventing ill health should remain for a further year.
We will
Develop KCH and PRUH as ‘health promoting hospitals’, continuing
the culture change that started in 2014/15 to make health promotion
mainstream.
Increase the number of staff trained to support patients in reducing
smoking and harmful alcohol use;
Objectives/Measures
Local Incentive Premium will be agreed to support the development of KCH and the
PRHU as Health Promoting Hospital
 The identification of patients who smoke and/or are using alcohol in a harmful way;
The provision of advice to these patients;
 Referrals made into specialist smoking services; and
 The roll-out of training to staff.
Increase provision of advice and brief interventions relating to
smoking and harmful alcohol use;
At the end of 2015-16 a greater number of our patients will have received:
 Advice on smoking and harmful alcohol use; and
Increase referrals into smoking cessation and alcohol services;

Referrals into specialist services, where this is requested.
Work with the providers of hospital food, both on the wards and in our
cafes, to promote and deliver healthier food;

A greater number of our staff will have received the training that they need to offer
evidence-based advice and brief interventions relating to smoking and harmful
alcohol use.
Review ways in which we can increase promotion of exercise to
improve health;
Continue work to implement NICE public health guidance.
130
15/16 PRIORITY 2:
Improving outcomes for patients following hip fracture
Hip fracture was a quality priority for 2014-15 with effort primarily focused on our Denmark Hill site.
We have made significant improvements over the year but there is much that can still be achieved and, along with our stakeholders, we agreed that
hip fracture should remain a quality priority for a further year.
We will
Increase the proportion of patients getting the surgery they need to
repair their hips in under 36 hours.
Objectives/Measures of success

The National Hip Fracture Database collects key data from all hospitals in relation to
hip fractures and will provide King’s with data that will enable us to compare our results
over time, and with other hospitals.

Key outcomes that we will measure include:
 Length of stay in hospital;
 Proportion of patients who are discharged to their own home;
 Time before surgery;
 Provision of physiotherapy and mobilisation;
 Proportion of patients who have a bone health and falls assessment; and
 Assessment of patients’ mental status before and after surgery.

At the end of 2015-16 our patients will:
 Receive the specialist care that they need in hospital, including support from careof-the-elderly doctors and a faster time to surgery;
Ensure that all patients receive the physiotherapy they need.
Ensure effective shared care between orthopaedics and geriatrics.
Increase the proportion of patients who have a geriatric assessment
within 72 hours.
Ensure all patients are tested for delirium before and after surgery.
Ensure all patients have a falls assessment and a bone health review.
Increase the proportion of our patients who have an
admission anaesthetic review prior to surgery, to ensure that our
patients are in the best health for surgery.
Our work in 2015-16 will focus on the care pathway for hip fracture
patients on both of our acute hospital sites, Denmark Hill and the
PRUH.

Be fitter so that they can be discharged from hospital earlier and are more likely to
be going to their own home;

Receive preventative advice and treatment so that they are less likely to fall in the
future, or if they do fall, they are less likely to incur a serious injury.
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15/16 PRIORITY 3:
Improving experience and coordination of discharge
Increased demand on our capacity urges us to ensure that our discharge coordination provides a safe and positive experience for our patients and
stakeholders. Our aim would be for a more person-centred quality priority in this area, linking to the development of integrated care.
We will
Objectives/Measures of success
Denmark Hill
Optimise integrated Care
a. Southwark and Lambeth Integrated Care (SLIC): Achieve integrated
working in the hospital environment building better
communications between all parties (internal & external) to
facilitate safer patient discharge.
b. SLIC: Increase and embed Care home interface meetings- group
including hospital and care home managers to enable effective
admission and discharge communications.
c.

Potential reduction in the number of bed day delays attributable to our local social
services authorities reported via the Delayed Transfer of Care to the Department
of Health.

Improvement in the quality of discharge planning information in the discharge
notification.

Improvement in the utilization of the Trust discharge checklist as per policyenhancing the quality of the discharge.

Choice policy and IHDT working - consistent process for managing and explaining
the process of care home placement to patients and relatives- measured by
reduction in the number of 'family choice' delays on the DTOC report.

All discharged patients to have ‘Leaving Hospital’ leaflet to ensure improved
communication with patients and their carers regarding the process for discharge
and setting an expected date of discharge.

Integration of LA social workers- Improved flow of information regarding previous
community services for clients plus LA SW carrying case load on ward- promoting
efficient working practices- measured by SLIC data- potential reduction in section
2/5 process and LOS.

Potential reduction in the number of bed day delays attributable to our local social
Continue to increase usage and profile of Homeless team.
d. Increased usage of @Home service across all specialties.
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We will
Objectives/Measures of success
services authorities reported via the Delayed Transfer of Care to the Department
of Health.

Positive feedback from our care home colleagues.

Demonstrable progress of an effective pathway between identified healthcare and
aging units (HAUs) and specified care homes.

Positive feedback from our care home colleagues regarding transfer of care
between inpatients, the Emergency Department (including CDU) and care homes.

Demonstrable progress of an effective pathway between identified HAU wards
and specified care homes – evidence that effective documentation including
clinical advice, advance care planning and DNAR information is sent to and from
care homes to hospital.

Evidence of increased uptake of advance care plan documents including the local
PEACE document in care homes and evidence that this is associated with
reduction in admissions of people who are on a palliative trajectory/ end of life.

Reduced number of missed referrals in ED.

Shared expertise and improved information sharing to assist with complex
discharge – evidenced by case studies.

Providing a seamless service for homeless patients from acute to community
setting for rough sleepers and hostel dwellers.
A reduction in the number of bed days attributable to medically fit for discharge.


Increase in the numbers of patients being referred and accepted to @Home
service- to capacity of 80 (overall per week)- measured by @Home data
133
We will

@Home service used to capacity and challenged during winter periods- ensuring
that’s medically stable patients have early discharge- measured by @Home data

LAS pilot- ensure that this is considered as a business case and long term service
provision for @Home- ensuring admission avoidance where possible- measured
by GSTT community services

Report monthly numbers of Medicines Information for Patients leaflets offered to
patients.
b. Commit to Care ward accreditation system discharge indicators to
be green across the organisation.

Develop and conduct quarterly surveys of patients’ experiences with their
medicines while in hospital.
c. Telephone follow up calls to embedded and routine in all
appropriate in patient wards areas (50% in first 6/12 up to 85% by
year end).

Evidence of improvements initiatives based on themes arising from calls.

Evidence through audit of care home discharge bundle that care homes are
receiving follow up calls and key issues identified and addressed as appropriate.

Improvements in Patient Experience surveys re discharge.

95% generated and sent as evidenced by EPR audit.
Improve safety and experience for our patients
a. Improve timeliness and quality of information around medications
for patients and carers.
d. Ensure all in patient wards have individual actions plans to
improve discharge, share good practice and innovative ideas.
e. Ensure all patients who have received care from a therapist has a
detailed discharge summary sent to GP.
Increase the number of discharges before 11:00
Ensure a robust referral system to external agencies, Bromley Health
and Medihome
Implement criteria led discharge throughout medicine and surgery
134
Objectives/Measures of success
PRUH
All inpatient wards with the exception of specialist areas will have a daily target of 2
patients before 10.00 monitoring of this will take place within the bed meeting. Results
will be feedback to ward areas at the end of the month. A measure of success might
lead to increased capacity in the AM of a shift rather than currently after 17.00. This
will be reviewed after 6 months with the aim of monthly targets set on differing wards.
A reduction in number of bed days attributable to medically fit for discharge patients.
Increased awareness of external services to help discharge the patient safely shifting
the care back to the community.
Criteria led discharge will be implemented to ensure discharge number s of the
We will
Commit to Care ward accreditation system discharge indicators to be
green across the organisation
Telephone follow up calls to embedded and routine in all appropriate
in patient wards areas(50% in first 6/12 up to 85% by year end)
15/16 PRIORITY 4:
Objectives/Measures of success
weekend improve. Initially it will focus on medical specialities. Patients will be able to
be discharged by either a nurse, doctor or therapist if they achieve their set
parameters over the weekend. Rather than waiting for the consulting team to review
on a Monday. The admitting team for a nominated individual to review will set
parameters.
As stated. However the indicator criteria will be reviewed mid-year to ensure that we
are monitoring the essential criteria or any new pilots such as telephone follow ups or
criteria led discharge.
Evidence of improvement initiatives based on themes arising from calls. Ward need to
keep a log of telephone calls made.
Improving the experience of cancer patients
Since 2010, Kings has consistently featured in the bottom 10 of Trusts in England for the cancer patient experience. More recently, there has been
some improvement, but it is clear that we still have a long way to go in order to align the patient experience with our excellent clinical care and
outcomes for cancer patients.
Patients continue to highlight a number of areas where we need to make improvements including:
 How we communicate
 Lack of access to key staff such as the Clinical Nurse Specialist and Doctors
 The information that we provide regarding any proposed clinical care and the support available
 Involving patients in decisions about their care and ensuring that they understand their care plan;
 Lack of confidence and trust in ward nursing staff
We will
Ensure that all the core MDT members (doctors and CNSs) are trained
in national advanced communication skills training
Objectives/Measures of success
 KPIs will be developed for the CNS teams, and progress against these and the
quality metrics below will be assessed at bi-monthly meetings with the CNS teams
and their DHons/HoNs.
135
We will
Ensure that all patients are seen by the CNS/support worker at
diagnosis
Increase the number of holistic needs assessments undertaken within
31 days of diagnosis and within 6 weeks of completion of treatment
Ensure all patients receive a FU call from the CNS teams within 48
hours of diagnosis, and within 24 hours of discharge from hospital
following treatment
Ensure that the CNS teams to review in-patients at least once during
their in-patient stay in order to provide further information and support
Ensure patients and GPs are provided with an end of treatment
summary / care plan
Establish health and well-being events for patients (for example HOPE
courses)
Undertake specialist training for nurses and HCAs on the in-patient
wards
Work with Macmillan to develop the band 4 support worker role in each
MDT – an innovative role aimed at helping patients to navigate through
their pathways and to provide ‘one to one support’
Introduce designated nurse led pre-assessment clinics for patients
commencing chemotherapy treatment
Continue with the rolling annual internal peer review of each MDT –
holding teams to account for progress being made against their patient
experience action plans
136
Objectives/Measures of success




MDTs will be held to account for progress being made against their patient
experience action plans and in the achievement of the metrics below at the bimonthly Trust cancer patient experience steering group and Trust cancer
committee meetings
MDTs will be held to account at the Trust’s annual internal peer review meetings
Analysis of the NCPES results for 2015 & 2016 (due to the time lag of the survey
process, demonstrable improvements are unlikely to be realised until 2016).
Analysis of the LCA commissioning metrics & COSD datasets by the Trust cancer
management team
At the end of 2015-16 there will be:
 Improvement in the 2016 National Cancer Patient Experience Survey.
 100% of all core MDT Doctors and CNSs to be trained in Advanced
Communication Skills
 100% patients to have a CNS present at / immediately after diagnosis
 100% patients to receive a phone call FU within 48 hours of their cancer diagnosis
 50% increase in the number of Holistic needs assessments being undertaken
within 31 days of diagnosis and within 6 weeks of completion of treatment
 100% patients commencing chemotherapy to receive a designated nurse led preassessment and ‘new patient talk’
 100% patients to receive FU phone support within 24 hours post discharge from
surgery /in-patient admission (related to their cancer)
 70% patients to be reviewed at least once by a CNS during an in-patient stay
 50% of patients to receive an end of treatment care plan
 30% of patients to attend health & well-being support events upon completion of
treatment
 Designated cancer information “hub” to be established at the PRUH Chartwell
Unit, and Macmillan Information pods to be placed around the PRUH hospital
 CNS teams to undertake bi-monthly teaching on the relevant in-patient wards
 Psycho-social support for cancer patients to be formalised at the PRUH –
Palliative Care Social Worker to undertake weekly sessions at the PRUH, and
introduce IAPT services
We will
Objectives/Measures of success

Develop a designated cancer information hub in the PRUH Chartwell
unit and work with Macmillan to ensure that information pods are
available in key areas throughout the PRUH
Successful partnership working with Macmillan with investment to pursue 3 key
themes of work – cancer patient experience, survivorship and care closer to
home. Improvements in all 3 of these areas is key to improving the overall patient
experience.
Establish a Trust cancer patient experience steering group
Develop KPIs for the CNS teams which aid to hold the teams to
account for quality improvements
137
15/16 PRIORITY 5:
Surgical Safety Culture
This is one of our priorities for this year and, although good progress has been made we would like to continue to have as strong focus in this key
safety area with the aim of building this year's work to achieve the following:
We will
To develop and implement a strategy to ensure the Surgical Safety
Checklist (SSC) is integrated into the working practices of all
theatre/interventional teams.
15/16 PRIORITY 6:
Objectives/Measures of success

Zero Surgical Never Events

100% compliance with completion of safer surgical checklist

>75% compliance with quality of checks performed.

20% improvement in Surgical Safety Culture rating
Medication Safety
The Trust does not seem to have any significant concerns with medication safety however there have been some ‘no harm’ errors, particularly in paediatrics, involving
calculation and strength of drugs. In view of this and ongoing high operational demand and patent acuity we would like to ensure that we work to prevent medication
adverse incidents.
We will
Objectives/Measures of success
 Proposed implementation of the ‘rule of one’ on Paediatric wards
 Reduction in incidents involving 10-fold errors
as a barrier to erroneous tenfold administration.
 Reduction in incidents involving administration of drugs to patients with known
 Incorporation of observational patient identification audit into
allergies
audit tools to monitor positive patient identification and target
areas of non-compliance.
 Increase in % of nursing staff passing the drug calculation competency assessment
at 100%
 Continue rollout of EPMA to ED and implement e-systems in
Critical Care to reduce chance of drug administration to patients
 Reduction in the number of medication errors involving the wrong patient.
with documented allergies.

Review drug calculation competency testing regime for nurses.
138
Statements of assurance from the
Board
cases required by the terms of that audit or
enquiry.
Information on the review of services
During the reporting period 2014/15 the King’s
provided and/or sub-contracted 9 relevant
health services.
The NCEPOD studies the Trust participated in
are detailed on page 146.
King’s has reviewed all the data available to
them on the quality of care in all these
relevant health services.
The reports of 42 national clinical audit were
reviewed by the provider in 2014/15 and
King’s intends to take actions to improve the
quality of healthcare provided in the actions
detailed on pages 147-165.
The income generated by the relevant health
services reviewed in the reporting period
2014/15 represents 100% of the total income
generated from the provision of relevant
health services by the Trust for the reporting
period 2014/15.
In addition, an extensive programme of local
audits were reviewed by the provider in
2014/15 and King’s intends to take the
following actions to improve the quality of
healthcare provided in the descriptions
detailed on pages166-168.
Participation in Clinical Audits and
National Confidential Enquiries
During the reporting period 2014/15, 46
national clinical audits and 4 national
confidential enquires covered relevant health
services that the King’s provides.
Information on participation in clinical
research
The number of patients receiving relevant
health services provided or sub-contracted by
Kings in 2014/15 that were recruited during
that period to participate in research approved
by a research ethic committee was 12,489.
During that period King’s participated in 100%
national clinical audits and 100% national
confidential enquiries of the national clinical
audits and national confidential enquiries
which it was eligible to participate in.
More information on King’s research activity
can be found in the Annual Report on pages
97-102.
The national clinical audits and national
confidential enquiries that King’s was eligible
to participate in during 2014/15 are listed on
pages 142-146.
The national clinical audits and national
confidential enquires that King’s participated
(with data collection completed) during
2014/15 can be found on pages 142-146
The national clinical audits and national
confidential enquires that King’s participated
in and for which data collection was
completed during 2014/1 are listed on pages
142-146 alongside the number of registered
Goals Agreed with Commissioners:
The Commissioning for Quality and
Innovation (CQUIN) framework
A proportion (2.4%) of King’s income in
2014/15 was was conditional on achieving
quality improvement and innovation goals
agreed between King’s and both NHS South
London Commissioning leads & NHS England
as part of the Commissioning for Quality and
Innovation (CQUIN) payment framework.
This equated to a total of £17.5m in 2014/15.
Please see the tables on pages 165-166 for
the detailed report of performance as
measured for our CQUIN indicators in
2014/15 for King’s. King’s has delivered
significant quality improvements under the
139
CQUIN schemes as shown on pages 168171.
Quality Account and Local Incentive
Premiums (LIPs)
Providers and commissioners come together
to agree the detail of local priorities and how
they will be achieved and measured. A series
of milestones and targets are agreed in
advance and each provider is required to
submit evidence to commissioners at regular
intervals in order to secure the funding
associated with them
For 2015/16 King’s had the option to either
select the ‘Enhanced Tariff Option’ under the
proposed 2015/16 National Tariff payment
system; or to select the ‘Default Tariff
Rollover’ which is a continuation of the
arrangements for 14/15. King’s selected the
Default Tariff and as a consequence CQUIN
schemes are no longer applicable. Therefore,
King’s has agreed with its Commissioners the
implementation of four Local Incentive
Premium initiatives for the 2015/16 in place of
local CQUIN schemes and are listed below:
• Local Incentive Premium Scheme 1 Medicines Optimisation (DH)
• Local Incentive Premium Scheme 2 - Care
Planning (DH)
• Local Incentive Premium Scheme 3 –
Prevention - Every Contact Counts (DH
and PRUH)
• Local Incentive Premium Scheme 4 –
Emergency Care (PRUH).
Statements from the Care Quality
Commission (CQC)
King’s is required to register with the Care
Quality Commission (CQC) and its registration
status as at 31 March 2015 is without any
condition for all locations.
The CQC has not taken enforcement action
against King’s during the period 01 April 2014
– 31 March 2015.
140
The Trust has not participated in any special
reviews or investigations by the CQC during
the reporting period.
The Trust continues to make improvements to
availability of medical records and the
Emergency Department and emergency
medical pathway at the PRUH to improve
quality of care in line with compliance actions
issued following the CQC inspection at the
PRUH in December 2013.
The CQC carried out a planned Trust-wide
inspection from 13 to 17 April 2015. Initial
high-level feedback highlighted an open and
transparent culture across the organisation as
well as areas of excellence. The CQC also fed
back on areas for improvement which were all
known to the Trust. Actions are currently
being taken to address these issues. A formal
report will be published twelve weeks after the
inspection.
Clinical coding error rate
King’s was subject to the annual mandatory
Coding Audit for Information Governance
Standards during the 2014/15 financial year.
There were 12 specialty audits completed
during this period, both by external and
internal accredited coding auditors across all
sites and a total of 511 episodes were audited
across 12 specialties. In the last year, King’s
has continued the established external audit
programme focusing on specific areas. There
is also a regular process of validation of
abstracted data for coding between clinical
staff and coder.
During 2014/15 the overall Information
Governance Audit coding inaccuracy rate was
5.7% and is lower than the national 7.0%
average error rate, as identified in the
Payment by Results Assurance Framework
2011/12 (the last year at which accuracy of
inpatient coding was tested at all NHS Acute
Trusts)
The Trust maintains a robust audit and
training cycle allowing early identification of
error and subsequent revision of the coded
clinical data prior to final submission to the
Secondary Uses Service (SUS).
Information Governance Toolkit attainment
levels
King’s Information Governance Assessment
Report overall score for 2014/15 was 73%
and was graded green (satisfactory).
This is higher than the previous year. There
are twelve areas where our scores have either
improved to either level 2 or 3 on their
previous score.
Information Governance awareness and
mandatory training procedures are in place
and all staff are appropriately trained.
A formal information security risk assessment
and management programme for key
Information Assets has been documented
implemented and reviewed.
Business continuity plans are up to date and
tested for all critical information assets (data
processing facilities, communications services
and data) and service - specific measures are
in place.
All information assets that hold, or are,
personal data are protected by appropriate
organisational and technical measures.
Procedures are in place for monitoring the
availability of paper health/care records and
tracing missing records.
The Trust has achieved a satisfactory score in
all areas (80% level 2, 20% level 3 – the
highest possible level). Twelve areas
improved on last year’s scores and there was
one additional area. This demonstrates our
commitment to developing a high quality and
robust approach to Information Governance.
As a result of having responsibility for the IG
Toolkit sitting with a single permanent IG
Manager, the process of completion has been
even more rigorous than in previous years.
In summary all areas achieved a satisfactory
score:
 80% of areas were level two
 20% of areas were level three
 Improvement in 12 areas plus reporting on
one new area
Payment by Results (PbR)
King’s was not identified as necessary for a
Payment by Results (PbR) clinical coding
audit in 2014/15, however for Trusts that
were subjected to PbR audit in 2014/15, the
national average coding error rate identified in
the Data Assurance Framework was 8% for
inpatients.
From the above statements, assurance can
be offered to the public that the Trust has in
2014/15:
 Performed to essential standards (e.g.
meeting CQC registration), as well as
excelling beyond these to provide high
quality care;

Measured clinical processes and
performance to inform and monitor
continuous quality improvement;

Participated in national cross-cutting
project and initiatives for quality
improvement e.g. strong and growing
recruitment to clinical trials.
These statements are included in accordance
with both Monitor’s NHS Foundation Trust
Annual Reporting Manual (December 2013)
for the quality report, as well as the
Department of Health’s Quality Accounts
Regulations (2013, 2012, 2011, 2010).
141
Statements of Assurance Evidence
Participation in Clinical Audits and National Confidential Enquiries
The following list is based on that produced by the Department of Health and Healthcare Quality
Improvement Partnership (HQIP).
NB: Data for the PRUH is not available for several audits during this period, as it was still part of the
South London Healthcare Trust at the time of the data collection.
142
Audit Title
Reporting period
Participation
DH
PRUH
Acute
Yes
Yes
Adult Community Acquired
Pneumonia
01/12/14 31/01/15
ICNARC Case Mix
Programme
- General Intensive Care
Unit
ICNARC Case Mix
Programme
- Liver Intensive Therapy
Unit (LITU)
National Emergency
Laparotomy Audit – Clinical
Audit
01/04/14 –
31/03/15
Yes
Yes
01/04/14 –
31/03/15
Yes
N/A
DH = 100%.
PRUH - service not provided.
07/01/14 –
30/11/14
Yes
Yes
National Joint Registry
01/04/14 31/03/15
Yes
Yes
Pleural Procedures
01/06/14 –
31/07/14
Yes
Yes
Not available at time of report participation rate included in
annual report, due to be
published Jul-15.
Not available at time of report data collection closes 31 March
2015.
DH = 20 patients and PRUH = 11
patients.
Trauma Audit and Research
Network, TARN
01/01/14 –
31/12/14
Yes
Yes
Audit of Transfusion
Practice in Children and
Adults with Sickle Cell
Disease
01/01/14 –
30/06/14
Bowel Cancer
01/04/13 –
31/03/14
Head and Neck Oncology
N/A
Blood and Transplant
Yes
N/A
Cancer
Yes
Yes
N/A
N/A
% of cases submitted
Not available at time of report data collection closes 31 May
2015.
DH and PRUH = 100%.
DH = 94.2%.
PRUH - data collection started 1
January 2015.
Not available at time of report data collection closes 31 March
2015.
PRUH - not eligible to participate
due to small patient numbers.
Not available at time of report data collection closes 27 March
2015.
King’s - service not provided.
Service centralised at Guy's and
Audit Title
Reporting period
Participation
DH
PRUH
Lung Cancer
01/01/14 –
31/12/14
Yes
Yes
Oesophago-gastric Cancer
01/04/13 –
31/03/14
Yes
Yes
Prostate Cancer - Clinical
Audit
01/04/14 –
31/07/14
Yes
Yes
Prostate Cancer Organisational Audit
31/10/13 –
29/11/13
Yes
Yes
Acute Coronary Syndrome
or Acute Myocardial
Infarction (MINAP)
Cardiac Rhythm
Management
01/04/14 –
31/03/15
Heart
Yes
Yes
01/04/14 –
31/03/15
Yes
Yes
Congenital Heart Disease
01/04/14 –
31/03/15
Yes
N/A
ICNARC National Cardiac
Arrest Audit
National Adult Cardiac
Surgery Audit
01/04/14 –
31/03/15
01/04/14 –
31/03/15
Yes
Yes
Yes
N/A
National Audit of
Percutaneous Coronary
Interventional Procedures
01/01/14 –
31/12/14
Yes
N/A
National Heart Failure Audit
01/04/14 –
31/03/15
Yes
Yes
National Vascular Registry –
abdominal aortic aneurysm
repairs
01/01/10 –
31/12/14
Yes
N/A
National Vascular Registry –
Carotid Endarterectomy
01/01/12 –
31/12/14
Yes
N/A
Pulmonary Hypertension
Audit
N/A
N/A
N/A
Chronic Kidney Disease in
Primary Care
N/A
Long-term Conditions
N/A
NA
% of cases submitted
St Thomas' NHS Foundation
Trust. (GSTT).
Not available at time of report data collection closes 30 June
2015.
Not available at time of report data collection closes 27 March
2015.
Not available at time of report data collection closes 6 March
2015.
King’s = 100%.
Not available at time of report data collection closes 31 May
2015.
Not available at time of report data collection closes 30 June
2015.
Not available at time of report data collection closes 4 May
2015.
PRUH - service not provided.
DH and PRUH = 100%.
Not available at time of report data collection closes 30 June
2015.
PRUH - service not provided.
Not available at time of report data collection closes 31 March
2015.
PRUH - service not provided.
Not available at time of report data collection closes 1 June
2015.
Not available at time of report data collection closes 25 March
2015.
PRUH - service not provided.
Not available at time of report data collection closes 25 March
2015.
PRUH - service not provided.
King’s - service not provided.
Audit not applicable to secondary
care providers.
143
144
Audit Title
Reporting period
Participation
DH
PRUH
Yes
Yes
% of cases submitted
Inflammatory Bowel Disease
– Biologics Audit
01/03/14 –
28/02/15
National Chronic
Obstructive Pulmonary
Disease (COPD) Audit
Programme – COPD Clinical
Audit
National COPD Audit
Programme – COPD
Organisational Audit
National COPD Audit
Programme – Pulmonary
Rehabilitation Service
Clinical Audit
National COPD Audit
Programme – Pulmonary
Rehabilitation Service
Organisational Audit
National Diabetes Adult
01/02/14 –
30/04/14
Yes
Yes
01/02/14 –
30/04/14
Yes
Yes
DH and PRUH = 100%.
12/01/15 –
10/04/15
Yes
N/A
Not available at time of report data collection closes 10 July
2015.
12/01/15 –
10/04/15
Yes
N/A
Not available at time of report data collection closes 24 April
2015.
Yes
N/A
Not available at time of report data collection closes 20 March
2015 and 30 June 2015.
PRUH - diabetes outpatient
service not provided.
National Diabetes Footcare
Audit
2013/14:
01/01/13 –
01/03/14
2014/15:
01/01/14 –
31/03/15
14/07/2015 onwards
Yes
N/A
National Paediatric Diabetes
Audit
01/04/14–
31/03/15
Yes
Yes
Pregnancy Care in Women
with Diabetes
01/01/14 –
31/12/14
Yes
N/A
Renal Registry
01/01/14 –
31/12/14
Yes
Yes
Rheumatoid and Early
Inflammatory Arthritis –
Clinical Audit and
Organisational Audit
01/02/14 –
30/01/15
Yes
Yes
Not available at time of report data collection closes 31 July
2015.
PRUH - diabetes footcare service
not provided.
2014/15 Not available at time of
report - data collection starts 1
April 2015.
Not available at time of report data collection closes 12
February 2015.
PRUH - pregnant women with
diabetes are managed by
Bromley Health Care.
Not available at time of report data collection closes 1 July
2015.
Not available at time of report data collection closes 30 April
2015.
Mental Health (Care in
Emergency Departments)
01/01/14 –
31/12/14
Mental Health
Yes
Yes
Not available at time of report data collection closes 28
February 2015.
DH = 48 patients and PRUH = 90
patients.
Not available at time of report participation rate included in
annual report, due to be
Audit Title
Reporting period
Participation
DH
PRUH
% of cases submitted
Mental Health Clinical
Outcome Review
Programme: National
Confidential Inquiry into
Suicide and Homicide for
people with Mental Illness
Prescribing Observatory for
Mental Health
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
King’s - service not provided.
National Audit of Dementia
N/A
N/A
N/A
National Hip Fracture
Database
01/01/14 –
31/12/14
Yes
Yes
Older People (Care in
Emergency Departments)
01/08/14 31/01/15
Yes
Yes
Sentinel Stroke National
Audit Programme (SSNAP) Clinical Audit
SSNAP – Organisational
Audit
British Society for Clinical
Neurophysiology (BSCN)
and Association of
Neurophysiological
Scientists (ANS) Standards
for Ulnar Neuropathy at
Elbow (UNE) testing
National Audit of
Intermediate Care
National PROMs Programme
01/07/14 –
30/09/14
Yes
Yes
26/06/14 –
18/07/14
01/04/14 –
01/05/14
Yes
Yes
National audit did not collect data
2014/15.
Not available at time of report participation rate included in
annual report, due to be
published Sep-15.
Not available at time of report participation rate included in
annual report, due to be
published May 2015.
Quarterly reports produced.
DH and PRUH HASU = 80-89%.
DH and PRUH SU = 90%+.
DH and PRUH = 100%.
Yes
N/A
Not available at time of report participation rate included in
annual report, due to be
published Mar-15.
PRUH – service not provided.
N/A
N/A
N/A
King’s - service not provided.
01/01/13 –
31/12/14
Yes
Yes
published June 2015.
King’s - service not provided. The
recommendations produced by
the study are, however, reviewed
for relevance to the Trust.
Older people
Fitting Child (Care in the
Emergency Department)
Epilepsy 12 – Clinical Audit
Epilepsy 12 – Organisational
Audit
Women’s and children’s services
01/08/14 Yes
Yes
31/01/15
01/01/13 –
30/04/13
01/01/14
Yes
Yes
Not available at time of report participation rate included in
annual report, due to be
published May 2015.
DH = 92% and PRUH = 100%.
Yes
Yes
DH and PRUH = 100%.
145
Audit Title
Reporting period
Participation
DH
PRUH
Yes
Yes
% of cases submitted
Maternal, Newborn and
Infant Clinical Outcome
Review Programme
(MBRRACE-UK)
National Neonatal Audit
Programme
Continuous
01/01/14 –
31/12/14
Yes
Yes
01/01/12 –
31/12/14
Yes
N/A
Not available at time of report data collection closes 2 March
2015.
Not available at time of report data collection closes 31 March
2015.
PRUH - service not provided.
Paediatric Intensive Care
Audit Network
DH and PRUH = 100%.
NCEPOD Studies:
NCEPOD Title
Reporting period
Participation
DH
PRUH
Acute
Yes
Yes
Sepsis
06/05/14 –
20/05/14
Gastrointestinal
Haemorrhage
01/01/13 –
30/04/13
Yes
Yes
Lower Limb Amputation
01/10/12 –
31/03/13
Yes
N/A*
Tracheostomy Care
25/02/13 –
12/05/13
Yes
N/A*
% of cases submitted
Clinical Questionnaire returned =
10/10 (100%)
Case notes returned = 70%
(7/10)
Organisational questionnaire
returned = 100% (3/3)
Clinical Questionnaire returned =
100% (7/7)
Case notes returned = 86% (6/7)
Organisational questionnaire
returned = 100% (1/1)
Clinical Questionnaire returned =
33% (2/6)
Case notes returned = 100%
(6/6)
Organisational questionnaire
returned = 100% (1/1)
Clinical Questionnaire returned:
Insertion = 83% (40/48)
Critical care = 73% (35/48)
Ward care = 83% (40/48)
Case notes returned = 8% (4/48)
Organisational questionnaire
returned = 100% (1/1)
* Studies completed prior to PRUH integration into KCH – participation details not available.
146
National clinical audit reports were reviewed by the Trust and actions to improve the
quality of healthcare:
Key
Rating
Definition
*
+
-
One of the highest performing Trusts nationally e.g. ranked within top 5 nationally.
King’s performance is similar to or above the national average for 67 – 100% of audit standards.
King’s performance is similar to or above the national average for 66 – 34% of audit standards/ within expected
range.
King’s performance is similar to or above the national average for 0 – 33% of audit standards.
N/A
Not applicable – national average comparable data not available.
=
Audit Title
Headline Results and/or actions taken
Rating
DH
ICNARC Case Mix Programme
- General Intensive Care Unit (ICU)
Published: August 2014
Audit Period: 01/04/12-31/03/13
Sample Size:
 DH: 100% (1,903 patients)
 PRUH: 100% (423 patients)
ICNARC Case Mix Programme
- General Intensive Care Unit (ICU)
Acute
ICNARC confidential comparison of general ICUs identified DH
mortality ratio within expected range and PRUH mortality ratio at
control limits, based on 2012-13 data.
PRUH
=
=
=
=
Hospital mortality - ICNARC website, based on 2012-13
data
Upon integration of PRUH into KCH, improvement actions were
put into place, led by the Clinical Director for Critical Care and
closely monitored by the Mortality Monitoring Committee.
The ICNARC confidential comparison of general ICUs shows
that DH and PRUH mortality ratios are within expected range.
Published: January 2015
Audit Period: 01/04/13 –
31/03/2014
Sample Size:
 DH: 100% (2011 patients)
 PRUH: 100% (454 patients)
The absolute standardised mortality number for the PRUH has
gone down and remains within control limits.
DH and PRUH are within expected range for unit-acquired
MRSA and unit-acquired infection in blood and, even though DH
has one of the highest number of patients, it has very low
numbers of infections. DH and PRUH performance is within
expected range for hospital mortality where risk of death is less
147
Audit Title
Headline Results and/or actions taken
Rating
DH
PRUH
than 20% and hospital mortality where risk of death is greater
than or equal to 20%.
ICNARC Case Mix Programme
- Liver Intensive Therapy Unit
(LITU)
Published: January 2015
Audit Period: 01/07/14 – 31/09/14
Sample Size:
 DH: 100%
 PRUH: Service not provided
National Emergency Laparotomy
Audit - organisational audit
Published: May 2014
Audit period: 01/06/13-31/10/13
Sample Size:
 DH: 100% (1/1)
 PRUH: 100% (1/1)
National Joint Registry
Published: September 2014
Audit Period: 01/04/13-31/03/14
Sample Size:
 DH: 365 procedures
 PRUH: 141 procedures
 Orpington: 76 procedures (Oct13 to Dec-13 only)
Case Ascertainment:
 King’s: 110%
Paracetamol overdose
Published: January 2015
148
The ICNARC confidential comparison of general ICUs shows
that DH has an elevated mortality ratio within Liver. A formal
response by ICNARC states that there is not a concern with the
mortality ratio, that the increase is likely due to chance variation
and that the risk prediction model may not perform as accurately
with King’s specialist casemix. An internal mortality review is,
however, planned within the Specialty to provide additional
assurance that there are no quality of care issues.
=
N/A
+
=
*
+
=
+
Current DH mortality performance for the period Jul-14 to Sep-14
DH performed better than all other London peer Trusts. PRUH
had mixed results for this audit which is in line with the national
picture.
The audit data is currently under detailed review and an action
plan will be developed across sites.
DH, PRUH and Orpington are within expected range for 90 day
mortality following hip and knee replacement and for hip and
knee revision rate.
King’s is one of five London Trusts awarded the Orthopaedic
CQUIN for complex hip and knee surgery and revision of hip and
knee surgery by NHS England. This is in part due to King’s
performance in the NJR.
DH performed in line with or above the national average for 4/5
measures. DH achieved the CEM standard of 100% for patients
receiving N-acetylcysteine (NAC) within 8 hours of ingestion. DH
Audit Title
Headline Results and/or actions taken
Rating
DH
Audit Period: 01/08/13 - 31/03/14
Sample Size:
 DH: 100% (50 patients)
 PRUH: 98% (49 patients)
PRUH
was below the national average for attaining the Medicines and
Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) recommended
treatment for paracetamol overdose.
PRUH performed in line with or above the national average for
5/5 measures. PRUH performed in the upper quartile nationally
for patients receiving NAC within 1 hour of arrival and for
staggered overdoses receiving NAC within 1 hour of arrival.
The data is currently under review by the clinical team at DH and
PRUH and a detailed improvement plan is being developed.
Pleural Procedures
Published: October 2014
Audit Period: 01/06/14 - 31/07/14
Sample Size:
 DH: 20 patients
 PRUH: 11 patients
Severe Sepsis and Septic Shock
Published: September 2014
Audit Period: 01/08/13 - 31/03/14
Sample Size:
 DH: 100% (50 patients)
 PRUH: 86% (43 patients)
DH performed in line with or above the national average for 6/11
audit criteria and performance is similar to or better than
previous (2011) for 7/8 criteria re-audited. PRUH performed in
line with or above the national average for 7/11 criteria. The data
is under review by the Division and a trust-wide action plan is in
development.
=
=
DH performance is above the national average for the majority
of criteria audited.
+
-
Action in progress at DH to improve practice includes the
implementation of ‘Sepsis: A Toolkit for Emergency
Departments’, jointly developed by the College of Emergency
Medicine and the UK Sepsis Trust.
Performance at PRUH is below the national average for the
majority of audit criteria. Improvements in practice have,
however, been made for 7/11 criteria re-audited.
Actions already taken at PRUH to improve practice include the
implementation of the Adult Sepsis Management flowchart; the
implementation of Symphony and PiMS, which include
mandatory fields for vital signs; and the implementation of a
sepsis box (currently in pilot phase).
To improve practice further serum lactate measurement, blood
pressure monitoring and urine output measurement will all be
included in the junior doctor training going forwards.
149
Audit Title
Headline Results and/or actions taken
Rating
DH
TARN - Online Survival Data
Published: Data available on-line
(17/02/15)
TARN data demonstrates that more trauma patients admitted to
DH are surviving compared to number expected based on
severity of injury.
PRUH
+
N/A
=
N/A
=
=
TARN data submission at the PRUH will start Q4, 2014/15.
Actions taken to enable PRUH participation include the
recruitment of two posts at PRUH allocated responsibility for
TARN submission, training provided by TARN, local training
provided by Data Systems Manager and roll out of Symphony
and PiMS at PRUH.
Current DH survival data for the period Jan-11 to Dec-14
Current DH survival data for the period 2013/14 and 2011/12
TARN - Major Trauma Dashboard
Published: August 2014
Audit Period: 01/04/14 - 31/06/14
Sample Size:
DH: Data not provided by TARN
PRUH: PRUH is not a Major
Trauma Centre
Patient Information and Consent
Published: November 2014
Audit Period: 13/01/14 – 04/04/14
Sample Size:
150
TARN data demonstrates mixed results for DH against the Major
Trauma dashboard criteria compared to the national average.
Areas for improvement include the proportion of patients:
Transferred to MTC within 2 days of referral request
With GCS<9 with definitive airway management within 30
minutes of arrival in ED
Directly admitted patients receiving CT scan within 30 minutes of
arrival at MTC
With an ISS of more than 8 that have a rehabilitation prescription
completed
The monthly Trauma Performance meeting and Trauma Board
review TARN data, review areas of below average performance,
monitor performance against actions set for both DH and PRUH
and co-ordinate a joint action plan to ensure successful data
submission across sites.
Blood and Transplant
DH performed in line with or above the national average for 17/
31 criteria and PRUH performed in line with or above the
national average for 12/31 criteria.
The key areas for improvement across all sites are:
Audit Title
Headline Results and/or actions taken
Rating
DH
Clinical case notes audit:
 DH: 17 patients
 PRUH: 10 patients
Patient survey:
 DH: 13 patients
 PRUH: 10 patients
Staff survey:
 DH: 6 staff members
 PRUH: 4 staff members
National Bowel Cancer Audit
Published: December 2014
Audit Period: 01/04/12 - 31/03/13
Sample Size:
 DH: 116% (128 patients)
 PRUH: The audit report has
published SLHT data only;
data for PRUH has not been
made available.
PRUH
Indication for transfusion documented
Recorded patient unable to give consent
Documented NHSBT leaflet given
Documented reason for transfusion explained.
Cancer
DH performed in line with or above the national average for
10/15 criteria and in line with or better than previous (2011-12)
for 10/15 criteria. As a result of actions implemented following
the 2013 report, ‘CT scan reported’ has improved from 72.5% to
100% and ‘MRI scan reported’ has improved from 63% to 100%.
=
N/A
+
N/A
+
N/A
The adjusted 90 day unplanned admission rate at DH is lower
than all 6 London peer trusts and the adjusted 2 year mortality
rate is the second lowest compared to all 13 peer trusts
nationally.
Areas for improvement:
Length of stay > 5 days remains above the national average at
DH (80.9% vs. 69.1%).
National Lung Cancer Audit Report
Published: December 2014
Audit Period:
Patients first seen 01/01/11 31/12/13 (3 data items)
Patients first seen 01/01/13 –
31/12/13 (11 data items)
Sample Size:
 DH: 120% (114 patients)
 PRUH: The audit report has
published SLHT data only;
data for PRUH has not been
made available.
National Oesophago-Gastric
The data is currently under review by the clinical team at DH and
PRUH and a detailed improvement plan is being developed.
DH achieved a rating of ‘good’ for 8/12 key process, nursing,
imaging and clinical measures assessed by the audit, and a
rating of ‘good’ for 11/12 key data completeness measures.
DH performed in line with or above the national average for 9/12
criteria and in line with or better than previous performance
(2013) for 7/10 re-audited criteria.
Measures identified for improvement include patients receiving
CT before bronchoscopy and NSCLC having surgery. The data
is currently under review by the clinical team at DH and PRUH
and a detailed improvement plan is being developed.
Two additional items identified from the national audit data for
improvement include PS0-1 Stage IIIB or IV NSCLC having
chemotherapy and small cell receiving chemotherapy. The
national audit reports data covering 2011-13 for these items and
an additional review of the 2013 data only, extracted locally from
the LUCADA system, demonstrates that improvements have
already been made at DH for both items.
Both PRUH and DH patients are referred to GSTT for all surgical
151
Audit Title
Headline Results and/or actions taken
Rating
DH
Cancer Audit
Published: November 2014
Audit Period: 01/04/11 - 31/03/13
Sample Size:
 DH: >90% (78 patients)
 PRUH: The audit report has
published SLHT data only;
data for PRUH has not been
made available.
Myocardial Ischaemia National
Audit Project (MINAP)
Published: December 2014
Audit Period: 01/04/13 – 31/03/14
Sample Size:
 DH: 957 patients
 PRUH: 81 patients
Cardiac Rhythm Management
Published: December 2014
Audit Period: 01/04/13 – 30/06/14
Sample Size:
 DH: 100% (457 patients)
 PRUH: 100% (135 patients)
Congenital Heart Disease
152
PRUH
procedures relevant to this audit. Outcome measures are
reported for GSTT, while DH-specific data is reported for tumour
data completeness and case ascertainment only, both of which
achieved a rating of ‘good’.
GSTT achieved the joint lowest 30-day mortality of the 46 trusts
in the audit, and the second lowest 90-day mortality of peer
trusts. GSTT also recorded the third lowest adjusted
complication rate amongst national and London peer trusts.
Heart
DH, which is a Heart Attack Centre, performed at or above the
national average for 6/17 audit criteria of best practice.
=
=
+
+
+
N/A
=
N/A
PRUH performed in line with or above the national average for
3/8 criteria (7 criteria applied to Heart Attack Centres only); 2
criteria not applicable.
DH was below the national average for door-to-balloon time and
call-to-balloon times.
DH and PRUH performance against the criteria for secondary
medication has decreased compared to the previous audit
(2012/13) and is below the national average.
The national audit does not currently provide patient outcomes
or quality of care performance data and the British Heart Rhythm
Society (BHRS) confirms that the numbers provided in the report
cannot be taken as evidence of competence or ability to provide
a safe, high quality service.
King’s (DH and PRUH) undertakes in excess of the minimum
numbers of cardiac implants expected by BHRS and NICE and
is therefore not identified as an outlier.
No mortality reported at 30 days post procedure or at 1 year.
Published: April 2014
Audit period: 01/04/2012 –
31/03/2013
Sample Size:
 DH: 27 cases
 PRUH: Service not provided.
National Audit of Percutaneous
Coronary Interventional
Procedures
Data completeness has improved, or remains, at 100% for 13/15
(86%) mandatory data fields.
Published: January 2015
Audit Period: 01/01/13 -31/12/13
Sample Size:
 DH: 1386 procedures
The call-to-balloon time <150 minutes for direct admissions is
below the national average, but similar to the national target of
79%, whilst for patients transferred in is both below the national
average and the national target.
DH performs better than the national average and exceeds the
national target for door to balloon time in <90 minutes for direct
admissions and patients transferred in from another hospital.
Audit Title
Headline Results and/or actions taken
Rating
DH
 PRUH: Service not provided.
National Audit of Percutaneous
Coronary Interventional
Procedures
Published: January 2014
Audit period: 01/01/12-31/12/12
Sample Size:
 DH: 1216 cases
 PRUH: Service not provided.
ICNARC National Cardiac Arrest
Audit
Published: July 2014
Audit Period: 01/04/13-31/03/14
Sample Size:
 DH: 100% (148 patients)
 PRUH: Did not participate in
2013-14 audit period
PRUH
DH performed at or better than previous for all criteria reaudited. Following the implementation of actions in 2012,
performance against all criteria relating to door-to-balloon time
and call-to-balloon time has improved from below 90% to over
90% for all criteria, and exceeds the national target of 75%. Callto-balloon time <150 minutes (transfers in) has improved from
51% in 2011 to 90.5% in 2012.
+
N/A
DH performed in line with or above the national average for:
13/16 criteria (81%) assessing reason resuscitation stopped
(Alive – RSOC>20 minutes).
12/16 criteria (74%) assessing survival to hospital discharge.
13/16 criteria (81%) assessing favourable neurological outcome.
=
N/A
The data shows that DH performed within expected range for
survival.
Denmark Hill
Shockable
Non-shockable
Denmark Hill
Actions to improve further are reported to and monitored by the
153
Audit Title
Headline Results and/or actions taken
Rating
DH
Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD)
– Adult – Organisational Audit
Published: September 2014
Audit period: 31/12/2013
Sample Size:
 DH: 100% (1/1)
 PRUH: 100% (1/1)
Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD)
– Adult – Clinical Audit
Published: June 2014
Audit period: 01/01/13 - 31/12/13
Sample Size:
 DH adult audit: 27 patients
 DH patient experience: 7
patients
 PRUH adult audit: 17 patients
 PRUH patient experience: 7
patients
Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD)
–Paediatric – Organisational Audit
Published: September 2014
Audit period: 31/12/2013
Sample Size:
 DH: 100% (1/1)
 PRUH: Specialist
gastroenterology service not
provided
Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD)
Paediatric – Clinical Audit
154
Deteriorating Patient Committee.
Long Term Conditions
DH adult service performed in line with the national average and
London peer and has improved performance compared to
previous (2010) with the implementation of a transitional care
service for young people to support their transfer to adult
services.
PRUH
=
=
+
+
=
N/A
=
N/A
To improve practice further at DH a second IBD nurse has been
recruited and funding will be sought in 2015/16 for an additional
IBD nurse, with a cross-site role. In addition Pharmacy will flag
all patients who have not been appropriately prescribed bone
protection or Heparin.
PRUH adult service performed in line with the national average
and has recently implemented a searchable database of adult
IBD patients locally, which will further improve performance. In
addition the inclusion of the IBD patient assessment on the
nutritional assessment tool is under investigation.
Adult in-patient care key indicator data: DH performance was
similar to or above the national average for 4/7 criteria. PRUH
performance was better than the national average for the
majority of criteria.
Adult patient experience key indicator data: DH was better than
the national average for the majority of criteria, whilst PRUH
performance was similar to or better than the national average
for 4/7 criteria.
Mortality data: None of the patients included in the DH sample
died in hospital. 1 (6%) adult patient death was recorded for the
PRUH. The death was not related to ulcerative colitis (national
average mortality rate – adult audit = 0.8%).
A detailed improvement plan has been developed that addresses
the recommendations made by both the organisational and
clinical audits.
The national audit data shows that DH paediatric service
performed in line with the national average.
Actions in progress at DH include the development of the
Paediatric Ulcerative Colitis Activity Index (PUCAI) assessment
on EPR and participation in clinical trials. DH has applied to
participate in two clinical trials, with national coverage.
Paediatric inpatient care key indicator data: DH had mixed
results for the audit.
Audit Title
Headline Results and/or actions taken
Rating
DH
Published: June 2014
Audit period: 01/01/13 - 31/12/13
Sample Size:
 DH paediatric audit: 11
patients
 DH patient experience: 0
patients
 PRUH: Specialist
gastroenterology service not
provided
National Chronic Obstructive
Pulmonary Disease (COPD) Audit
Programme – Organisational Audit
Published: November 2014
Audit Period: 01/02/14 – 30/04/14
Sample Size:
 DH: 100%
 PRUH: 100%
National Diabetes Audit (NDA)
Report
Published: October 2014
Audit Period: 1/01/12 – 31/03/13
Sample Size:
 DH: 100% (5966 patients)
 PRUH: Diabetic outpatient
service not provided.
PRUH
Mortality data: None of the patients contained in the DH sample
died in hospital.
A detailed improvement plan has been developed that addresses
the recommendations made by both the organisational and
clinical audits.
DH achieved the highest organisational score compared to 15
national and London peer trusts. Out of 198 units participating
nationally, DH ranked ninth best performing. PRUH achieved the
same overall organisational score as the national median. Both
sites achieved the highest possible domain scores for NonInvasive Ventilation and Managing Respiratory Failure and
Oxygen Therapy.
+
=
=
N/A
+
+
At the PRUH, to improve practice further an additional specialist
respiratory nurse has been appointed and in-reach visits to
respiratory patients in the Emergency Department and other
wards is now included in the consultant job plan. In addition,
COPD patients will be discussed at the existing multi-disciplinary
team (MDT) meeting and the frequency of ward based specialist
reviews will increase to twice daily.
Performance improvements have also been driven forward at DH
since the audit, with the provision of two new pulmonary
rehabilitation centres in the local community. Action is also in
progress regarding the implementation of electronic recordsharing with GP practices.
Across all 6 NICE recommended treatment targets, DH
performed 6th out of 17 national and London peer Trusts.
The NDA report recommends that DH focuses its improvement
strategy on HbA1c ≤58mmol/mol (7.5%), DH achieved 38.6%
compared with the national average 62.2% and previous
performance in 2011/12 of 43.8%. A DH action plan is in
development to support further improvement.
Overall, treatment targets and care processes for Lambeth and
Southwark have improved since previous rounds of the audit.
National Diabetes Inpatient Audit
(NaDIA)
Published: March 2014
Audit period: 16 – 20 Sep-13
Sample Size:
Performance at DH has improved for 10/12 patient experience
criteria from 2012 to 2013 and at PRUH performance has
improved across the board, including in relation to medication
safety and patient experience.
Areas where DH appears to perform below national average
155
Audit Title
Headline Results and/or actions taken
Rating
DH


DH: 133 (100%)
PRUH: 43 cases
National Paediatric Diabetes Audit
Published: October 2014
Audit period: 01/04/14 – 31/03/14
Sample Size:
 DH: 100% (135 patients)
 PRUH: 100% (112 patients)
Pregnancy Care in Women with
Diabetes (NPID)
Published: October 2014
Audit Period: 01/01/2013 –
31/12/2013
Sample Size:
 DH: 100% (31 patients)
 PRUH: Service not provided
by King’s (provided by
Bromley Healthcare).
include the number of episodes of mild hypoglycaemia and blood
glucose above target range; both of these may reflect greater
identification compared to other trusts due to the electronic data
capture, which flags all blood results occurring outside of range.
The PRUH results will improve further with new diabetes
specialist staff currently being recruited.
DH performance is within expected NICE target range, and
similar to peer (Evelina Children’s Hospital, GSTT). PRUH
performance is within the expected range and similar to London
peers.
Reference lines represent the upper and lower NICE HbA1c
targets of 58 mmol/mol and 80 mmol/mol respectively.
NICE recommends that women with diabetes take 5 milligrams
(5mg) of folic acid while planning pregnancy and then up to 12
weeks gestation to reduce the risk of having a baby with a neural
tube defect. 59% at DH used 5mg folic acid supplement prior to
pregnancy compared with 19% in the London region and 33%
nationally.
NICE recommends that women with diabetes who are planning
to become pregnant should aim to maintain their HbA1c below
43 mmol/mol (6.1%). 19% at DH had a first trimester HbA1c
measurement below 43 mmol/mol compared with 9% in the
London region and 11% nationally.
NPID has defined 'adequately prepared for pregnancy' as taking
folic acid (400mcg or 5mg) prior to pregnancy and having a first
trimester HbA1c measurement of less than 53 mmol/mol. 44%
were prepared for pregnancy at DH compared with 17% in the
London region and 21% nationally.
A trust-wide action plan will be developed to support further
improvement and inclusion of Princess Royal University Hospital
(PRUH) in the 2015 audit round.
156
PRUH
=
=
+
N/A
Audit Title
Headline Results and/or actions taken
Rating
DH
Renal Registry
Published: December 2014
Audit Period: 01/01/13 - 31/12/13
Sample Size:
 King’s: 100% (162 patients)
 PRUH: Service not provided.
King’s has the 4th highest rate in England of patients starting on
renal replacement therapy (RRT) who have diabetes, at 35.8%,
however survival for patients on RRT is very similar to national
average (89.8% vs. 91.0%), indicating good quality care.
PRUH
N/A
N/A
=
+
Compared to the 2012 data, patients presenting to a nephrologist
less than 90 days before RRT initiation has increased from
18.8% to 21.7% at King’s and is above the national average
(18.9%).
Patients on home dialysis continues to exceed the NICE target of
15% at 18.3%, and is above the national average of 17.3%.
King’s has the 4th highest level of satellite haemodialysis.
Overall rates for hospital-acquired infections per 100 dialysis
patient years (01/05/12 – 30/04/13) are all similar to or better
than the national average.
The median time on waiting list for kidney transplant has
increased from 635 days in 2011 to 742 days in 2013.
Anaesthesia Sprint Audit
Published: March 2014
Audit period: 01/05/13 - 31/07/13
Sample Size:
 DH: 79% (31 patients)
 PRUH: 78% (76 patients)
The data is currently under review by the clinical team at DH and
PRUH and a detailed improvement plan is being developed.
Older People
DH had mixed results for this audit, whilst PRUH performed at or
better than national average performance for the majority of audit
criteria.
An action plan has been developed at PRUH to improve
performance further – education will be provided to all
anaesthetic staff on the process for managing a proximal femoral
fracture. In addition a laminated copy of the process, based on
the Anaesthetic Sprint Audit of Practice standards, will be put up
in trauma theatres and the anaesthetic department. The process
includes the provision of peri-operative nerve block and the need
to record in the patient notes if Bone Cement Implantation
Syndrome (BCIS) occurs post implementation of the cement and
the appropriate steps to be taken. Two snapshot audits will be
undertaken, one to assess provision of nerve block for all general
anaesthetic procedures and another to provide assurance of the
157
Audit Title
Headline Results and/or actions taken
Rating
DH
PRUH
safety and efficacy of diamorphine use at the PRUH.
National Hip Fracture Database
(NHFD) National Report
Published: September 2014
Audit Period:
One year cohort: 01/01/1331/12/13
Three year cohort: 01/01/1131/12/13
Sample Size:
 DH: 154 patients
 PRUH: 371 patients
Sentinel Stroke National Audit
Programme (SSNAP) – Clinical
Audit
Published: October 2014
Audit period: 01/04/14 – 30/06/14
Sample Size:
 DH: 90+% (196 patients)
 PRUH: 80-89% (210 patients)
SSNAP – Clinical Audit
Published: January 2015
Audit period: 01/07/14 – 30/09/14
Sample Size:
 DH: 80-89% (190 patients)
 PRUH: 80-89% (194 patients)
SSNAP Acute Organisational
Audit
Published: October 2014
Audit period: 01/07/14
Sample Size:
 DH: 100% (1/1)
 PRUH: 100% (1/1)
158
The audit data is currently under review at DH and an action plan
will be developed.
Both DH and PRUH performed above the national average for
time to surgery, bone health medication and falls assessment.
Both hospitals performed below national average for time taken
to orthopaedic care and senior geriatric review.
=
=
*
+
DH Hyper Acute Stroke Unit (HASU) achieved the 4th highest
overall SSNAP score compared to all national peers. PRUH
HASU achieved the 5th highest overall SSNAP score compared
to national peers.
*
+
DH achieved the highest organisational audit score nationally
and performed above the national average for all six domains.
*
+
Compared to the 2012/13 financial year best practice criteria
attainment for the calendar year 2013 has improved from 0.2% to
14.5% at DH. Local data collection at DH shows that
performance has improved further to the end Q3, 2014/15, with
all 9 criteria met in 45.65% of cases. Performance at PRUH is
40% for the calendar year 2013.
Actions are in place, led by the newly-established Hip Fracture
Forum, to drive improvement in these areas and, whilst
performance demonstrates improvement, the area remains
under close internal scrutiny and is a Trust quality priority topic.
DH Hyper Acute Stroke Unit (HASU) achieved the 3rd highest
overall SSNAP score compared to all national peers. PRUH
HASU achieved the 5th highest overall SSNAP score compared
to national peers.
The SSNAP data is routinely reviewed by the multidisciplinary
team, with areas of underperformance identified and actions
taken to improve practice.
PRUH performed above the national average for the majority of
the criteria.
Audit Title
Headline Results and/or actions taken
Rating
DH
SSNAP - Mortality Data
Published: November 2014
Audit period: 01/04/13 – 31/03/14
Sample Size:
 DH: 90%+ (762 patients)
 PRUH: 80-89% (816 patients)
The standardised mortality ratio at both DH and PRUH is within
the control limit.
PRUH
=
=
=
=
=
=
Standardised mortality ratio – DH Hyper Acute Stroke Unit (HASU)
Standardised mortality ratio – PRUH Hyper Acute Stroke Unit (HASU)
Asthma in Children
Published: January 2015
Audit Period: 01/08/13 - 31/03/14
Sample Size:
 DH: 100% (50 patients)
 PRUH: 100% (50 patients)
Epilepsy 12
Published: November 2014
Audit Period:
Service Descriptor: 01/01/14
Clinical Audit: 0/1/01/13 –
30/04/13
Women’s & Children’s Health
Denmark Hill (DH) performed in line with or above the national
average for 14/22 measures. DH performed in the upper quartile
nationally for administration of beta 2 agonist and IV
hydrocortisone/oral prednisone.
Princess Royal University Hospital (PRUH) performed in line with
or above the national average for 16/22 measures. PRUH
performed in the upper quartile nationally for the recording of
respiratory rate and GCS score as well as discharge
prescriptions for prednisone.
The data is currently under review by the clinical team at DH and
PRUH and a detailed improvement plan is being developed.
DH was not identified as an outlier for any of the 12 performance
indicators measured by the audit.
Performance at PRUH was not identified as an outlier for the
majority of the performance indicators (11 out of 12). It was,
however identified as a negative outlier for Epilepsy Specialist
Nurse (Indicator 2).
159
Audit Title
Headline Results and/or actions taken
Rating
DH
Patient Reported Experience
Measures: 01/01/13 – 30/04/14
Sample Size:
 DH: 92% (9 patients)
 PRUH: 100% (7patients)
PRUH
DH performed in line or above the national average for 5/10
applicable indicators and PRUH for 6/11 applicable indicators.
PRUH performance was similar to or better than for 7 of the
previous indicators. DH did not participate in the first round.
It is noted that data reliability is affected by small patient
numbers.
National Neonatal Audit
Programme
Published: October 2014
Audit Period: 01/01/13 - 31/12/13
Sample Size:
 DH: 100% (603 patients)
 PRUH: 100% (325 patients)
Paediatric Asthma
Published: March 2014
Audit period: 01/11/13 – 30/11/13
Sample Size:
 DH: 100% (32 patients)
 PRUH: 100% (18 patients)
Paediatric Bronchiectasis
Published: March 2014
Audit period: 01/10/13 - 30/11/13
Sample Size:
 DH: 100% (12 patients)
 PRUH: No patients diagnosed
with bronchiectasis during the
audit period.
160
A trust wide action plan is in development to support further
improvement.
DH performance is above the national average for all criteria
audited and has shown improvements compared to the previous
performance.
+
-
+
=
+
N/A
Performance at PRUH is below the national average, although
has improved for Retinopathy of Prematurity (ROP) screening
(28% achieved 2013 report compared to 100% achieved in the
2014 report).
A local review of the audit data found that PRUH performance is
driven by data quality issues rather than quality of care issues.
Training to be provided to all staff to ensure appropriate data
collection across all criteria.
DH and PRUH performed at or above the national average for
the majority of criteria relating to initial assessment and treatment
criteria. The discharge process has been identified for
improvement at both sites.
A trust-wide action plan is in place to improve performance
across both sites. Actions include: a new Respiratory Clinic will
be set up at the PRUH to include the treatment of difficult asthma
cases, an audit of the appropriate management of paediatric
asthma patients in the Emergency Department will be completed
across sites, education and training will be provided if indicated,
DH guidance will be rolled out at the PRUH, cases at PRUH will
be reviewed to ensure that patients are being discharged and
followed up appropriately, and the asthma link nurses at DH will
be provided with training to ensure that device technique is
assessed and a written asthma plan provided at discharge.
DH performed at or above the national average for all criteria
relating to diagnosis, consultation and exacerbations and the
majority of standards relating to lung function (7/9 criteria). It is
noted that the criterion below the national average maybe a data
submission issue – under investigation by the Division. Other
actions being progressed to improve performance further include
the development of a discharge summary proforma that includes
all the data items specified in the audit.
Audit Title
Headline Results and/or actions taken
Rating
DH
Paediatric Intensive Care Audit
Network (PICANet)
Published: September 2014
Audit period: 01/01/13 – 31/12/13
Sample Size:
 DH: 100% (658 patients)
 PRUH: Service not provided.
The audit identifies the mortality rate at Denmark Hill (DH) as
being one of the lowest nationally, and second lowest amongst
peer trusts.
PRUH
+
N/A
The standardised mortality ratio (adjusted) has improved to 0.83
(2013) from 0.96 (2012) and is the second lowest of all peer
trusts.
DH has the lowest rate of emergency admissions of all peer
Trusts and emergency readmissions at DH have reduced
compared to the previous audits. DH has improved year on year
from 2.2% (2011) to 1.4% (2012) to 0.8% (2013).
The data from the NHS England Consultant Outcomes Publication (2014) reviewed by Trust
in 2014/15.
Audit Title
Headline Results and/or actions taken
Cardiothoracic Surgery
Acute
In-hospital mortality rate (risk adjusted) – within expected range
(DH only; service not provided at PRUH).
Rating
DH
PRUH
=
N/A
Data taken from: Society for
Cardiothoracic Surgery in Great
Britain & Ireland
Published: October 2014
Period: 1st April 2010 - 31st
March 2013.
161
Audit Title
Headline Results and/or actions taken
Interventional Cardiology
Major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular event (MACCE) rate
– below expected range, i.e. better than expected (DH only;
service not provided at PRUH).
Data taken from: The British
Cardiovascular Intervention
Society (BCIS)
Published: October 2014
Period: 01/01/12 – 31/12/13
Colorectal Surgery – Bowel
Cancer
Data taken from: The National
Bowel Cancer Audit
Published: October 2014
Period: 01/04/10 – 31/03/13
162
Adjusted 90-day mortality – within expected range (DH only; data
relates to patients whose bowel cancer was diagnosed between
April 2010 and March 2013, before PRUH integration).
Rating
DH
PRUH
=
N/A
=
N/A
Audit Title
Headline Results and/or actions taken
Orthopaedics – Hip and Knee
Surgery
Hip surgery - hospital risk adjusted 90-day mortality rate – within
expected range, DH and PRUH
Rating
DH
PRUH
=
=
Data taken from: The National
Joint Registry
Published: October 2014
Period: 01/04/13- 31/03/14
Knee surgery - hospital risk adjusted 90-day mortality rate within expected range, DH and PRUH.
=
=
163
Audit Title
Neurosurgery
Headline Results and/or actions taken
Rating
DH
PRUH
=
=
30-day Standardised Mortality Rate (risk adjusted) - within
expected range (DH only; service not provided at PRUH).
=
N/A
Within expected range for complications, below national average
for transfusion rate and mortality (DH only; service not provided
at PRUH).
=
N/A
Mortality (risk adjusted) – within expected range (DH only;
service not provided at PRUH).
=
N/A
Data taken from: The
Neurosurgical National Audit
Programme
Published: December 2014
Period: Timeframe not stated
Urology – Nephrectomy
(Surgical Removal of a Kidney)
Data taken from: The British
Association of Urological
Surgeons
Published: October 2014
Period: 01/01/12 – 31/12/13
Vascular Surgery
Data taken from: The Vascular
Society of Great Britain and
Ireland
Published: October 2014
Period: Timeframe not stated
164
Mortality following elective abdominal aortic aneurysm repair (risk
adjusted)
Audit Title
Headline Results and/or actions taken
Rating
DH
PRUH
Mortality following carotid endarterectomy (risk adjusted)
Bariatric Surgery
In-hospital mortality rate – Mortality within expected range at DH
and PRUH.
=
PRUH within expected range and better than national average
for in-hospital mortality rate, post-operative stay and related
readmissions and re-exploration for bleeding.
N/A
=
Data taken from: The Bariatric
Registry
Published: October 2014
Period: 01/04/12 – 31/03/14
Thyroid and Endocrine Surgery
Data taken from: The British
Association of Endocrine and
Thyroid Surgeons (BAETS)
Published: October 2014
Period: 01/07/10 – 30/06/13
Oesophago-gastric, head and
neck and lung cancers
PRUH – second relevant clinician to submit data 2015/16.
DH – relevant clinician did not submit any data.
Not applicable – patients are referred to Guy’s & St Thomas’s for
surgery.
N/A
N/A
165
Programme of local audits were reviewed by the Trust in 2014/15
Audit Title
Liver Transplantation
Published: April 2014
Audit period: 01/04/2003 – 31/03/13
Sample Size:
 DH: 100% (207 patients)
 PRUH: N/A. Service not
provided.
Headline Results and/or actions taken
The audit demonstrates that adult patients treated at DH achieve:
The lowest 90 day patient mortality rate (0%) and 90 day graft loss rate
(0.8%) for elective first liver transplants and the joint lowest rate nationally
for both criteria for super urgent transplants.
A risk adjusted survival rate for elective and super urgent transplants that
compares favourably to all other centres nationally, with DH achieving the
highest rate of survival at 3 years and 5 years for elective transplants.
The audit demonstrates that paediatric patients treated at DH achieve:
A 90 day patient mortality rate and 90 day graft loss rate in line with or
better than the national average for both elective and super urgent
transplants.
An unadjusted survival rate at 1 year, 3 years and 5 years that is above
the national average for elective and super urgent transplants (2013 –
2013).
National Care of the Dying Audit in
Hospitals (NCDAH)
Published: May 2014
Audit period: 01/05/13 – 31/05/13
Sample Size:
 DH: 98% (49 patients)
 PRUH: 100% (50 patients)
Potential Donor Audit
Published: May 2014
Audit period: 01/04/13 – 31/03/14
Sample Size:
 King’s (DH & PRUH): 100% of
applicable cases
Actions to improve further are incorporated into the Liver Mortality
Monitoring Committee presentation and Liver performance meeting and
not recorded in a separate action plan.
Organisational Key Performance Indicators (KPIs): In line with the national
picture, DH and PRUH had mixed results for KPI achievement.
Clinical KPIs: DH at or better than the national average for the majority of
KPI targets, whilst PRUH had mixed results.
A trust-wide action plan is in development that addresses patient
information; education and training; local audit on End of Life Care; the
review of End of Life Care audit data from Specialty-level to Board-level;
and the implementation of a King’s policy for deactivation of implantable
cardioverter defibrillators. To improve the provision of services at PRUH a
business case is in development for additional palliative care nursing staff.
Recruitment will include an education lead and an End of Life Care lead.
The audit is not running 2014/15.
Trust-level data available (DH and PRUH). Total number of patients
receiving a transplanted organ from donations at King’s rose from 109 in
2012/13 to 116 in 2013/14.
Total number of kidneys successfully donated rose from 68 in 2012/13 to
73 in 2013/14; pancreas successfully donated rose from 8 in 2012/13 to
14 in 2013/14; livers successfully donated rose from 22 in 2012/13 to 26 in
2013/14 and hearts successfully donated from 6 in 2012/13 to 8 in
2013/14.
An action plan to continue to drive improvement across sites has been
developed and is monitored on a quarterly basis by the Trust’s Organ
Donation Committee.
166
Patient Safety Audit Programme
NICE Derogation Audit Programme
The Patient Safety Audit Programme sets out King’s approach to ensuring
that areas identified as high risk are subject to routine review and, where
required, improvement. The Programme is a key component of King’s
Risk Management Strategy and is reported through the Patient Safety
Committee to the Trust’s Quality Governance Committee. The Patient
Safety Audit Programme includes:
Clinical record-keeping
Consent
Surgical Safety Checklist
Discharge
Moving and handling
Falls assessment
Patient observations (deteriorating patient)
Clinical handover (nursing)
Skin integrity and pressure ulcers
Patient identification
Infection prevention and control
Nutrition
Nasogastric and orogastric tube placement
Availability of patient records
Screening procedures and diagnostic test procedures
Blood transfusion
Hospital Acquired Thrombosis (HAT)
Medicines management
Resuscitation
Piped medical gas administration
Safeguarding
Tracheostomy.
King’s sometimes approves local practice that differs from NICE guidance.
We call this a ‘NICE derogation’, and it is usually approved on the grounds
that, because of its academic and research status, King’s is able to offer
services beyond those of many other hospitals. These derogations are
always subject to detailed scrutiny and local clinical audit to ensure that
patient outcomes are better than or as expected. In 2014-15 the NICE
Derogation Audit Programme has included audits of derogations to the
following NICE guidance:
CG122 Ovarian cancer
CG154 Ectopic pregnancy and miscarriage
CG95 Chest pain of recent onset
CG112 Sedation in children and young people
CG144 Venous thromboembolic diseases
CG149 antibiotics for early onset neonatal infection
CG151 Neutropenic sepsis
CG55 Intra partum care
CG62 Antenatal care
IPG149 Division of ankyloglossia (tongue-tie) for breastfeeding
CG156 Fertility: assessment and treatment of people with fertility
problems
CG171 Female urinary incontinence.
167
KCH Divisional Clinical Audit
Programmes
Each of King’s Divisions has a clinical audit programme in place:
Ambulatory Care and Local Networks.
Critical Care, Theatres and Diagnostics.
Liver, Renal, Surgery and Orthopaedics.
Networked Services.
Trauma, Emergency and Acute Medicine.
Women’s and Children’s.
Four hundred and sixty six local clinical audit projects are reported in the
Divisional Audit Programmes for 2014-15 and many hundreds of
improvements in practice are made every year as a result of these
programmes.
Goals Agreed with Commissioners
The following table indicates the goals and achievement for CQUINs at King’s:
Goal Number
National CQUIN Indicators
Friends and Family Test –
implementation of staff
Friends and Family Test – Friends
and Family early implementation outpatients
Friends and Family Test –
Increased or maintained response
rate
Q4 target
N/A
2a
NHS Safety Thermometer –
Reduction in Falls at Denmark Hill
Site
2b
NHS Safety Thermometer –
Reduction in Pressure Ulcers at
PRUH
No more
than 3
injurious falls
per month
Grade 2 0.89
bedday rate
Grade 3 0.04
bedday rate
Grade 4 – 0
bedday rate
90%
1a
1 - Friends and Family
1b
2
2 – NHS Safety
Thermometer
3 - Dementia
4. Improved
coordination and
delivery of care for
people with Long
Term Conditions
168
3a
Find, assess & refer patients
Q4 Actual
N/A Achieved
N/A
N/A (Achieved)
Inpatient
30%
A&E
20%
60-80%
varied
Inpatient
DH – 50%
PRUH 43%
A&E
DH&PRUH 23%
Failed in January but
achieved in Feb and Mar
Grade 2 – 0.81
Grade 3 0.04
Grade 4 – 0 bedday rate
DH 97%
PRUH 96%
Achieved
3b
Clinical leadership & staff training
3c
Supporting of careers of people with
dementia
N/A
Achieved
4a
Improved coordination and delivery
of care for people with Long Term
Conditions: Care planning training
and implementation (Diabetes and
Respiratory at DH)
20% of care
plans show a
care plan –
Diabetes
90%
clinicians
Audit in progress
79% clinicians trained
Goal Number
4b
5. Improving
Communication
across primary and
secondary care
5a
5b
6 – Alcohol and
Smoking prevention
and well being
7 – London
Commissioning
6a
National CQUIN Indicators
Q4 target
trained
Q4 Actual
Improved coordination and delivery
of care for people with Long Term
Conditions: COPD Bundles at
PRUH
Improving Communication across
primary and secondary care –
improving discharge summaries and
provision of on call advice
Shared access to patient records
across primary and secondary care
- Denmark Hill only :
Anticoagulation - development of
implementation plan to support
NICE AF guideline requirements
Screening of alcohol use & provision
of brief advice and staff training –
Denmark Hill
85%
92%
N/A
N/A
Achieved
TBA
TBA*
80%
screening
and brief
advice
75% training
MAU – 85% screened /
71% brief advice
ASU 89% screened /
80% brief advice
Other wards 90%
screened/ 83% brief
advice
64% - Training
78% screened / 99%
brief advice
Maternity 42%%
screened / 100% brief
advice
Not achieved - Training
6b
Screening of alcohol use &
provision of brief advice and staff
training – PRUH
6c
Screening of smoking use &
provision of brief advice and staff
training – Denmark Hill
6d
Screening of smoking use &
provision of brief advice and staff
training – PRUH
7a
7 day working – Emergency
Medicine (Denmark Hill)
80%
screening
and brief
advice
45%
Maternity at
PRUH
75% training
80%
screening
and brief
advice
75% training
80%
screening
and brief
advice
45%
Maternity at
PRUH
75% training
N/A
MAU – 86% screened /
84% brief advice
ASU 89% screened /
91% brief advice
Other wards 90%
screened/ 92% brief
advice
83% Training
78% screened / 99%
brief advice
Maternity 42%%
screened / 100% brief
advice
Not achieved - Training
Not achieved
169
Goal Number
Standards
National CQUIN Indicators
Consultant led communication –
Emergency Medicine (both sites)
Q4 target
N/A
7c
Emergency Departemnt – Clinical
Decision Unit (PRUH)
N/A
Achieved DH Not
achieved PRUH
Achieved
7d
Emergency Department – Shift
Leader (PRUH)
N/A
Not achieved
7e
Emergency Department – 24/7
access to the key diagnostics
(PRUH)
Emergency Department – Policies
(PRUH)
N/A
TBA*
N/A
Achieved
Emergency Department – National
Early Warning System (NEWS) –
both sites
Clinical medication review of
patients in health and ageing unit to
improve the management of
patients medicines after discharge –
both sites
N/A
Not achieved DH
Achieved PRUH
80% DH
70% PRUH
90% DH
66% PRUH
7b
7f
7g
8 – Clinical medication
review
8a
Q4 Actual
NHS England CQUINs
9 – NATIONAL Cardiac Surgery
9a
Inpatient waits within 7 days
35%
Achieved
10 – Highly Specialist
Services
10a
50%
Not achieved, (37.5%
achieved)
11 – NATIONAL Endocrine Coding
11a
Providers of Highly specialised
services will hold a clinical outcome
collaborative audit workshop and
produce a single Provider report.
Outpatient Coding
N/A 50%
Achieved
12 – NATIONAL - HIV
Telemedicine
12a
Service model improvements in
HIV services for ‘stable’ patients
N/A 40%
Achieved
13 - NATIONAL - Renal
Dialysis
13a
35%
Achieved
14 - LOCAL - Clinical
Utilisation
14
Shared haemodialysis care –
patient involvement in the tasks of
haemodialysis
To facilitate providers adoption and
use of utilisation technology in
managing patient flow, to optimise
patients care in the level one neurorehabilitation
15 - LOCAL Specialised
Orthopaedics
15
Complex cases of orthopaedic
surgery (mainly revisions) are
discussed in a network MDT
30%
*Q4 Actual awaiting commissioner confirmation
170
1%
Achieved
Achieved
Goal Number
16 LOCAL - Gynae
MDT
16
17 LOCAL - Children's
Asthma
17
18 LOCAL - HIV
Clinical Trials
18
19 LOCAL - Children's
Short Gut
19
National CQUIN Indicators
Ensure that women being
considered for surgery for the
treatment of urinary and faecal
incontinence, and those with
recurrent prolapse are discussed in
a sector / regional based MDT to
ensure that they are treated in line
with agreed protocols.
Develop a comprehensive discharge
bundle for patients and primary care
to reduce readmissions
Support trial entry or to work in
partnership with another provide
Q4 target
30%
Q4 Actual
Achieved
30%
Achieved
40%
Achieved
To enable further discussion and
improve the pathway for patients on
the gastrointestinal failure pathway
40%
Achieved
171
Part 3. An Overview of performance in 2013/14 against mandated national key standards
All trusts are required to report against a core set of indicators, for at least the last two reporting periods, using a standardised statement set out in the NHS
(Quality Accounts) Amendment Regulations 2012. Only indicators that are relevant to the services provided at King’s are included in the tables below.
Indicator
Data
Source
Period 1
Value
Summary Hospital Mortality
Index (SHMI)
NHS IC
Oct 12– Sept 13
National Targets & Indicators
Jul 13 – Jun
94.0%
14
91%
Palliative Care Indicator: %
of patient death with
palliative care coding.
NHS IC
Oct 12–Sept13
35.05%
*6-week diagnostic waits
PiMs/
CRIS
March 2014
*Percentage of incomplete
pathways within 18 weeks
for patients on incomplete
pathways at the end of the
reporting period
PiMs/
Oasis
March 2014
172
Period 2
Value
Actions taken to improve the result in year
The Trust discusses these results monthly with the divisions
at a special executive committee. Follow up actions have
led to an improvement in scores.
Oct 13- Sept
14
The Assistant Medical Director has audited a sample of
patients to ensure that palliative care coding was
appropriate and that the patients were in receipt of expert
palliative care intervention.
33.95%
3.49%
March 2015
5.5%
Additional commissioner funding in Q4 to fund offsite work
and additional onsite capacity in the evening and weekend.
92.3%
March 2015
92.2%
Additional national and commissioner funding across 14/15
to reduce admitted backlog and reduce waiting times in
specific specialties in outpatients.
Indicator
Data
Source
Period 1
Value
Period 2
Value
Actions taken to improve the result in year
*Maximum waiting time of
62 days from urgent GP
referral to first treatment for
all cancers.
Open
Exeter
Jan-Mar 2014
87.3%
Jan-Mar 2015
84.2%
Implemented a number of site service moves to increase
capacity to achieve the wider 62 day target.
CHKS
Apr to Dec 13
3.7%
Apr to Dec 14
Readmissions 28 day
Patients aged 0-14
Patients aged 15+
CHKS
Apr-Dec 13
Trust responsiveness to the personal needs of patients
Q32 Were you involved as
CQC
KCH 2013/14
much as you wanted to be
in decisions about your
care and treatment?
Q34 Did you find someone
CQC
KCH 2013/14
on the hospital staff to talk
to about your worries and
fears?
Q36 Were you given
CQC
KCH 2013/14
enough privacy when
discussing your condition or
treatment?
Q56 Did a member of staff
CQC
KCH 2013/14
tell you about medication
side effects to watch for
when you went home?
Q62 Did hospital staff tell
CQC
KCH 2013/14
you who to contact if you
3.9%
4.5%
4.5%
Apr to Dec 14
7.5
Sept 14 – Jan
15
7.0
5.5
Sept 14 – Jan
15
5.2
8.7
Sept 14 – Jan
15
8.0
4.7
Sept 14 – Jan
15
4.3
7.8
Sept 14 – Jan
15
7.3
Data is analyzed monthly to look for trends. Any issues are
acted upon and raised to executives and commissioners
where appropriate. In 2013/14 the Trust conducted an
emergency readmissions audit with a GP and this will be
repeated in 2014/15.
Divisions are tasked with developing action plans to
address issues raised by patients. These are monitored
through the Patient Experience Committee and through
Divisional performance meetings.
Examples of improvement work include:
The Trust dignity month which highlights innovative projects
across the trust to improve patient dignity
Introduction of patient and relative diaries in the Frank
Cooksey Rehabilitation Unit to improve communication,
particularly out or hours and at weekends.
In Haematology, patients are now offered a pre-transplant
information session which has been well received by
patients.
Development of new Discharge Policy to improve the
discharge process for patients and improve the information
that they receive
Patient stories and patient video stories on our wards to
*Figures for period March 2014 reflect the quarter 4 position. Figures for period March 2015 reflect the average of the monthly results between 01 April 2014 - 31 March
2015.
173
Indicator
Data
Source
Period 1
Value
Period 2
Value
were worried about your
condition or treatment after
you left hospital?
How likely are you to
recommend our ward to
friends and family if they
needed similar care or
treatment?"
How likely are you to
recommend our A&E
174
Actions taken to improve the result in year
gather qualitative feedback to support service improvement.
Trust
Trust
2013/2014
2013/2014
Family & Friends Test
Inpatient 2014/15
Note:
average
scoring
FFT score
changed to
for DH
% October
Site = 62
2014. Data
ranging
updated to
from 61 reflect new
68
scoring.
Target
Average %
FFT score
of
for
inpatients
inpatients
who would
is 68 to
recommend
place
across all
King’s on
sites = 93%
top 20%
with a high
of London
of 96%
trusts
Average %
of
inpatients
who would
not
recommend
across all
sites = 2%
Emergenc 2014/15
Note:
y average
scoring
Divisions have developed action plans to address issues
raised by patients who would not recommend King’s.
Examples include:
 ‘Shh noise at night campaign’ on children’s wards
 introducing soft close bins
 Focused improvement work on our poorest performing
wards for patient experience focussing on improving
teamwork, reducing hospital harms, improving patient
experience.
 Continued roll-out of ‘intentional rounding’
National and local response targets linked to CQUIN are on
track to be met. Awaiting March results.
A wide ranging improvement programme is underway to
improve the patient experience of the ED on both sites.
Indicator
department/ to friends and
family if they needed similar
care or treatment?"
Data
Source
Period 1
Value
FFT score
for DH
Site = 45
ranging
from 40 59
PRUH
Site = 43
ranging
from 10 –
79
Target
FFT score
for
inpatients
is 61 to
place
King’s on
top 20%
of London
trusts
Period 2
Value
Actions taken to improve the result in year
changed to
% October
2014. Data
updated to
reflect new
scoring.
Average %
of
emergency
who would
recommend
at the DH
site = 84%
versus 8%
who would
not
recommend
Average %
of
emergency
patients
who would
recommend
at the
PRUH site
= 78%
versus 13%
who would
not
recommend
Actions include:
 Improving experience of arriving at the ED: To
improve the ‘Meet and Greet’ function where a senior
nurse ‘greets’ patients, the desk has been moved to
improve visibility for patients and to give the nurse
better oversight of the main reception area
 A review of signage has been undertaken
 Introduced curtained areas in the triage areas to
improve privacy and dignity
 New patient information leaflet detailing steps in their
journey, what to expect in the ED etc
 Increased use of volunteers across the department
including in reception to support patients through their
journey
175
Indicator
Data
Source
% of staff employed who
would recommend the
Trust as a provider of care
to their Family or Friends
NHS IC
Indicator
Data
Source
% of patients admitted who
were risk assessed for VTE
NHS IC
C-difficile infection rate per
100,000 bed days
Patient safety incidents
176
NRLS
Period 1
KCH
2013/14
Period 1
Value
78.3
Value
Period 2
Value
Workforce
Q2 – 14/15
67%
Period 2
KCH 2013/14
98.4%
KCH 2013/14
Reportable cases
Rate /100,000
bed days
49
Oct 13 – Mar 14
Value
Patient Safety
KCH 2014/15
97.44%
75
13.13
18.56
KCH 2014/15
Reportable
cases
Rate /100,000
bed days
8841
Apr-Sept 14
9844
Actions taken to improve the result in year
We have focused on improving communications with staff in
year, and this work has been reflected in our improved score
in the survey.
Actions taken to improve the result in year
The specialist team monitors this on a regular basis. This
ensures Kings remains a national leader in this field.
The following actions have been taken to review CDIFF in
2013/14:
 Implementation of the DH’s two stage testing
methodology
 Multidisciplinary review of all cases to identify lessons
to be learnt
 An increased focus on cleaning standards including the
secondment of the senior IC nurse
 Introduction of hydrogen peroxide vapour technology as
an enhanced cleaning technology
 Much stronger focus on antibiotic prescribing including
monthly antibiotic stewardship audits.
 Introduction of a antibiotic prescribing app to further
improve antibiotic prescribing compliance.
 Introduction of a practice facilitator role in TEAM to
improve communication between the division and the
IPC team, better manage isolation facilities and improve
training.
 Increased establishment of IPC nurses from 5.5 WTE to
7 WTE
This is monitored through the quarterly safety report.
Indicator
reported to the National
Reporting and Learning
Service (NRLS)
Patient safety incidents
reported to the National
Reporting and Learning
Service (NRLS), where
degree of harm is recorded
as ‘severe harm’ or ‘death’,
as a percentage of all
patient safety incidents
reported
Rate per 1000 bed days
published#
Data
Source
Period 1
Value
Period 2
Value
Actions taken to improve the result in year
NRLS
Oct 13 – Mar 14
0.8%
Apr-Sept 14
0.6
This figure is in line with that of other large acute teaching
hospitals.
All incidents were fully investigated and subject to a
detailed root cause analysis.
The current reporting rate is one of the highest amongst
acute teaching hospitals and reflects the positive reporting
culture at King’s.
NRLS
Oct 13 – Mar 14
36.1
Apr-Sept 14
40.7
5.7**
* These figures accurately reflect data currently held by the NRLS on patient safety incidents at KCH, and discrepancies may exist with data previously
published by the NRLS. Further information on the total number of incidents reported to the NRLS (which includes October 2012-March 2013 information) is
yet to be published but is expected to report 8749 patient safety incidents for 2012/13 of which 34 (0.39%) resulted in death or severe harm.
**These figures are those published by the NRLS at a point in time, which have subsequently been adjusted to the figures marked with one asterisk.
177
Indicator
From local Trust data
Oct 12 –
March 13
April – Sept
2013
Most
recent
results for
Trust
Oct13Mar14
*Patient safety incidents reported to the National Reporting & Learning System
5206
8841
9844
 Number of patient safety
incidents


Rate of patient safety incidents
(number/1000 bed days)
Not
published
36.1
Percentage resulting in severe
harm or death
0.9%
0.8%
40.77
0.6%
Time period
for most
recent Trust
results
Best result
nationally
Worst result
nationally
National average
April – Sept
2014
12020
35
Not published
April – Sept
2014
74.9
0.24
Not published
April – Sept
2014
0%
82.9%
Not published
*In relation to the rate of severe harm and death, that not all organisation apply the national coding of degree of harm in a consistent way which can make
comparison of harm profile of organisations difficult.
This Information has been taken from the most recently published [April 2014 Organisation Patient Safety Incident Report which covers the period April –
September 2013. The comparative data relates to the ‘Acute Teaching Organisation’ Cluster rather than National Data in line with the published safety data.
The data does not include PRUH figures as the figures cannot be disaggregated from the SLHT data for the period prior to acquisition on the 1st October.
178
Patient safety incidents resulting in
severe harm or death
with data previously published by the
NRLS.
The National Reporting and Learning
Service (NRLS) was established in 2003.
The system enables patient safety incident
reports to be submitted to a national
database on a voluntary basis designed to
promote learning. It is mandatory for NHS
trusts in England to report all serious
patient safety incidents to the Care Quality
Commission as part of the Care Quality
Commission registration process. To avoid
duplication of reporting, all incidents
resulting in death or severe harm should
be reported to the NRLS who then report
them to the Care Quality Commission.
Although it is not mandatory, it is common
practice for NHS Trusts to report patient
safety incidents under the NRLS’s
voluntary arrangements.
As there is not a nationally established
and regulated approach to reporting and
categorising patient safety incidents,
different trusts may choose to apply
different approaches and guidance to
reporting, categorisation and validation of
patient safety incidents. The approach
taken to determine the classification of
each incident, such as those ‘resulting in
severe harm or death’, will often rely on
clinical judgment. This judgment may,
acceptably, differ between professionals.
In addition, the classification of the impact
of an incident may be subject to a
potentially lengthy investigation which may
result in the classification being changed.
This change may not be reported
externally and the data held by a trust may
not be the same as that held by the NRLS.
Therefore, it may be difficult to explain the
differences between the data reported by
the Trusts as this may not be comparable.
The data provided above represents the
most up-to-date data held by the NRLS on
patient safety incidents in King’s, but for
the reasons above differences may exist
179
Indicator
From local Trust
data
2014-15
2013-14
From Health and Social Care Information Centre
Most recent
results for
Trust
Time period for
most recent
Trust results
Best result
nationally
Worst result
nationally
National
average
Domain 3: Helping people recover from episodes of ill health or following injury
Emergency readmissions to hospital within 28 days of discharge:

% of patients aged 0-15 readmitted
within 28 days
3.90%
3.80%
3.80% 2013-14
0
14.94
3.11

% of patients aged over 15 readmitted
within 28 days
4.50%
4.50%
4.50% 2013-14
0
17.15
4.51
100
77
96
0
30.8
16.1
Domain 4: Ensuring that people have a positive experience of care
Responsiveness to inpatients’ personal
needs (Source: national NHS inpatient
survey)
Percentage of staff who would recommend
the provider to friends or family needing
care Source: national NHS staff survey
75.1
2014
78.3%
2014
Domain 5: Treating and caring for people in a safe environment and protecting them from avoidable harm
Percentage of admitted patients risk97.4
98.4
98.4
2013-14
assessed for venous thromboembolism
(VTE)
Rate of clostridium difficile (number of
infections/100,000 bed days).
180
13.13
15.53
15.53
2013-14
Performance against key national priorities
As at quarter 4 the Trust self-certified a
performance rating of ‘risks identified’ for
2014/15 against the Monitor Compliance
Framework for Denmark Hill. This equates to
a Monitor governance risk rating of ‘risks
identified’ which is in line with the planned
trajectory.
181
Appendix 1: Statements from Key External Stakeholders
Healthwatch Southwark, Lambeth and
Bromley’s response to King’s College
Hospital NHS Foundation Trust Quality
Accounts for 2014/15
This is a joint response to the King’s Quality
Account 2014-2015 from Local Healthwatch
Southwark, Lambeth and Bromley because
we share services which operate across these
boroughs. We appreciate the opportunity to
comment on the quality of the services
provided by King’s College NHS (Kings) at
their main two sites: Denmark Hill (DH) and
Princess Royal University Hospital (PRUH).
We would also like to see more emphasis on
carers and mental wellbeing.
We are concerned about the information and
governance of King’s, as this was rated as
‘red’, which is unsatisfactory and would like to
see this improve in the next year.
General comments
Last year’s priorities for 2014-2015
We appreciate the work King’s is doing
towards integrating two hospital systems,
however we feel that there is still a lot of data
missing from the Quality Accounts document
(such data has been made available from
other trusts such as Guys & St. Thomas FT
and South London & Maudsley FT)1. On a
wider point, we recommend it would be useful
to have a model template to include formatting
so it is easier for the public to compare Trust
quality.
We note the intention to improve all priority
goals, reflected in 5 out of 6 priorities being
carried over to this year’s priorities, although it
does raise questions on how progress is
moving forward. We hope that our comments
and suggestions below are used to help
shape this year’s priorities.
The draft report generally relates to
performance and outcomes at the DH site.
Clear data of each site performance and
activity needs to be documented for each
priority, rather than just an overall indication of
the trust performance. This masks the current
differences between the two sites in how the
service operates and the differences in
performance.
It is good to see comprehensive aims and
measures for most of the priorities so it is not
just reliant on a few measures. However,
1
To the best of our knowledge all relevant data is
included. Additional data may be available on request
182
across the priorities, we feel that they are
developed and approached in silos i.e.
clinical, management and delivery aspects.
Priority development should be considered in
terms of patient-centred care and this would
have a greater impact on patient experience.
Working to reduce Preventative Ill-health:
We would like to see everyone screened
(instead of just key wards) and more focus on
obesity. It is hard to comment on the progress
made without seeing data on the long term
and short term progress.
Hip Fractures: Questions were raised around
community physiotherapy, our feedback
suggests that in the hospital physiotherapy is
easier to access and of good quality; however
when patients are back in the community,
care and support can be variable. Discharge
also plays a role for this patient cohort and
again can be variable. We know the intention
to improve is there, reflected in a priority
focused solely on this, however we do not
have enough information on its progress, or
rather why it is not progressing. In relation to
PRUH, considerable improvement still needs
to take place especially on liaison and close
working between orthopaedic surgeons and
care of the elderly physicians for this older
patient group.
Discharge: We were very concerned that
Older People, out of your three target groups,
consistently performed badly across all the
measures. They are an important group of
users, particularly as you note the increasing
acuity of patients you see. Some groups of
Older People will not complain as much so
they will not always have their voices heard,
however King’s need to do more to engage
with them to design services. Ongoing care
plan is crucial after discharge. This includes a
contact number that patients can get through
to relevant professionals. From our
intelligence and from our public meeting we
held on QA, we have heard of patients getting
through and then being signposted back to go
back to their GP, where the GP may not have
complete understanding, which causes
anxiety for patients. It also appears there is a
huge communication gap and authority of
responsibility gap between hospitals and GPs.
There needs to be an intermediary, including
copies of discharge plans to both patients and
GP.
Cancer Experience: We think the partnership
with Macmillan is great and helps to improve
patient experience. The cancer line is a great
initiative, although we are concerned about
the operational hours as support is confined to
working hours. Timings should be extended
perhaps to 8am-8pm, 7 days a week,
although we understand the resources and
recommend this is explored.
Falls: It is great that action is taken such as
the Safe Care Forum to discover the root
causes of falls and the preventative aspect to
assess occurrences. Alongside this, we
suggest that solution-focused initiatives for
example salt shoes be explored as these can
avoid slips, as well as exploring King’s
comparator, Guys, on their root causes and
how they are addressing it. We will be
monitoring the root cause report that is soon
to be published.
Safer Surgery: We are concerned that there
is no data available. We suggest that in future
quarter 1-3 should be provided at the time of
the draft report. We note the various activities
that have taken place, but this needs to be
distinguished between specialties and sites
(DH / PRUH). We are very concerned that
Trusts are still not meeting the basics of
safety resulting in ‘never events’ taking place
and we strongly encourage transparency.
This year’s priorities for 2015-2016
We would like to see further progress on the
priorities from last year, therefore we agree
with the new set of priorities. Please also keep
in mind our suggestions and considerations
above, as they also relate to this year’s
priorities.
Working to reduce Preventative Ill-health:
We could like to see an additional indicator
here to link up with mental wellbeing or
psychological/counselling support to help
those who need it or those with dualdiagnoses. More quantifiable measures are
needed for this measure.
Falls: Again, it is difficult to ascertain if
initiatives will be taking place at both sites or
just at DH e.g. staff training.
Discharge: Following our comments above,
discharge plan needs to be clear and a
decision made on who will follow-up before
patients are discharged. There were
suggestions a discharge officer could be
considered to ‘checklist’. Feedback from our
sources has highlighted the sometimes
haphazard discharge process;
Communication needs to be better with
patients and timelier, with quantifiable
measures, and better consistency and quality
of discharge notes. Clerical and pharmacy
183
components also play a part in the discharge
experience.
We feel it is positive volunteers carry out
follow-up calls after discharge; however the
calls are not ‘full or detailed enough’ and
could be used more effectively. These calls
are great opportunities to have fuller
conversation about care after hospital. They
provide routes to develop a ‘flagging system’
for example if patients needed to speak to
clinicians; this could be referred onto
clinicians. It is also as a way to identify
vulnerable people; particularly those who
have no family or those who do not speak
English well or share a different culture which
could affect aftercare. We are not aware if this
more holistic approach is captured. We would
like to see information on the progress made
and especially improvements to the older
people group. We would like to see more
information on PRUH progress as high priority
is given but with little information.
We are pleased to see the focus on discharge
to social care institutions, however, we would
ask that this approach does not rush carers
into a placement decision and that the
dialogue that takes place is managed
sensitively to all parties and does not cause
added stress, unintentional or not. We
welcome the emphasis on integrated care,
particularly SLIC and @home team.
Medication Safety: It needs to be clear if this
focus is on paediatrics or across the Trust.
We would like to see a focus on older people
because we are aware of many issues
affecting this patient group. For example, the
strength of medications may not be
appropriate, many take a lot of medications
and it can be confusing to understand
reactions between different medications, or
even if they should be on all their medications.
We believe information on the current
medication errors should be reported, i.e.
baseline figures. On a wider note on
184
medication safety, we believe public
awareness on medication safety will empower
individuals to raise issues and/or to initiate
dialogues with professionals around their
medication.
Other Comments:
Audits / Clinical: The performance of DH site
on national and local audits are impressive
with most generally above average and selfidentified improvements. There is also clear
distinction between PRUH and DH
performance,
CQUIN/National Indicators: Clear format
specifying national and local targets and
comparator data, however there is no data in
the table, again Q3 results would be helpful
for the draft report. It would also be helpful to
include Guys’ as data can be benchmarked
because it is a similar acute trust.
Monitor / CQC: It would be helpful to mention
CQC and Monitor investigations and reports
and provide short updates with appropriate
links.
In summary, we are pleased that King’s are
working towards consistent services and
performance across its many sites. However,
we would like to see continued improvements
in patient-centred care across all its services,
particularly around dignity, respect and patient
experience, more electronic and less paperbased communication alongside
administrative and clerical competence, and a
clear line of command on where to go should
any problems arise.
Healthwatch Southwark, Lambeth,
Bromley & Lewisham
NHS Southwark Clinical Commissioning
Group
Thank you for sharing the KCH Quality
Accounts with us and inviting us to comment
on the draft document. I am able to set out
below a summary of feedback from
Southwark, Lambeth and Bromley CCGs.
Commissioners participated in the stakeholder
event you ran in January of this year where
we were able to look at last year’s priorities
and those for the coming year 2015/16 all of
which commissioners endorse.
NHS Southwark CCG have reviewed your
Quality Accounts and are agreed that your
priorities are broadly in line with our own and
here put forward comments that include
feedback from NHS Lambeth CCG, and also
NHS Bromley CCG.
On behalf of all commissioners we would like
to acknowledge the commitment and focus
that King’s have made in the past year
through the clinical quality review group and
senior nursing and medical attendance at this
forum and at the quality of reports and
presentations.

We welcome the focus on
preventable disease in the coming
year which has also been encouraged
through the local incentive scheme for
acute trusts in order to work towards a
cultural shift to disease prevention.

We are pleased to see continuing
work at improving the outcomes for
patients following hip fracture at the
PRUH. While acknowledging the
significant improvements in the hip
fracture pathway over last year at the
Denmark Hill site there are existing
concerns at the PRUH site. We would
welcome a more specific target on the
number of patients who are
discharged to their own home, and
who receive a bone health
assessment across the trust.

We support the continued work at
improving the experience of care for


patients discharged at both the
Denmark Hill site and at the PRUH.
While acknowledging that this is a
whole system issue involving
refocusing from discharge to a transfer
of care to primary care we are
encouraged to see specific focus on
communication and reporting. Also in
fostering a learning culture by
improving the recording of adverse
incidents linked to discharge. It is
unclear if the trust has met the
increase in 5 points that they were
seeking. Perhaps showing the 2013/14
data beside the evaluation data may
help this?
Bromley is pleased to see that PRUH
is specifically mentioned and
highlighted in most of the sections and
data. While they accept that the Trust
operates across many sites with
consistent values and standards, the
CCG does wish to see PRUH data
reported separately. It could also be
added that at times it is not completely
clear whether whole trust data is being
reported or PRUH data and this could
perhaps be clearer at times.
While we acknowledge that there
have been significant improvements to
the quality of care at the PRUH site it
would be good to see plans which
address issues at that site around
delays to direct access diagnostics,
IST cancer improvement plans, and
the PIMs migration issue and access
to notes.
The trust has laid out really clearly what audits
they have participated in, and what results
and actions have been taken. The only
additional action we would like to see is in
relation to the MINAP audit where no actions
have been added. The audit of the Sepsis
toolkit has raised the question of the trust
appearing to be an outlier at Denmark Hill
regarding an elevated mortality ratio within
185
liver. We are reassured to see in internal
review of this in the coming year.
We look forward to receiving the final version
of your Quality Accounts and to hearing of the
186
impact of the actions you plan to implement in
2015/16.
Mark McLaughlin
Quality Consultant
NHS Southwark CCG
20 May 2015
Appendix 2: 2014/15 Statement of the Directors; responsibilities in
respect of the Quality Report
The directors are required under the Health
Act 2009 and the National Health Service
(Quality Accounts) Regulations to prepare
Quality Accounts for each financial year.

Monitor has issued guidance to NHS
foundation trust boards on the form and
content of annual quality reports (which
incorporate the above legal requirements) and
on the arrangements that NHS foundation
trust boards should put in place to support the
data quality for the preparation of the quality
report.




In preparing the Quality Report, directors are
required to take steps to satisfy themselves
that:
 the content of the Quality Report meets
the requirements set out in the NHS
Foundation Trust Annual Reporting
Manual 2014/15 and supporting guidance
 the content of the Quality Report is not
inconsistent with internal and external
sources of information including:
 board minutes and papers for the period
01 April 2014 to 31 March 2015
 papers relating to Quality reported to the
board over the period 01 April 2014 to 31
March 2015
 feedback from governors at their meetings
on 09 April and 14 May 2015
 feedback from commissioners dated 20
May 2015
 feedback from local Healthwatch
organisations dated 11 May 2015
 the trust’s complaints report published
under regulation 18 of the Local Authority
Social Services and NHS Complaints
Regulations 2009, dated 22/10/2014
 the latest national patient survey
 the latest national staff survey
 the Head of Internal Audit’s annual opinion
over the trust’s control environment dated
19 May 2015

CQC Intelligent Monitoring Report dated
21 April 2015
the Quality Report presents a balanced
picture of the NHS foundation trust’s
performance over the period covered;
the performance information reported in
the Quality Report is reliable and accurate;
there are proper internal controls over the
collection and reporting of the measures of
performance included in the Quality
Report, and these controls are subject to
review to confirm that they are working
effectively in practice;
the data underpinning the measures of
performance reported in the Quality
Report is robust and reliable, conforms to
specified data quality standards and
prescribed definitions, is subject to
appropriate scrutiny and review; and
the Quality Report has been prepared in
accordance with Monitor’s annual
reporting guidance (which incorporates the
Quality Accounts regulations) (published
www.monitor.gov.uk/annualreportingmanu
al) as well as the standards to support
data quality for the preparation of the
Quality Report (available at
www.monitor.gov.uk/annualreportingmanu
al).
The directors confirm to the best of their
knowledge and belief they have complied with
the above requirements in preparing the
Quality Report. By order of the board
Lord Kerslake
Chair
Roland Sinker
Chief Executive
Date: 26 May 2015
187

Independent Audit Assurance

Independent auditor’s report to the council
of governors of King’s College Hospital NHS
Foundation Trust on the quality report
We refer to these national priority indicators
collectively as the ‘indicators’.
We have been engaged by the council of
governors of King’s College Hospital NHS
Foundation Trust to perform an independent
assurance engagement in respect of King’s
College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust’s
quality report for the year ended 31 March 2015
(the ‘Quality Report’) and certain performance
indicators contained therein.
This report, including the conclusion, has been
prepared solely for the council of governors of
King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
as a body, to assist the council of governors in
reporting King’s College Hospital NHS
Foundation Trust’s quality agenda, performance
and activities. We permit the disclosure of this
report within the Annual Report for the year
ended 31 March 2015, to enable the council of
governors to demonstrate they have discharged
their governance responsibilities by
commissioning an independent assurance
report in connection with the indicators. To the
fullest extent permitted by law, we do not accept
or assume responsibility to anyone other than
the Council of Governors as a body and King’s
College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust for our
work or this report, except where terms are
expressly agreed and with our prior consent in
writing.
Scope and subject matter
The indicators for the year ended 31 March
2015 subject to limited assurance consist of the
national priority indicators as mandated by
Monitor:
188
Referral to treatment time, 18 weeks in
aggregate, incomplete pathways; and
Maximum 62 day waiting time from urgent GP
referral to treatment for all cancers.
Respective responsibilities of the directors
and auditors
The directors are responsible for the content
and the preparation of the quality report in
accordance with the criteria set out in the ‘NHS
foundation trust annual reporting manual’
issued by Monitor.
Our responsibility is to form a conclusion, based
on limited assurance procedures, on whether
anything has come to our attention that causes
us to believe that:



the quality report is not prepared in all material
respects in line with the criteria set out in the
‘NHS foundation trust annual reporting manual’;
the quality report is not consistent in all material
respects with the sources specified in the
guidance; and
the indicators in the quality report identified as
having been the subject of limited assurance in
the quality report are not reasonably stated in
all material respects in accordance with the
‘NHS foundation trust annual reporting manual’
and the six dimensions of data quality set out in
the ‘Detailed guidance for external assurance
on quality reports’.
We read the quality report and consider
whether it addresses the content requirements
of the ‘NHS foundation trust annual reporting
manual, and consider the implications for our
report if we become aware of any material
omissions.
We read the other information contained in the
quality report and consider whether it is
materially inconsistent with the documents
specified within the detailed guidance.
We consider the implications for our report if we
become aware of any apparent misstatements
or material inconsistencies with those
documents (collectively the ‘documents’). Our
responsibilities do not extend to any other
information.
We are in compliance with the applicable
independence and competency requirements of
the Institute of Chartered Accountants in
England and Wales (ICAEW) Code of Ethics.
Our team comprised assurance practitioners
and relevant subject matter experts.
Assurance work performed
We conducted this limited assurance
engagement in accordance with International
Standard on Assurance Engagements 3000
(Revised) – ‘Assurance Engagements other
than Audits or Reviews of Historical Financial
Information’ issued by the International Auditing
and Assurance Standards Board (‘ISAE 3000’).
Our limited assurance procedures included:







evaluating the design and implementation
of the key processes and controls for
managing and reporting the indicators;
making enquiries of management;
testing key management controls;
analytical procedures on monthly and
departmental data;
limited testing, on a selective basis, of the
data used to calculate the indicator back to
supporting documentation;
comparing the content requirements of the
‘NHS foundation trust annual reporting
manual’ to the categories reported in the
quality report; and
reading the documents.
A limited assurance engagement is smaller in
scope than a reasonable assurance
engagement. The nature, timing and extent of
procedures for gathering sufficient appropriate
evidence are deliberately limited relative to a
reasonable assurance engagement.
Limitations
Non-financial performance information is
subject to more inherent limitations than
financial information, given the characteristics of
the subject matter and the methods used for
determining such information.
The absence of a significant body of
established practice on which to draw allows for
the selection of different, but acceptable
measurement techniques which can result in
materially different measurements and can
affect comparability. The precision of different
measurement techniques may also vary.
Furthermore, the nature and methods used to
determine such information, as well as the
measurement criteria and the precision of these
criteria, may change over time. It is important to
read the quality report in the context of the
criteria set out in the ‘NHS foundation trust
annual reporting manual’.
The scope of our assurance work has not
included testing of indicators other than the two
selected mandated indicators, or consideration
of quality governance.
Basis for qualified conclusion
As set out in the ‘Statement on quality from the
chief executive of the NHS Foundation Trust’
section on pages 107-109 of the Trust’s Quality
Report, the Trust currently does not maintain
monthly datasets for the 18 week referral to
treatment incomplete pathway indicator.
189
As a result of the lack of data for 1 April 2014 to
28 February 2015, we have concluded that we
are unable to test sufficiently the 18 week
referral to treatment incomplete pathway
indicator for the year ended 31 March 2015.
Whilst we were not engaged to provide a
separate conclusion on the data for the period
from 1 March 2015 to 31 March 2015, the
sample testing that we performed on that data
as part of our work on the 18 week referral to
treatment incomplete pathway indicator for the
year ended 31 March 2015 indicated the data
contained errors including incorrect start dates
being used, lack of evidence supporting the
existence of the pathway and pathways
incorrectly remaining open at year end. Due to
the range of errors identified we are unable to
quantify the effect on the reported indicator for
the year ended 31 March 2015.
190
‘Basis for qualified conclusion’ section above,
nothing has come to our attention that causes
us to believe that, for the year ended 31 March
2015:



the quality report is not prepared in all material
respects in line with the criteria set out in the
‘NHS foundation trust annual reporting manual’;
the quality report is not consistent in all material
respects with the sources specified in the
guidance; and
the indicators in the quality report subject to
limited assurance have not been reasonably
stated in all material respects in accordance
with the ‘NHS foundation trust annual reporting
manual’.
Deloitte LLP
Qualified cconclusion
Chartered Accountants
Based on the results of our procedures, except
for the effects of the matters described in the
St Albans
28 May 2015
Annual
Accounts
FOREWORD TO THE ACCOUNTS
King's College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
Annual Accounts 2014/15
These accounts, for the year ending March 31 2015, have been prepared by
King's College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust in accordance with
paragraphs 24 and 25 of Schedule 7 to the National Health Service Act
2006.
Signed
Roland Sinker
Acting Chief Executive
26 May 2015
Statement of Chief
Executive's responsibilities
as the accounting officer of
King's College Hospital NHS
Foundation Trust
The NHS Act 2006 states that the chief
executive is the accounting officer of the NHS
foundation trust. The relevant responsibilities
of the accounting officer, including their
responsibility for the propriety and regularity of
public finances for which they are answerable,
and for the keeping of proper accounts, are
set out in the NHS Foundation Trust
Accounting Officer Memorandum issued by
Monitor.
Under the NHS Act 2006, Monitor has
directed King's College Hospital NHS
foundation trust to prepare for each financial
year a statement of accounts in the form and
on the basis set out in the Accounts Direction.
The accounts are prepared on an accruals
basis and must give a true and fair view of the
state of affairs of King's College Hospital NHS
foundation trust and of its income and
expenditure, total recognised gains and
losses and cash flows for the financial year.
In preparing the accounts, the Accounting
Officer is required to comply with the
requirements of the NHS Foundation Trust
Annual Reporting Manual and in particular to:
•
194
observe the Accounts Direction issued by
Monitor, including the relevant accounting
and disclosure requirements, and apply
suitable accounting policies on a
consistent basis;
•
make judgements and estimates on a
reasonable basis;
•
state whether applicable accounting
standards as set out in the NHS
Foundation Trust Annual Reporting
Manual have been followed, and disclose
and explain any material departures in the
financial statements; and
•
ensure that the use of public funds
complies with the relevant legislation,
delegated authorities and guidance; and
•
prepare the financial statements on a
going concern basis.
The accounting officer is responsible for
keeping proper accounting records which
disclose with reasonable accuracy at any time
the financial position of the NHS foundation
trust and to enable him/her to ensure that the
accounts comply with requirements outlined in
the above mentioned Act. The Accounting
Officer is also responsible for safeguarding
the assets of the NHS foundation trust and
hence for taking reasonable steps for the
prevention and detection of fraud and other
irregularities.
To the best of my knowledge and belief, I
have properly discharged the responsibilities
set out in Monitor's NHS Foundation Trust
Accounting Officer Memorandum.
Signed:
Roland Sinker
Acting Chief Executive Officer
Date: 26 May 2015
Annual governance
statement
Scope of responsibility
As Accounting Officer, I have responsibility for
maintaining a sound system of internal control
that supports the achievement of the NHS
foundation trust’s policies, aims and
objectives, whilst safeguarding the public
funds and departmental assets for which I am
personally responsible, in accordance with the
responsibilities assigned to me. I am also
responsible for ensuring that the NHS
foundation trust is administered prudently and
economically and that resources are applied
efficiently and effectively. I also acknowledge
my responsibilities as set out in the NHS
Foundation Trust Accounting Officer
Memorandum.
The purpose of the system of internal
control
The system of internal control is designed to
manage risk to a reasonable level rather than
to eliminate all risk of failure to achieve
policies, aims and objectives; it can therefore
only provide reasonable and not absolute
assurance of effectiveness. The system of
internal control is based on an ongoing
process designed to identify and prioritise the
risks to the achievement of the policies, aims
and objectives of King’s College Hospital
NHS Foundation Trust, to evaluate the
likelihood of those risks being realised and the
impact should they be realised, and to
manage them efficiently, effectively and
economically. The system of internal control
has been in place in King’s College Hospital
NHS Foundation Trust for the year ended 31
March 2015 and up to the date of approval of
the annual report and accounts.
Capacity to handle risk
The Trust Board has overall accountability for
the Trust’s Risk Management Strategy
through the Trust’s Executive Directors. The
Trust’s Medical Director provides the lead,
and is supported by a centralised Patient
Safety and Risk Management team. The Chief
Operating Officer has accountability for the
development, implementation and testing of
the Trust’s business continuity plan. The Trust
operates a unified approach covering both
clinical and non-clinical risks which are
recorded on a computerised risk register. The
Trust is committed to providing a learning
environment for all levels of staff, to ensure
that good practice is developed and
disseminated to all areas of the organisation.
In March 2015, Monitor launched a formal
investigation into the longstanding financial
operational challenges at the PRUH. The
regulator has decided to open a formal
investigation to trigger a regulatory process
that would enable Monitor to use its legal
powers to underpin the changes the trust
needs to make.
Following the investigation, Monitor has
agreed with King’s that the trust will:
• develop and implement an effective shortterm recovery plan to deliver the required
improvements at the PRUH that King’s
planned to make when it took over the
hospital; and
• develop and implement a longer-term plan
by working closely with other national and
local health care organisations (including
NHS England and local commissioners) to
ensure patient services are improved, and
also provided in a sustainable way for the
future.
The Trust already has methods of promoting
good practice in place such as:
• A commitment to individual appraisal and
personal development planning for all
staff;
• Policies to encourage the open reporting
and investigation of adverse incidents
including near misses. In addition the web
based incident reporting system allows
anonymous reporting;
195
•
•
•
•
A commitment to root cause analysis of
problems and incidents and the avoidance
of blaming and ‘scape-goating’;
A range of problem resolution policies and
procedures, including capability, raising
concerns or ‘whistle-blowing’, workplace
stress, mediation, harassment and
discipline, which are designed to identify
and remedy problems at an early stage;
A range of individual support mechanisms
to encourage individuals to raise concerns
about their own performance in ways
which will not threaten their security or
livelihood, e.g. appraisal, substance abuse
policies, professional counselling and
occupational health services; and
A range of clinical and non-clinical audit
mechanisms.
All staff are trained in these policies as part of
the corporate and local induction policies and
updated via regular staff briefings and the
Trust intranet.
As part of the recovery plans being developed
in collaboration with Monitor, these are being
enhanced by strengthened governance
arrangements to deliver financial cost
improvements without adversely affecting
patient safety and quality. These
enhancements are outlined in the section on
risk and control framework below,
The Trust recognises that it is important to be
outward looking and to learn and improve
from the experience of other organisations
and experts and where possible to benchmark
the quality and performance of the services
we provide to our patients. We do this through
a variety of ways. We are members of
external national groups and networks
including but not limited to the Shelford Group
which comprises leading NHS multi-specialty
academic healthcare organisations, who are
dedicated to excellence in clinical research,
education and patient care.
Foundation Trust Network; the Association of
University Hospitals; CHKS and other external
196
sources of healthcare intelligence such as Dr
Foster and CQC reports and inspections. The
Trust uses the Healthcare Evaluation
database (HED) which is set up to enable
benchmarking internally and externally across
a wide range of clinical effectiveness, patient
experience and patient safety indicators. In
addition, we seek both external and internal
expertise such as the Department of Health,
KHP partners and our Governors to provide
an independent critical eye.
The risk and control framework
The Trust operates a cyclical mechanism for
the identification, evaluation and control of
risk, facilitated by means of a central risk
register. This is a dynamic document which
reflects corporate and local risks and their
movement within the register. Local Risk
Groups identify risks and potential hazards
and formulate actions plans to deal with them.
Each risk is scored on a common basis
across the Trust for likelihood and potential
impact. If risks cannot be satisfactorily
resolved at a local level, they are considered
by the relevant corporate risk management
group.
The existing Trust governance structure was
implemented in 2010 following an extensive
external review by the Trust’s internal
auditors. The Trust plans a review of its
governance framework commencing in May
2015. It is considered good practice for all
foundation trust boards to review periodically
the adequacy and effectiveness of
governance. Monitor published new guidance
during 2014 which set out the requirement for
foundation trusts to demonstrate that their
governance arrangements have been
evaluated and reviewed independently at
least once every three years. Given the
challenges which the Trust is facing with
regard to the delivery of its financial plans and
following the appointment of a new Chair, the
Trust considers it opportune to assure the
Board and other stakeholders of the adequacy
and effectiveness of its governance
arrangements.
Since the 2010 review, the quality governance
framework has had at its centre the Quality &
Governance Committee with a membership
comprising the full Board with Commissioner
representation. The quality and governance
reporting committees: Patient Outcomes,
Patient Safety, Patient Experience and
Organisational Safety are chaired by
Executive Directors, who are also accountable
for reporting to the Quality & Governance
Committee on a quarterly basis. The reporting
structures and processes are embedded
across all sites down to Divisional and
speciality.
This ensures that patient outcomes/clinical
effectiveness, patient and organisational
safety and patient experience at all sites are
integrated within an existing and established
quality governance monitoring framework and
robust performance management
infrastructure. Importantly, the relevant
specialty and divisional clinical governance
and associated committees operate across all
sites have been required to implement the
terms of reference and reporting procedures
that are already in place at King’s.
Compliance with this requirement will be
subject to internal audit, which received a
rating of ‘significant assurance’ in January
2015.
Through a defined reporting programme the
Quality and Governance Committee, which is
a committee of the Board, and its reporting
committees: Patient Safety, Patient
Outcomes, Patient Experience and
Organisational Safety, will receive progress
reports and assurances from the various
committees which feed into them. All of these
committees are minuted and have in place
action trackers which are updated after every
meeting.
The Board of the enlarged organisation
continues to receive a monthly Performance
Report and performance scorecard which
provides up to date information of key quality
indicators drilling down to site specific
information - patient safety, patient experience
and clinical effectiveness, highlighting current
quality and safety issues and action being
taken.
A suite of other reports are received on a
quarterly basis including a comprehensive
Integrated Quality & Governance report,
separate reports on patient safety, patient
outcomes and patient experience which
provide site specific information. A Nursing
Performance report is presented together with
a quarterly report from the Director of Infection
Prevention and Control, who is also the
Executive Director of Nursing and Maternity.
The Director of Nursing provides a regular
report to the Board of Directors on nursing
numbers in comparison to an acuity based
evaluation of safe staffing levels.
The quarterly Quality and Governance Report
is presented to the Quality and Governance
Committee by the Medical Director, Director of
Nursing & Midwifery (& DIPC), Director of
Corporate Affairs and Chief Operating Officer.
The report addresses the three dimension of
quality – Patient Safety, Patient Outcomes,
Patient Experience together with
Organisational Safety across the enlarged
organisation. It includes updates on quality
priorities and driving improvement across the
quality dimension:
• Patient Outcomes: mortality monitoring
and review of mortality outliers, progress
against NCEPODs and participation in
National Audits, updates on public health
priorities, NICE Quality standards;
• Patient Safety: profile and analysis of
adverse incidents and progress against
related improvement work streams,
serious incidents and improvement
actions, adverse incident benchmarking
data, claims and inquests;
• Patient Experience: National Surveys,
monthly internal How Are Doing Survey,
197
•
updates from patient opinion websites,
complaints and PALS trends and analysis,
service improvements, outcome of
Ombudsman investigations, Local CQUIN,
Friends and Family Test ; and
Organisational Safety: analysis of health
and safety incidents, inspection findings
etc.
The Divisional score cards include the quality
dimensions and other specialist indicators.
These are formally reviewed at the monthly
Divisional performance review meetings led
by the Chief Operating Office in partnership
with the Medical Director and Nursing &
Midwifery Director (& Trust DIPC). These
discussions inform the monthly Performance
Report and Trust score card which continue to
be considered by the Board. The reports are
structured so that the Board can drill down to
site specific performance and quality
information.
Unresolved risks are passed to the Quality &
Governance Committee to review the
adequacy of, and progress against action
plans and to consider acceptance or further
resolution. If additional resources are required
to reduce the risk to an acceptable level, this
is considered by the Business Resource and
Strategy Group and, if necessary by the Trust
Finance and Performance Committee. Risks
that have an above average consequence
and likelihood are given priority in the
resource allocation process. It is the Trust’s
policy as defined within the Risk Management
Strategy that its risk appetite is defined as all
red risks are required to be reviewed by the
Board of Directors. The Board has decided
that all risks assessed as having a greater
than average likelihood of occurrence with a
potential impact of more than moderate harm,
are not acceptable and require mitigation. The
Board reviews the nature and assessment of
these risks and the potential impact on
delivery of the Trust’s Strategic priorities and
careful consideration is given to whether the
level of risk should be accepted or further
198
treatment plans put in place. The Board will
seek additional assurance or take direct
action where it considers that risks are not
being adequately controlled or accepted.
The Board Assurance Framework provides a
high level management assessment process
and record which enables the Trust to focus
on the principal risks to delivering its strategic
priorities and the robustness of internal
controls to reduce or manage the risks to
acceptable levels. The Assurance Framework
is updated by the Executive Directors and
reviewed by the Board on a quarterly basis.
The sources of key controls and assurances,
both internal and external, are reviewed for
their adequacy and relevance and action
plans are agreed.
Information Governance is reviewed by the
Quality and Governance Committee, who are
advised by the Caldicott Guardian and the
Senior Information Risk Owner. The Trust
completes the annual Information Governance
toolkit. In the submission made in March
2015, the Trust achieved at least a Level 2
rating on all requirements and scored a total
of 73% across all indicators. The Trust has
made significant efforts to ensure the security
of the information it holds and transmits to and
from its systems. These include the
enforcement of encryption for any portable
devices used on Trust systems, encryption for
all Trust laptop computers and the
implementation of ‘remote wipe’ functionality
for smart phones in the event of their loss or
theft.
All Trust policies, procedures and business
cases include an Equality Impact Assessment
so that their implications can be considered by
the Board of Directors. Major policy or
strategic decisions are taken only after
consultation with the Council of Governors,
Staff Side representatives and public and
patient stakeholders. The Trust holds
community events to receive the views of
Trust Members and the Annual Public
meeting in September 2014 was very well
attended.
In order to address the risk and control
implications of the Trust’s financial recovery
plans, the Trust has further strengthened the
existing arrangements. The frequency of full
Board meetings has been increased to bimonthly and a new Savings Board
established.
The remit of the Savings Board is to
• Receive monthly reports on progress of
delivery against the target.
• Hold programme sponsors and project
managers to account to ensure progress
is made in line with agreed timescales.
• Ensure divisions and service lines are
ready and able to realise benefits in line
with changes implemented.
• Allocate the Trust’s programme
management and service improvement
resource to scope, define and implement
efficiency and savings ideas and projects
raised by divisions as part of the executive
review process.
• To ensure there is no increase to clinical
risk or decrease in quality of care as a
result of changes implemented by
reviewing the clinical risk assessment of
CIPs, specifically those schemes that
have been given a high-risk rating.
• To provide leadership, advice and
guidance to sponsors and project
managers including unlocking issues or
barriers preventing progress and
adjudicating on any contentious issues.
• To ensure service changes align to Trust
strategy and values.
Membership includes all Executive Directors
and other relevant senior managers and
meetings are chaired by the CEO.
All divisions have committed to completion of
a risk assessment of CIP schemes contained
within their plans. These are signed off and
reviewed by each Divisional Manager, Head
of Nursing, Finance Manager and Clinical
Director as a regular item on the agenda of
their Divisional Board. Consequently 15/16
CIP schemes are routinely risk assessed and
RAG rated by divisions and logged onto the
central repository for CIP plans. The Savings
Board reviews the detail of these clinical risk
assessments of CIPs, specifically those
schemes that have been given a ‘High-Risk’
rating.
In November 2013, the Board of Directors
held a risk workshop facilitated by KPMG to
reassess the key strategic risks facing the
Trust. This workshop informed revision of the
Board Assurance Framework, which is
reviewed by the Board on a quarterly basis.
Each risk is scored on a likelihood and impact
matrix and cross-referenced to the Trust’s
strategic aims. Following this review the three
highest scoring risks were identified as:
a) Financial Constraints – The need to invest
in additional quality and safety measures
at the PRUH together with the pressures
to meet emergency access and referral to
treatment time targets has caused
significant financial pressures. The Trust
has addressed this risk by appointing a
Transformation and Turnaround Director
and external support from PwC to
increase the focus on delivering cost
improvements. The Financial Recovery
Plans for the next one, two and five years
will be overseen by the Trust Board.
b) Failure to deliver workforce capacity and
capability – there is a risk of sub-optimal
staffing levels due to the levels of
vacancies, capacity increases and a
shortage of suitably qualified applicants.
This is being addressed by recruitment
plans at Divisional levels, a Recruitment
Delivery Manager to improve ‘time to hire’
cost and vacancy rate and the
development of an overseas recruitment
capability through KCH Commercial
Services.
c) Failure to provide enough capacity to meet
demand levels leading to target failure –
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the Trust is working with McKinsey and SE
London commissioners to produce a new
design for emergency pathways and to
assess the levels of demand and capacity
across both acute and primary care health
sectors.
The outcomes of these action plans on the
assessed risk are considered by the Board on
a monthly basis as part of the finance &
performance reports.
The Board will self-certify the validity of its
Corporate Governance Statement. A number
of compliance assessments review the
adequacy of the governance arrangements.
These will review the Trust’s ability to meet its
financial and operational targets in light of the
longstanding problems at the PRUH and
content and timelines of the recovery plans
required to address them.
Assurance on compliance with relevant
regulations, internal policies and procedures
is undertaken through the Trust’s committee
structure for example CQC registration via the
QGC and fire regulations through the Health
and Safety Committee. Compliance
assessments are also undertaken by Internal
Audit.
The CQC inspected all Trust sites in April
2015. The final report is awaited and action
plans will be developed and monitored by the
Board, to implement any areas of
improvement identified.
The Foundation Trust is fully compliant with
the registration requirements of the Care
Quality Commission (CQC).
On-going compliance with the registration
requirements is monitored through the Trust’s
Quality Governance Framework.
The underpinning management committees:
Patient Outcome, Patient Safety, Patient
Experience and Organisational Safety
Committees have specific responsibility within
their terms of reference for reviewing and
200
monitoring compliance against the CQC’s
Fundamental Standards, the NHS Outcomes
Framework and previously the NHS Litigation
Authority’s Acute Risk Management
Standards.
To support this and to maintain a strong
focus, the Trust has appointed Assurance and
Regulatory Performance teams The
Assurance team work closely with Divisions in
supporting the registration of services or new
locations with the CQC and assessing
compliance with the Essential
Standards/Outcomes. The Trust has
implemented a Quality Monitoring system and
assessment tool, mirroring the CQC’s
inspection methodology, in order to assess
compliance with CQC Fundamental
Standards.
As an employer with staff entitled to
membership of the NHS Pension Scheme,
control measures are in place to ensure all
employer obligations contained within the
Scheme regulations are complied with. This
includes ensuring that deductions from salary,
employer’s contributions and payments into
the Scheme are in accordance with the
Scheme rules, and that member Pension
Scheme records are accurately updated in
accordance with the timescales detailed in the
Regulations.
Control measures are in place to ensure that
all the organisation’s obligations under
equality, diversity and human rights legislation
are complied with.
The foundation trust has undertaken risk
assessments and Carbon Reduction Delivery
Plans are in place in accordance with
emergency preparedness and civil
contingency requirements, as based on
UKCIP 2009 weather projects, to ensure that
this organisation’s obligations under the
Climate Change Act and the Adaptation
Reporting requirements are complied with.
Review of economy, efficiency and
effectiveness of the use of resources
The Board of Directors ensures that resources
are used economically, efficiently and
effectively by means of monthly finance and
performance reports. These are considered in
detail by the Finance and Performance
Committee which is a committee of the Board,
chaired by Non-Executive Directors. The Audit
Committee receives regular reports from the
Trust’s Internal Auditors, KPMG LLP and its
External Auditors, Deloitte LLP. The Trust has
prepared a one year recovery plan and will be
submitting two and five year plans to Monitor
during 2015. As part of the plan, the
Department of Health has made available a
working capital facility to cover any liquidity
issues whilst the measures are implemented.
Respecting and Protecting Patient
Information
The Information Governance Steering Group
(IGSG) is responsible for reviewing the
effectiveness of King’s information
governance systems and processes. It reports
directly to the Quality and Governance
Committee and receives reports from the
Patient Records Committee and the Data
Quality Steering Group.
The IGSG is chaired by King’s Senior
Information Risk Owner (SIRO) and members
include the Caldicott Guardian, Director of
ICT, Information Security Manager, Freedom
of Information Lead/Deputy SIRO, Information
Governance & Records Manager and Patient
Records Service Managers. The IGSG
agenda is driven by Information Governance
Toolkit requirements. It works to ensure the
highest practical standards and systems for
the confidential handling of patient information
and personal data within King’s.
During the year 2014/15 there were five
serious incidents related to a confidentiality
breach, the details of which and the actions
taken are summarised below.
Incident 1
Description: August 2014: a computer was
discovered to be missing presumed stolen
from the Day Surgery Unit, Denmark Hill
campus. Computer was password protected
and policy in place that data not saved to local
drive. Potential risk that data was saved onto
local drive, not known how many individuals
might be affected, possibly < 500
Action taken by the Trust: reported to ICO.
Recommendation made to bring forward a
project to prevent data being saved on local
computer drives and for local management to
improve security measures including
Kensington locks, locks on office doors and
swipe card restrictions.
Further action required by ICO: o/s
Incident 2
Description: September 2014: five desktop
computers were stolen from a paediatric
research area at Denmark Hill campus.
Number of people affected not known, but
possibly <100.
Action taken by Trust: The incident was
reported to the police and to the ICO.
Physical security measures were reinforced
and the project to prevent data being saved
on local computer drives commenced, with
priority given to areas where incidents have
occurred previously.
Further action required by ICO: No further
action required
Incident 3
Description: September 2014: patient
handover sheets were left in public area at the
Princess Royal Hospital, Bromley, found and
handed in promptly by member of the public.
Repeat of type incident within 12 month
period. <30 people affected.
Action taken by Trust: Reported to the ICO.
Caldecott Guardian identified the locum
responsible and spoke to his agency
regarding refreshing his IG training. He then
followed up with Trust-wide Communications
and specific discussion in the Junior Doctor
Forums.
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Further action required by ICO: No further
action required
Incident 4
Description: Three sets of interview notes
lost from the KCH site of a joint KCH/KCL
research project.
Action taken by Trust: Full investigation and
search carried out, it is considered that the
lost information is likely to have been put in
the confidential waste. Study protocols have
been reviewed. Sensitive information is no
longer stored on site; now taken to the study
main office at end of each day. All of the
study’s staff have taken HSCIC training
modules: Introduction to Information
Governance and Information Governance:
The Beginner's Guide. They have also taken
HSCIC’s module on Secure Handling of
Confidential Information.
Further action required by ICO: o/s
Incident 5
Description: Near miss; blood test results for
120 patients faxed in error to another hospital
via NHS mail’s secure faxing service. Error
immediately identified by other hospital and
originator informed. Fax went to secure area
at receiver Trust and was immediately
contained, reported and securely destroyed
thus preventing any disclosure of confidential
information.
Action taken by Trust: Review of protocols
and guidance about the use of fax. Corporate
risk register entry review.
Further action required by ICO: o/s
Annual Quality Report
The directors are required under the Health
Act 2009 and the National Health Service
(Quality Accounts) Regulations 2010 (as
amended) to prepare quality accounts for
each financial year. Monitor has issued
guidance to NHS foundation trust boards on
the form and content of annual quality reports
which incorporate the above legal
requirements in the NHS Foundation Trust
Annual Reporting Manual.
202
The Board’s clinical plans and core quality
priorities have been developed in consultation
with a wide range of internal and external
stakeholders including senior clinical teams,
Commissioners, Health Overview and
Scrutiny Committees, Healthwatch Governors
and members of the enlarged organisation.
The Board receives regular reports on all
aspects of quality through monthly
performance reports and scorecards, and
quarterly reports on patient safety, patient
outcomes and patient experience and
organisational safety. The Board also receives
a separate quarterly Quality and Governance
Report which includes detailed analyses of all
serious complaints and adverse incidents
together with actions taken and related
service developments/ improvements. The
Board considers the Assurance Framework
and the Trust Risk Register on a quarterly
basis and agrees actions as necessary to
mitigate risks.
The data included within the Quality Report is
subject to audit by both internal and external
audit to assure the Board that the underlying
data is robust. This is supplemented by
regular clinical audits of data within
specialities and national audits. Further
information on the data included in the Quality
Report can be found on pages 103-190.
A review of elective waiting data (Referral to
Treatment Time) by KPMG revealed some
weaknesses in accurately recording the date
patients are placed on the waiting list. In order
to address these issues, the Trust has
appointed a RTT coordinator to oversee the
process.
The Quality & Governance Committee
monitors the three dimensions of quality,
Patient Safety, Patient Outcomes which
addresses clinical audit and effectiveness,
Patient Experience and Organisational Safety
through a series of management committees
chaired by executive directors. This is
underpinned by a robust performance
management and reporting structure which
provides the Board and the Corporate and
Divisional management teams with up to date
information of the key quality indicators. This
enables a strong Board focus on all aspects of
quality and is the vehicle through which the
Trust’s quality priorities and Monitor’s Quality
Governance Framework are monitored. The
Trust’s centralised patient safety, clinical
effectiveness, patient experience and
assurance teams work closely together, to
ensure that the processes for the
identification, analysis, monitoring and
reporting of quality issues are robust,
systematic and responsive to the changes in
the regulatory environment.
Review of effectiveness
As Accounting Officer, I have responsibility for
reviewing the effectiveness of the system of
internal control. My review of the effectiveness
of the system of internal control is informed by
the work of the internal auditors, clinical audit
and the executive managers and clinical leads
within the NHS foundation trust who have
responsibility for the development and
maintenance of the internal control
framework. I have drawn on the content of the
quality report attached to this Annual report
and other performance information available
to me.
My review is also informed by comments
made by the external auditors in their
management letter and other reports. I have
been advised on the implications of the result
of my review of the effectiveness of the
system of internal control by the Trust Board,
the Audit Committee, the Finance and
Performance Committee and the Quality and
Governance Committee and a plan to address
weaknesses and ensure continuous
improvement of the system is in place.
The Board reviews the proceedings of all its
committees at every meeting and considers
and approves the arrangements for risk
management in the Trust including the risk
framework incorporated in the Trust’s Risk
Management Strategy. Committee chairs
draw the Board’s attention to any matters
arising from the proceedings of their
committees which have risk implications at
each Board meeting.
All Board committees produce an annual
report and Committee Self-Assessment which
covers establishment, composition, reporting
structure, the work plan, resources and
meeting arrangements which are reviewed by
the Board.
The Internal Auditors issued one report in the
year which gave a rating of ‘No Assurance’ to
the system of appointing short term
administrative staff. This was due to the
authorisation process not being correctly
followed in a significant number of cases. The
Trust has re-emphasised the correct process
and instigated additional controls to prevent
this from happening in the future.
Conclusion
No significant internal control issues have
been identified by either the Trust’s internal
processes or by assurance reviews
undertaken by external bodies with the
exception of the findings of the Monitor
investigation review in relation to the PRUH
and the consequent effect on the Trust’s
overall financial and operational stability and
the two areas of reduced assurance identified
by Internal Audit, which are outlined above.
Signed:
Roland Sinker
Acting Chief Executive Officer
Date: 26 May 2015
203
Independent Auditor’s financial
statements of King’s College
Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
In our opinion the financial statements:
 give a true and fair view of the state of
the Group and Trust’s affairs as at 31
March 2015 and of the Group’s and
Trust’s income and expenditure for the
year then ended;
 have been properly prepared in
accordance with the accounting
policies directed by Monitor –
Independent Regulator of NHS
Foundation Trusts; and
 have been prepared in accordance
with the requirements of the National
Health Service Act 2006.
The financial statements comprise the
Group Statement of Comprehensive
Income, the Group and Trust Balance
Sheets, the Group and Trust Statements
of Cash Flow, the Group and Trust
Statements of Changes in Taxpayers’
Equity and the related notes 1 to 28. The
financial reporting framework that has
been applied in their preparation is
applicable law and the accounting policies
directed by Monitor – Independent
Regulator of NHS Foundation Trusts.
Emphasis of matter – Going concern
We have considered the adequacy of the
disclosures made in the directors’
statement contained within the Strategic
Report on page 29 and the disclosures
made in Note 1 in respect of the Group’s
ability to continue as a going concern.
The Group incurred a net deficit of £51.9m
during the year ended 31 March 2015 and
is projecting a further significant deficit for
2015/16 of £70.5m, together with a cost
improvement plan of £86.3m. The Group
has identified additional funding of £80m is
required before the end of 2015/16 to
204
support the Trust, £59.7m of which has
been agreed.
Whilst we have concluded that the
Accounting Officer’s use of the going
concern basis of accounting in the
preparation of the financial statements is
appropriate, the forecasted deficit and
reliance on future funding being arranged
indicate the existence of a material
uncertainty which may give rise to
significant doubt over the Group’s ability to
continue as a going concern. The financial
statements do not include the adjustments
that would result if the Group was unable
to continue as a going concern. We
describe below how the scope of our audit
has responded to this risk. Our opinion is
not modified in respect of this matter.
Qualified Certificate
We certify that we have completed the
audit of the accounts in accordance with
the requirements of Chapter 5 of Part 2 of
the National Health Service Act 2006 and
the Audit Code for NHS Foundation Trusts
except that:
 we have qualified our conclusion on
the quality report in respect of the 18
week referral to treatment incomplete
pathways indicator; and
 as noted in the section ‘matters on
which we are required to report by
exception’, we have been unable to
conclude that King’s College Hospital
NHS Foundation Trust has made
proper arrangements for securing
economy, efficiency and effectiveness
in its use of resources.
Our assessment of risks of material
misstatement
The assessed risks of material
misstatement described below are those
that had the greatest effect on our audit
strategy, the allocation of resources in the
audit and directing the efforts of the
engagement team.
Risk
Going concern
Given the uncertainties in respect of the
Group’s funding and reliance of external
funding, which are explained above in the
Emphasis of matter - Going concern, we
considered going concern to be a significant
risk.
The Group is forecasting a deficit of £70.5m
for 2015/16 and discussions with management
have highlighted the requirement to obtain
further funding before the end of 2015/16 to
support the Group.
How the scope of our audit responded to
the risk
We reviewed the Group’s financial
performance in 2014/15 including its
achievement of planned cost improvements in
the year.
We held discussion with management to
understand the funding arrangements that
have been agreed, confirming to signed loan
agreements. Discussions were held regarding
management’s expectation around further
funding requirements.
We reviewed the Group’s cash flow forecasts
and the Group’s financial plan submitted to
Monitor.
We held discussions with management to
understand the current status of contract
negotiations with its commissioners.
We reviewed the annual report and financial
statement disclosures in Note 1 made by the
Group in respect of the material uncertainties in
respect of going concern.
We have included an emphasis of matter
paragraph above in respect of this matter.
NHS revenue and provisions
In 2014/15, income from activities amounted
to £888m as per Note 2, with NHS debt of
£62m. Of this debt, £13m has been provided
for. There are significant judgments in
recognition of revenue from care of NHS
patients and in provisioning for disputes with
commissioners due to:
the complexity of the Payment by Results
regime, in particular in determining the level
of overperformance and Commissioning for
Quality and Innovation revenue to recognise
the judgemental nature of provisions for
disputes with commissioners and other
counterparties.
The settlement of income with CCGs
continues to present challenges, leading to
disputes and delays in the agreement of year
end positions.
We evaluated the design and implementation
of controls over recognition of Payment by
Results income, with IT specialists performing
the testing of the systems controls.
We performed detailed substantive testing of
the recoverability of overperformance income
and adequacy of provision for
underperformance through the year, and
evaluated the results of the agreement of
balances exercise.
We challenged key judgements around specific
areas of dispute and actual or potential
challenge from commissioners and the
rationale for the accounting treatments
adopted. In doing so, we considered the
historical accuracy of provisions for disputes
and reviewed correspondence with
commissioners.
205
Risk
How the scope of our audit responded to
the risk
We reviewed the key changes and any open
areas in setting 2015-16 tariffs, and considered
whether, taken together with the settlement of
current year disputes, there were any
indicators of inappropriate adjustments in
revenue recognised between periods.
Property valuations
At the beginning of 2014/15 the Group held
property assets of £445m within Property,
Plant and Equipment at a modern equivalent
use valuation and £75.7m of land, as per Note
10. The valuations are by nature significant
estimates which are based on specialist and
management assumptions and which can be
subject to material changes in value.
In the current year the Trust had a net
revaluation gain of £2.4m to land and £14.4m
to buildings and dwellings.
We evaluated the design and implementation
of controls over property valuations, and tested
the accuracy and completeness of data
provided by the Group to the valuer.
We used internal valuation specialists to review
and challenge the appropriateness of the key
assumptions used in the valuation of the
Group’s properties, including through
benchmarking against revaluations performed
by other Trusts in 2014/15.
We assessed whether the valuation and the
accounting treatment of the uplift was
compliant with the relevant accounting
standards, and in particular whether
impairments should be recognised in the
Income Statement or in Other Comprehensive
Income.
The description of risks above should be
read in conjunction with the significant
issues considered by the Audit Committee
discussed on page 71.
Our audit procedures relating to these
matters were designed in the context of
our audit of the financial statements as a
whole, and not to express an opinion on
individual accounts or disclosures. Our
opinion on the financial statements is not
modified with respect to any of the risks
described above, and we do not express
an opinion on these individual matters.
Our application of materiality
We define materiality as the magnitude of
misstatement in the financial statements
that makes it probable that the economic
decisions of a reasonably knowledgeable
person would be changed or influenced.
We use materiality both in planning the
scope of our audit work and in evaluating
the results of our work.
206
We determined materiality for the Group to
be £8.7m, which is below 1% of revenue
and below 3% of equity.
We agreed with the Audit Committee that
we would report to the Committee all audit
differences in excess of £173,000, as well
as differences below that threshold that, in
our view, warranted reporting on
qualitative grounds. We also report to the
Audit Committee on disclosure matters
that we identified when assessing the
overall presentation of the financial
statements.
An overview of the scope of our audit
Our group audit was scoped by obtaining
an understanding of the Group and its
environment, including internal controls,
and assessing the risks of material
misstatement at the Group level.
The focus of our audit work was on the
Trust, with work performed at the Trust’s
head offices in Denmark Hill. All testing for
the Group was performed by the main
audit engagement team, led by the audit
partner.
The Trust’s subsidiaries were also subject
to a full audit. These entities account for
0.2% of the group’s net assets and 1.7%
of the group’s deficit. They were also
selected to provide an appropriate basis
for undertaking audit work to address the
risks of material misstatement identified
above.
Our audit work was executed at levels of
materiality applicable to each individual
entity which were lower than group
materiality and ranged from £1,200 to
£30,400 (2014 £1,400 to £23,200).
At the Group level we also tested the
consolidation process and carried out
analytical procedures to confirm our
conclusion that there were no significant
risks of material misstatement of the
aggregated financial information of the
remaining components not subject to audit
or audit of specified account balances.
The audit team included integrated
Deloitte specialists bringing specific skills
and experience in property valuations and
Information Technology systems.
Opinion on other matters prescribed by
the National Health Service Act 2006
In our opinion:
 the part of the Directors’ Remuneration
Report to be audited has been
properly prepared in accordance with
the National Health Service Act 2006;
and
 the information given in the Strategic
Report and the Directors’ Report for
the financial year for which the
financial statements are prepared is
consistent with the financial
statements.
Matters on which we are required to
report by exception
Use of resources
The Group has described the following
matters in its Annual Governance
Statement which we consider to be
relevant to the Group’s arrangements to
secure economy, efficiency and
effectiveness:
 the risks to the Group in respect of its
financial performance and liquidity in
2014/15 and plan for 2015/16;
 the Monitor financial risk rating as at
31 March 2015 and those forecasted
for 2015/16;
 the enforcement actions taken by
Monitor in March 2015;
 weaknesses in the Trust’s
arrangements to ensure the quality of
reported data.
As a result of these matters, we have
been unable to conclude that King’s
College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
has made proper arrangements for
securing economy, efficiency and
effectiveness in its use of resources.
Annual Governance Statement and
compilation of financial statements
Under the Audit Code for NHS Foundation
Trusts, we are required to report to you if,
in our opinion:
 the Annual Governance Statement
does not meet the disclosure
requirements set out in the NHS
Foundation Trust Annual Reporting
Manual, is misleading, or is
inconsistent with information of which
we are aware from our audit; or
 proper practices have not been
observed in the compilation of the
financial statements.
We have nothing to report in respect of
these matters.
We are not required to consider, nor have
we considered, whether the Annual
Governance Statement addresses all risks
and controls or that risks are satisfactorily
addressed by internal controls.
Our duty to read other information in the
Annual Report
Under International Standards on Auditing
(UK and Ireland), we are required to report
to you if, in our opinion, information in the
annual report is:
207



materially inconsistent with the
information in the audited financial
statements;
apparently materially incorrect based
on, or materially inconsistent with, our
knowledge of the Group acquired in
the course of performing our audit; or
otherwise misleading.
In particular, we have considered whether
we have identified any inconsistencies
between our knowledge acquired during
the audit and the directors’ statement that
they consider the annual report is fair,
balanced and understandable and
whether the annual report appropriately
discloses those matters that we
communicated to the audit committee
which we consider should have been
disclosed. We confirm that we have not
identified any such inconsistencies or
misleading statements.
Respective responsibilities of the
accounting officer and auditor
As explained more fully in the Accounting
Officer’s Responsibilities Statement, the
Accounting Officer is responsible for the
preparation of the financial statements and
for being satisfied that they give a true and
fair view. Our responsibility is to audit and
express an opinion on the financial
statements in accordance with applicable
law, the Audit Code for NHS Foundation
Trusts and International Standards on
Auditing (UK and Ireland). Those
standards require us to comply with the
Auditing Practices Board’s Ethical
Standards for Auditors. We also comply
with International Standard on Quality
Control 1 (UK and Ireland). Our audit
methodology and tools aim to ensure that
our quality control procedures are
effective, understood and applied. Our
quality controls and systems include our
dedicated professional standards review
team and independent partner reviews.
This report is made solely to the Board of
Governors and Board of Directors (“the
Boards”) of King’s College Hospital NHS
Foundation Trust, as a body, in
accordance with paragraph 4 of Schedule
10 of the National Health Service Act
208
2006. Our audit work has been
undertaken so that we might state to the
Boards those matters we are required to
state to them in an auditor’s report and for
no other purpose. To the fullest extent
permitted by law, we do not accept or
assume responsibility to anyone other
than the Trust and the Boards as a body,
for our audit work, for this report, or for the
opinions we have formed.
Scope of the audit of the financial
statements
An audit involves obtaining evidence
about the amounts and disclosures in the
financial statements sufficient to give
reasonable assurance that the financial
statements are free from material
misstatement, whether caused by fraud or
error. This includes an assessment of:
whether the accounting policies are
appropriate to the Group’s and the Trust’s
circumstances and have been consistently
applied and adequately disclosed; the
reasonableness of significant accounting
estimates made by the Accounting Officer;
and the overall presentation of the
financial statements. In addition, we read
all the financial and non-financial
information in the annual report to identify
material inconsistencies with the audited
financial statements and to identify any
information that is apparently materially
incorrect based on, or materially
inconsistent with, the knowledge acquired
by us in the course of performing the
audit. If we become aware of any
apparent material misstatements or
inconsistencies we consider the
implications for our report.
Craig Wisdom FCA
(Senior statutory auditor)
for and on behalf of Deloitte LLP
Chartered Accountants and Statutory
Auditor
St Albans, United Kingdom
28 May 2015
Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income for year ended 31 March 2015
note
Operating income and costs
Operating income from continuing operations
Operating expenses from continuing operations
Operating surplus
Finance income and costs
Finance income
Finance expense - financial liabilities
Finance expense - unwinding of discount on provisions
Public Dividend Capital Dividends payable
Net finance costs
Share of profit of Associates/Joint Ventures accounted for using the equity method
Gain from transfer by absorption
2
1,083,782
3
(1,099,712)
(15,930)
892,054
(871,87
5)
20,179
5
6
18
213
(25,252)
(153)
(11,450)
(36,642)
169
(17,059)
(165)
(10,195)
(27,250)
757
-
1,278
65,542
(250)
(52,065)
59,749
(52,065)
59,749
(5,595)
26,261
(280)
(31,679)
(2,139)
59,758
117,368
(52,065)
(52,065)
59,749
59,749
11.2
Movement in fair value of investment property and other investments
Corporate tax expense
(Deficit)/surplus from continuing operations
(Deficit)/surplus of discontinued operations and the gain/loss on disposal of
discontinued operations
(Deficit)/surplus for the year
Other comprehensive income, that will not be reclassified subsequently to
income and expenditure
Impairments
Revaluations
Share of comprehensive income from associates and joint ventures
Other recognised gains and losses
Remeasurements of net defined benefit pension scheme liability/asset
Other reserve movements
Fair value gains/(losses) on available-for-sale financial investments
Recycling gains/(losses) on available-for-sale financial investments
Total comprehensive (expense)/income for the year
Allocation of (losses)/profits for the year
(a) (Deficit)/surplus for the year attributable to:
(i) non-controlling interest; and
(ii) owners of the parent
Total
Group
2014-15 2013-14
£000
£000
7
21
(b) Total comprehensive (expense)/income for the year attributable to:
(i) non-controlling interest; and
(31,679) 117,368
(ii) owners of the parent
Total
(31,679) 117,368
The Trust has taken advantage of the exception afforded by the Companies Act to omit the Statement of Comprehensive
Income for the Foundation Trust parent. The deficit relating to the parent Trust for the year ended 31 March 2015 is
£59.409m (2014: surplus £61.623m).
209
Statements of Financial Position as at 31 March 2015
note
Non-current assets
Intangible assets
Property, plant and equipment
Investment property
Investment in associates (and joint controlled
operations)
Other investments
Trade and other receivables
Other financial assets
Other assets
Total non-current assets
Current assets
Inventories
Trade and other receivables
Other financial assets
Non-current assets for sale and assets in disposal
groups
Cash and cash equivalents
Total current assets
Total assets
Current liabilities
Trade and other payables
Borrowings
Other financial liabilities
Provisions
Other liabilities
Total current liabilities
Financed by:
Taxpayers' equity
Public Dividend Capital
Revaluation reserve
Available for sale investments reserve
Other reserves
Merger reserves
Income and expenditure reserve
Total taxpayers' equity
Trust
31 March
2015
£000
31 March
2014
£000
9
10
11
3,495
612,695
-
1,769
571,616
-
3,495
612,695
-
1,769
571,616
-
11
4,386
7,272
627,848
3,598
4,167
581,150
250
8,645
625,085
250
5,278
578,913
17,090
98,040
-
15,292
118,135
-
17,090
99,046
-
15,292
118,390
-
43,445
158,575
786,423
54,535
187,962
769,112
42,663
158,779
783,848
54,185
187,867
766,780
(164,095)
(7,624)
(1,239)
(10,189)
(183,147)
(137,329)
(4,289)
(1,144)
(9,989)
(152,751)
(163,944)
(7,435)
(1,239)
(10,189)
(182,807)
(137,240)
(4,289)
(1,144)
(9,989)
(152,662)
(24,572)
603,276
35,211
616,361
(24,008)
601,077
35,205
614,118
(222,570)
(6,295)
(228,865)
374,411
(206,565)
(6,886)
(213,451)
402,910
(221,082)
(6,295)
(227,377)
373,700
(204,882)
(6,886)
(211,768)
402,350
231,316
165,236
(22,141)
374,411
228,136
144,997
29,777
402,910
231,316
165,236
(22,852)
373,700
228,136
144,997
29,217
402,350
13
12
13
14
15
17
18
16
Net current (liabilities)/assets
Total assets less current liabilities
Non-current liabilities
Trade and other payables
Borrowings
Other financial liabilities
Provisions
Other liabilities
Total non-current liabilities
Total assets employed:
Group
31 March
31 March
2015
2014
£000
£000
17
18
The notes on pages 11 to 49 form part of these accounts.
The financial statements on pages 191-257 were approved and authorised for issue by the Board on 26 May 2015 and
signed on its behalf by:
Signed:
Roland Sinker
Date: 26 May 2015
Acting Chief Executive
210
Statement of Changes in Taxpayers' Equity for the year ended 31 March 2015
Public
Dividend
Capital
£000
Income and
expenditure
reserve
£000
Revaluation
reserve
£000
Total
reserves
£000
228,136
-
29,777
(52,065)
144,997
-
402,910
(52,065)
Transfers by normal absorption: transfers between reserves
-
-
-
-
Impairments
-
-
(5,595)
(5,595)
Revaluations - property, plant and equipment
-
-
26,261
26,261
Transfer to retained earnings on disposal of assets
-
427
(427)
-
Share of comprehensive income from associates and joint
ventures
-
-
-
-
Gains/losses on available-for-sale financial investments
-
-
-
-
Other recognised gains and losses
-
-
-
-
2,900
-
-
2,900
Public Dividend Capital repaid
-
-
-
-
Public Dividend Capital written off
-
-
-
-
280
(280)
-
-
Balance at 31 March 2015
231,316
(22,141)
165,236
374,411
Balance at 1 April 2013
Surplus for the year
135,678
-
35,132
59,749
87,536
-
258,346
59,749
65,262
(65,542)
280
-
Impairments
-
-
(2,139)
(2,139)
Revaluations - property, plant and equipment
-
-
59,758
59,758
Transfer to retained earnings on disposal of assets
-
438
(438)
-
Share of comprehensive income from associates and joint
ventures
-
-
-
-
Gains/losses on available-for-sale financial investments
-
-
-
-
Other recognised gains and losses
-
-
-
-
27,196
-
-
27,196
Public Dividend Capital repaid
-
-
-
-
Public Dividend Capital written off
-
-
-
-
Other reserve movements
-
-
-
-
228,136
29,777
144,997
402,910
Group
Balance at 1 April 2014
Deficit for the year
Public Dividend Capital received
Other reserve movements
Transfers by normal absorption: transfers between reserves
Public Dividend Capital received
Balance at 31 March 2014
211
Statement of Changes in Taxpayers' Equity for the year ended 31 March 2015
Public
Dividend
Capital
£000
Income and
expenditure
reserve
£000
Revaluation
reserve
£000
Total
reserves
£000
228,136
-
29,312
(52,490)
144,997
-
402,445
(52,490)
Transfers by normal absorption: transfers between reserves
-
-
-
-
Impairments
-
-
(5,595)
(5,595)
Revaluations - property, plant and equipment
-
-
26,261
26,261
Transfer to retained earnings on disposal of assets
-
427
(427)
-
Share of comprehensive income from associates and joint
ventures
-
-
-
-
Gains/losses on available-for-sale financial investments
-
-
-
-
Other recognised gains and losses
-
-
-
-
2,900
-
-
2,900
Public Dividend Capital repaid
-
-
-
-
Public Dividend Capital written off
-
-
-
-
280
(280)
-
-
Balance at 31 March 2015
231,316
(23,031)
165,236
373,521
Balance at 1 April 2013
Surplus for the year
135,678
-
35,711
58,705
87,536
-
258,925
58,705
65,262
(65,542)
280
-
Impairments
-
-
(2,139)
(2,139)
Revaluations - property, plant and equipment
-
-
59,758
59,758
Transfer to retained earnings on disposal of assets
-
438
(438)
-
Share of comprehensive income from associates and joint
ventures
-
-
-
-
Gains/losses on available-for-sale financial investments
-
-
-
-
Other recognised gains and losses
-
-
-
-
27,196
-
-
27,196
Public Dividend Capital repaid
-
-
-
-
Public Dividend Capital written off
-
-
-
-
Other reserve movements
-
-
-
-
228,136
29,312
144,997
402,445
Trust
Balance at 1 April 2014
Deficit for the year
Public Dividend Capital received
Other reserve movements
Transfers by normal absorption: transfers between reserves
Public Dividend Capital received
Balance at 31 March 2014
212
Statement of Cash Flows for the year ended 31 March 2015
Group
Note
Cash flows from operating activities
Operating (deficit)/surplus from continuing operations
Operating (deficit)/surplus from discontinued operations
Operating (deficit)/surplus
Non-cash income and expense
Depreciation and amortisation
Impairments
loss on disposal
Decrease/(increase) in trade and other receivables
Increase in inventories
Increase in trade and other payables
Increase in other liabilities
Decrease in provisions
Tax paid
Other movements in operating cash flows
Net cash generated from operations
Cash flows from investing activities
Interest received
Purchase of intangible assets
Sales of intangible assets
Purchase of property, plant and equipment
Sales of property, plant and equipment
Cash flows attributable to acquisitions or disposals of
business units and subsidiaries (not absorption transfers)
Net cash used in investing activities
Cash flows from financing activities
Public Dividend Capital received
Loans received from the Independent Trust Financing
Facility
Other loans received
Loans repaid to the Independent Trust Financing Facility
Other loans repaid
Capital element of PFI and other service concession
payments
Other capital receipts
Interest paid
Interest element of PFI and other service concession
obligations
PDC dividend paid
Cash flows attributable to financing activities of discontinued
operations
Net cash (used in)/generated from financing activities
(Decrease)/increase in cash and cash equivalents
Cash and cash equivalents at 1 April
Cash and cash equivalents transferred by normal absorption
Cash and cash equivalents at 31 March
Trust
2014-15
£000
2013-14
£000
2014-15
£000
2013-14
£000
(15,930)
(15,930)
20,179
20,179
(15,609)
(15,609)
20,477
20,477
22,154
4,535
285
17,257
(1,798)
28,882
200
(649)
(250)
(37)
54,649
16,925
2,648
430
(70,647)
(1,739)
47,434
4,437
(2,775)
2
16,894
22,154
4,535
285
16,779
(1,798)
28,821
200
(649)
(250)
54,468
16,925
2,648
430
(70,803)
(1,739)
47,362
4,437
(2,775)
16,962
213
(2,664)
(46,614)
131
169
(804)
(34,068)
17
147
(2,664)
(46,614)
131
104
(804)
(34,068)
17
(48,934)
(1,504)
(36,190)
(3,125)
(52,125)
(34,751)
2,900
27,196
2,900
27,196
22,000
(1,012)
(78)
33,600
1,683
(1,012)
(123)
22,000
2,864
(1,012)
(78)
33,600
(1,012)
(123)
(3,199)
95
(1,452)
(2,005)
168
(730)
(3,199)
95
(1,375)
(2,005)
168
(730)
(23,443)
(12,616)
(16,310)
(9,138)
(23,443)
(12,616)
(16,310)
(9,138)
(16,805)
33,329
(13,864)
31,646
(11,090)
14,033
(11,522)
13,857
54,535
43,445
40,502
54,535
54,185
42,663
40,328
54,185
213
Notes to the accounts
1. Accounting policies
Monitor has directed that the financial
statements of NHS foundation trusts shall
meet the accounting requirements of the
Foundation Trust Annual Reporting Manual
(FT ARM), which shall be agreed with HM
Treasury. Consequently, the following
financial statements have been prepared in
accordance with the FT ARM 2014-15 issued
by Monitor. The accounting policies contained
in that manual follow International Financial
Reporting Standards (IFRS) and HM
Treasury's Financial Reporting Manual (the
FReM) to the extent that they are meaningful
and appropriate to NHS foundation trusts.
They have been applied consistently in
dealing with items considered material in
relation to the accounts.
1.1. Accounting convention
These accounts have been prepared under
the historical cost convention modified to
account for the revaluation of property, plant
and equipment, intangible assets, inventories
and certain financial assets and financial
liabilities.
1.2. Acquisitions and discontinued
operations
Activities are considered to be ‘acquired’ only
if they are taken on from outside the public
sector. Activities are considered to be
‘discontinued’ only if they cease entirely. They
are not considered to be ‘discontinued’ if they
transfer from one public sector body to
another.
214
consolidated within the entity's financial
statements. In accordance with IAS 1
Presentation of Financial Statements, restated
prior period accounts are presented where the
adoption of the new policy has a material
impact.
The King's College Hospital Charity is an
independent charity and is not under the
control of the Foundation Trust. Therefore, the
charity has not been consolidated within these
accounts.
1.4. Subsidiaries
Subsidiary entities are those over which the
Foundation Trust is exposed to, or has rights
to, variable returns from its involvement with
the entity and has the ability to affect those
returns through its power over the entity. The
income, expenses, assets, liabilities, equity
and reserves of subsidiaries are consolidated
in full into the appropriate financial statement
lines. The capital and reserves attributable to
non-controlling interests are included as a
separate item in the Statement of Financial
Position.
The amounts consolidated are drawn from the
draft financial statements of the subsidiaries
for the year. Where subsidiaries' accounting
policies are not aligned with those of the
Foundation Trust then the amounts are
adjusted during consolidation where the
differences are material.
1.3. Charitable funds
The Foundation Trust has a wholly owned
subsidiary company, KCH Commercial
Services Ltd, who wholly own Agnentis Ltd
and KCH Management Ltd. The accounts for
this company have been consolidated into the
Foundation Trust annual accounts.
For 2014-15, the divergence from the FReM
that NHS charitable funds are not
consolidated with NHS Foundation trusts' own
returns is removed. Under the provisions of
IAS 27 Consolidated and Separate Financial
Statements, those charitable funds that fall
under common control with NHS bodies are
The primary statements and notes to the
accounts have been presented with separate
'Group' and 'Trust' columns. The Trust has
taken advantage of the exemption afforded by
the Companies Act to omit the Statement of
Comprehensive Income for the Foundation
Trust parent. The deficit relating to the parent
Trust for the year ended 31 March 2015 is
£52.490m (2014 : surplus £58.705m). Where
the difference between the 'Group' and 'Trust'
figures is considered immaterial, the 'Trust'
version of the note has been omitted.
1.5. Associates
Associate entities are those over which the
foundation trust has power to exercise a
significant influence. Associate entities are
recognised in the foundation trust's financial
statements using the equity method. The
investment is initially recognised at cost. It is
increased or decreased subsequently to
reflect the foundation trust's share of the
entity's profit or loss or other gains and losses
(e.g. revaluation gains on the entity's property,
plant or equipment) following acquisition.
It is also reduced when any distribution (e.g.
share dividends) are received by the
foundation trust from the associate.
1.6. Joint ventures
Joint ventures are arrangements in which the
Trust has joint control with one or more other
parties, and where it has the rights to the net
assets of the arrangement.
Joint ventures are accounted for using the
equity method.
1.7. Joint operations
Joint operations are arrangements in which
the Trust has joint control with one or more
other parties, and has the rights to the assets,
and obligations for the liabilities, relating to the
arrangement. The foundation trust includes
within its financial statements its share of the
assets, liabilities, income and expenses.
1.8. Income
Income in respect of services provided is
recognised when, and to the extent that,
performance occurs and is measured at the
fair value of the consideration receivable. The
main source of income for the foundation trust
is contracts with commissioners in respect of
health care services provided under the
Department of Health's Payment by Results
rules-based system and local agreements for
non-mandatory tariff activity.
Where income is received for a specific
activity which is to be delivered in the
following financial year, that income is
deferred.
Income from the sale of non-current assets is
recognised only when all material conditions
of sale have been met, and is measured as
the sums due under the sale contract.
The foundation trust has accounted for
income for incomplete spells of patient activity
at 31 March. The work in progress is derived
from patients admitted before the year end but
not discharged as at 31 March. The
calculation is based on the number of bed
days and the average bed price.
The foundation trust receives income under
the NHS Injury Cost Recovery Scheme,
designed to reclaim the cost of treating injured
individuals to whom personal injury
compensation has subsequently been paid
e.g. by an insurer. The foundation trust
recognises the income when it receives
notification from the Department of Work and
Pensions' Compensation Recovery Unit that
the individual has logged a compensation
claim. The income is measured at the agreed
tariff for the treatments provided to the injured
individual, less a provision for unsuccessful
compensation claims and doubtful debts.
1.9. Expenditure on employee benefits
Short-term employee benefits
Salaries, wages and employment-related
payments are recognised in the period in
which the service is received from employees.
The cost of annual leave entitlement earned
215
but not taken by employees at the end of the
period is recognised in the financial
statements to the extent that employees are
permitted to carry-forward leave into the
following period.
Pension costs
Past and present employees are covered by
the provisions of the NHS Pension Scheme.
The Scheme is an unfunded, defined benefit
scheme that covers NHS employers, general
practices and other bodies, allowed under the
direction of the Secretary of State, in England
and Wales. It is not possible for the foundation
trust to identify its share of the underlying
scheme liabilities. Therefore, the scheme is
accounted for as a defined contribution
scheme.
Employers pension cost contributions are
charged to operating expenses as and when
they become due.
Additional pension liabilities arising from early
retirements are not funded by the scheme
except where the retirement is due to illhealth. The full amount of the liability for the
additional costs is charged to operating
expenses at the time the foundation trust
commits itself to the retirement, regardless of
the method of payment.
1.10. Expenditure on other goods and
services
Expenditure on goods and services is
recognised when, and to the extent that they
have been received, and is measured at the
fair value of those goods and services.
Expenditure is recognised in operating
expenses except where it results in the
creation of a non-current asset such as
property, plant and equipment.
1.11. Property, plant and equipment
Recognition
216








Property, plant and equipment is
capitalised if:
it is held for use in delivering services or
for administrative purposes;
it is probable that future economic benefits
will flow to, or service potential will be
supplied to the foundation trust;
it is expected to be used for more than
one financial year;
the cost of the item can be measured
reliably; and
the item has cost of at least £5,000; or
collectively, a number of items have a cost
of at least £5,000 and individually have a
cost of more than £250, where the assets
are functionally interdependent, they had
broadly simultaneous purchase dates, are
anticipated to have simultaneous disposal
dates and are under single managerial
control; or
items form part of the initial equipping and
setting-up cost of a new building, ward or
unit, irrespective of their individual or
collective cost.
Where a large asset, for example a building,
includes a number of components with
significantly different asset lives, the
components are treated as separate assets
and depreciated over their own useful
economic lives.
Valuation
All property, plant and equipment is measured
initially at cost, representing the cost directly
attributable to acquiring or constructing the
asset and bringing it to the location and
condition necessary for it to be capable of
operating in the manner intended by
management. All assets are measured
subsequently at fair value.
Land and buildings are stated in the statement
of financial position at their revalued amounts,
being the fair value at the date of revaluation
less any impairment.
Revaluations are performed with sufficient
regularity to ensure that carrying amounts are
not materially different from those that would
be determined at the end of the reporting
period. Fair values are determined as follows:
 land and non-specialised buildings –
market value for existing use; and
 specialised buildings – depreciated
replacement cost.
Properties in the course of construction for
service or administration purposes are carried
at cost, less any impairment loss. Cost
includes professional fees but not borrowing
costs, which are recognised as expenses
immediately, as allowed by IAS 23 for assets
held at fair value. Assets are revalued and
depreciation commences when they are
brought into use.
Operational equipment other than IT
equipment, which is considered to have nil
inflation, is valued at net current replacement
cost through annual uplift by the change in the
value of the GDP deflator. Equipment surplus
to requirements is valued at net recoverable
amount.
All land and buildings are restated to fair value
using professional valuations in accordance
with IAS16 every five years. A three year
interim revaluation is also carried out. The last
asset valuations were undertaken in 2014 as
at the prospective valuation date at 31 March
2015.
Valuations are carried out by professionally
qualified valuers in accordance with the Royal
Institute of Chartered Surveyors (RICS)
Appraisal and Valuation Manual.
The valuations are carried out primarily on the
basis of Depreciated Replacement Cost
(DRC) for specialised operational property
(e.g. NHS patient treatment facilities) and
Existing Use Value for non-specialised
operational property. The value of land for
existing use purposes is assessed at Existing
Use Value. For non-operational properties
including surplus land, the valuations are
carried out at Market Value.
The Department of Health has adopted the
Modern Equivalent Asset approach (MEA) for
its DRC valuations rather than continuing with
identical replacement.
The MEA approach used to value the property
will normally be based on the cost of a
modern equivalent asset that has the same
service potential as the existing asset and
then adjusted to take account of
obsolescence. In the past, functional
obsolescence has not been reflected in asset
valuations for the NHS.
Functional obsolescence examines a
building’s design or specification and whether
it may no longer fulfil the function for which it
was originally designed or whether it may be
much more basic than the MEA. The asset
will still be capable of use but at a lower level
of efficiency than the modern equivalent
asset, or may be capable of modification to
bring it up to a current specification. Other
common causes of functional obsolescence
include advances in technology or legislative
change. The obsolescence adjustment will
reflect either the cost of upgrading, or if this is
not possible, the financial consequences of
the reduced efficiency compared with the
modern equivalent.
The MEA approach incorporates the Building
Cost Information Service Index to determine
an increase or decrease in building costs
which impact on the asset valuation.
Additional alternative Open Market Value
figures have only been supplied for
operational assets scheduled for imminent
closure and subsequent disposal.
The carrying values of property, plant and
equipment are reviewed for impairment in
217
periods if events or changes in circumstances
indicate the carrying value may not be
recoverable. The costs arising from financing
the construction of the property, plant and
equipment are not capitalised but are charged
to the Statement of Comprehensive Income in
the year to which they relate.
All impairments resulting from price changes
are charged to the Statement of
Comprehensive Income. If the balance on the
revaluation reserve is less than the
impairment the difference is taken to the
Statement of Comprehensive Income.
The valuation included the Foundation Trust's
PFI scheme.
Subsequent expenditure
Subsequent expenditure relating to an item of
property, plant and equipment is recognised
as an increase in the carrying amount of the
asset when it is probable that additional future
economic benefits or service potential deriving
from the cost incurred to replace a component
of such item will flow to the enterprise and the
cost of the item can be determined reliably.
Where a component of an asset is replaced,
the cost of the replacement is capitalised if it
meets the criteria for recognition above. The
carrying amount of the part replaced is derecognised. Other expenditure that does not
generate additional future economic benefits
or service potential, such as repairs and
maintenance, is charged to the Statement of
Comprehensive Income in the period in which
it is incurred.
Depreciation
Items of property, plant and equipment are
depreciated over their remaining useful
economic lives in a manner consistent with
the consumption of economic or service
delivery benefits. Freehold land is considered
to have an infinite life and is not depreciated.
Property, plant and equipment which has
been reclassified as 'Held for Sale' ceases to
218
be depreciated upon the reclassification.
Assets in the course of construction and
residual interests in off-Statement of Financial
Position PFI contract assets are not
depreciated until the asset is brought into use
or reverts to the foundation trust, respectively.
Buildings, installations and fittings are
depreciated on their current value over the
estimated remaining life of the asset as
advised by the District Valuer. Leaseholds are
depreciated over the primary lease term.
Equipment is depreciated on current cost
evenly over the useful economic life of the
asset. Standard useful economic lives are
estimated for each major category of
equipment and individual lives will only be
applied where it is clear that the standard lives
are materially inappropriate.
The major categories and their useful
economic lives are:
 vehicles - 7 years;
 furniture - 10 years;
 office and IT equipment - 5 years;
 soft furnishings - 7 years;
 short life medical and other equipment - 5
years;
 medium life medical equipment - 10 years;
 long life medical equipment - 15 years;
 mainframe-type IT installations - 8 years.
Revaluation gains and losses
Revaluation gains are recognised in the
revaluation reserve, except where, and to the
extent that, they reverse a revaluation
decrease that has previously been recognised
in operating expenses, in which case they are
recognised as operating income.
Revaluation losses are charged to the
revaluation reserve to the extent that there is
an available balance for the asset concerned,
and thereafter charged to operating expenses.
Gains and losses recognised in the
revaluation reserve are reported in the
Statement of Comprehensive Income as an
item of 'other comprehensive income'.
Impairments
In accordance with the ARM, impairments that
arise from a clear consumption of economic
benefits or service potential in the asset are
charged to operating expenses. A
compensating transfer is made from the
revaluation reserve to the income and
expenditure reserve of an amount equal to the
lower of (i) the impairment charged to
operating expenses; and (ii) the balance in the
revaluation reserve attributable to that asset
before the impairment.
An impairment that arises from a clear
consumption of economic benefit or service
potential is reversed when, and to the extent
that, the circumstances that gave rise to the
loss is reversed. Reversals are recognised in
operating income to the extent that the asset
is restored to the carrying amount it would
have had if the impairment had never been
recognised. Any remaining reversal is
recognised in the revaluation reserve. Where,
at the time of the original impairment, a
transfer was made from the revaluation
reserve to the income and expenditure
reserve, an amount is transferred back to the
revaluation reserve when the impairment
reversal is recognised.
Other impairments are treated as revaluation
losses. Reversals of 'other impairments' are
treated as revaluation gains.
De-recognition
Assets intended for disposal are reclassified
as ‘Held for Sale’ once all of the following
criteria are met:
 the asset is available for immediate sale in
its present condition subject only to terms
which are usual and customary for such
sales; and
 the sale must be highly probable.
As at 31 March 2015, the foundation trust did
not hold any assets intended for disposal.
Donated, government grant or other grantfunded assets
Donated and grant funded property, plant and
equipment assets are capitalised at their fair
value on receipt. The donation/grant is
credited to income at the same time, unless
the donor has imposed a condition that the
future economic benefits embodied in the
grant are to be consumed in a manner
specified by the donor, in which case, the
donation/grant is deferred within liabilities and
is carried forward to future financial years to
the extent that the condition has not yet been
met.
The donated and grant funded assets are
subsequently accounted for in the same
manner as other items of property, plant and
equipment.
Private finance initiative (PFI) transactions
PFI transactions which meet the IFRIC 12
definition of a service concession, as
interpreted in HM Treasury’s FReM, are
accounted for as “on-Statement of Financial
Position” by the trust. In accordance with IAS
17, the underlying assets are recognised as
property, plant and equipment at their fair
value, together with an equivalent finance
lease liability. Subsequently, the assets are
accounted for as property, plant and
equipment and/or intangible assets as
appropriate.
The annual contract payments are
apportioned between the repayment of the
liability, a finance cost and the charges for
services.
The service charge is recognised in operating
expenses and the finance cost is charged to
Finance Costs in the Statement of
Comprehensive Income.
219
Components of the asset replaced by the
operator during the contract (‘lifecycle
replacement’) are capitalised where they meet
the foundation trust’s criteria for capital
expenditure. They are capitalised at the time
they are provided by the operator and are
measured initially at their fair value.
The element of the annual unitary payment
allocated to lifecycle replacement is
predetermined for each year of the contract
from the operator’s planned programme of
lifecycle replacement. Where the lifecycle
component is provided earlier or later than
expected, a short-term finance lease liability
or prepayment is recognised respectively.
Where the fair value of the lifecycle
component is less than the amount
determined in the contract, the difference is
recognised as an expense when the
replacement is provided. If the fair value is
greater than the amount determined in the
contract, the difference is treated as a ‘free’
asset and a deferred income balance is
recognised, and is released to the operating
income over the shorter of the remaining
contract period or the useful economic life of
the replacement component.
Assets contributed by the foundation trust for
use in the scheme continue to be recognised
as items of property, plant and equipment in
the foundation trust’s Statement of Financial
Position.
1.12. Intangible assets
Recognition
Intangible assets are non-monetary assets
without physical substance, which are capable
of sale separately from the rest of the trust’s
business or which arise from contractual or
other legal rights. They are recognised only
when it is probable that future economic
benefits will flow to, or service potential be
provided to, the trust; where the cost of the
asset can be measured reliably.
220
Software
Software that is integral to the operating of
hardware, for example an operating system, is
capitalised as part of the relevant item of
property, plant and equipment. Software that
is not integral to the operation of hardware, for
example application software, is capitalised as
an intangible asset.
Internally generated intangible assets
Internally generated goodwill, brands,
mastheads, publishing titles, customer, lists
and similar items are not capitalised as
intangible assets.
Expenditure on research is not capitalised: it
is recognised as an operating expense in the
period in which it is incurred.
Expenditure on development is capitalised
only where all of the following can be
demonstrated:
 the technical feasibility of completing the
intangible asset so that it will be available
for use;
 the intention to complete the intangible
asset and use it;
 the ability to sell or use the intangible
asset;
 how the intangible asset will generate
probable future economic benefits or
service potential;
 the availability of adequate technical,
financial and other resources to complete
the intangible asset and sell or use it; and
 the ability to measure reliably the
expenditure attributable to the intangible
asset during its development.
Measurement
Intangible assets are recognised initially at
cost, comprising all directly attributable costs
needed to create, produce and prepare the
asset to the point that it is capable of
operating in the manner intended by
management.
Subsequently intangible assets are measured
at fair value. Revaluation gains and losses
and impairments are treated in the same
manner as for Property, Plant and Equipment.
Intangible assets held for sale are measured
at the lower of their carrying amount or ‘fair
value less costs to sell’.
Amortisation
Intangible assets are amortised over their
expected useful economic lives in a manner
consistent with the consumption of economic
or service delivery benefits.
1.13. Inventories
Inventories are valued at the lower of cost and
net realisable value. The cost of inventories is
measure using the First In, First Out method.
This is considered to be a reasonable
approximation to current cost due to the high
turnover of stocks.
1.14. Cash and cash equivalents
Cash is cash in hand and deposits with any
financial institution repayable without penalty
on notice of not more than 24 hours. Cash
equivalents are investments that mature in 3
months or less from the date of acquisition
and that are readily convertible to known
amounts of cash with insignificant risk of
change in value. These balances exclude
monies held in the Foundation Trust's bank
account belonging to patients. Account
balances are only set off where a formal
agreement has been made with the bank to
do so. In all other cases overdrafts are
disclosed within payables. Interest earned on
bank accounts and interest charged on
overdrafts is recorded as, respectively,
interest receivable and interest payable in the
periods to which they relate. Bank charges
are recorded as operating expenditure in the
periods to which they relate.
1.15. Financial instruments and financial
liabilities
Recognition
Financial assets and financial liabilities which
arise from contracts for the purchase or sale
of non-financial items (such as goods or
services), which are entered into in
accordance with the foundation trust’s normal
purchase, sale or usage requirements, are
recognised when, and to the extent which,
performance occurs, i.e. when receipt or
delivery of the goods or services is made.
Financial assets or financial liabilities in
respect of assets acquired or disposed of
through finance leases are recognised and
measured in accordance with the accounting
policy for leases described below.
All other financial assets and financial
liabilities are recognised when the Trust
becomes a party to the contractual provisions
of the instrument.
De-recognition
All financial assets are de-recognised when
the rights to receive cash flows from the
assets have expired, or the trust has
transferred substantially all of the risks and
rewards of ownership.
Financial liabilities are de-recognised when
the obligation is discharged, cancelled or
expires.
Classification
Financial assets are categorised as Loans
and receivables or ‘Available-for-sale financial
assets’.
Financial liabilities are classified as 'Other
Financial liabilities'.
Loans and receivables
Loans and receivables are non-derivative
financial assets with fixed or determinable
payments which are not quoted in an active
market. They are included in current assets.
221
The foundation trust’s loans and receivables
comprise: cash at bank and in hand, NHS
debtors,
accrued income and ‘other debtors’.
Loans and receivables are recognised initially
at fair value, net of transactions costs, and are
measured subsequently at amortised cost,
using the effective interest method.
The effective interest rate is the rate that
discounts exactly estimated future cash
receipts through the expected life of the
financial asset or, when appropriate, a shorter
period, to the net carrying amount of the
financial asset.
Interest on loans and receivables is calculated
using the effective interest method and
credited to the Statement of Comprehensive
Income.
Available-for-sale financial assets
Available-for-sale financial assets are nonderivative financial assets which are either
designated in this category or not classified in
any of the other categories.
They are included in long-term assets unless
the Trust intends to dispose of them within 12
months of the Statement of Financial Position
date.
Available-for-sale financial assets are
recognised initially at fair value, including
transaction costs, and measured
subsequently at fair value, with gains or
losses recognised in reserves and reported in
the Statement of Comprehensive Income as
an item of 'other comprehensive income'.
When items classified as ‘available-for-sale’
are sold or impaired, the accumulated fair
value adjustments recognised are transferred
from reserves and recognised in 'Finance
Costs' in the Statement of Comprehensive
Income.
222
Financial liabilities
All financial liabilities are recognised initially at
fair value, net of transaction costs incurred,
and measured subsequently at amortised cost
using the effective interest method.
The effective interest rate is the rate that
discounts exactly estimated future cash
payments through the expected life of the
financial liability or, when appropriate, a
shorter period, to the net carrying amount of
the financial liability.
They are included in current liabilities except
for amounts payable more than 12 months
after the Statement of Financial Position date,
which are classified as long-term liabilities.
Interest on financial liabilities carried at
amortised cost is calculated using the
effective interest method and charged to
Finance Costs. Interest on financial liabilities
taken out to finance property, plant and
equipment or intangible assets is not
capitalised as part of the cost of those assets.
Determination of fair value
For financial assets and financial liabilities
carried at fair value, the carrying amounts are
determined using discounted cash flow
analysis.
Impairment of financial assets
At the Statement of Financial Position date,
the Trust assesses whether any financial
assets, other than those held at ‘fair value
through income and expenditure’ is impaired.
Financial assets are impaired and impairment
losses are recognised if, and only if, there is
objective evidence of impairment as a result
of one or more events which occurred after
the initial recognition of the asset and which
has an impact on the estimated future cash
flows of the asset.
For financial assets carried at amortised cost,
the amount of the impairment loss is
measured as the difference between the
asset’s carrying amount and the present value
of the revised future cash flows discounted at
the asset’s original effective interest rate. The
loss is recognised in the Statement of
Comprehensive Income and the carrying
amount of the asset is reduced through the
use of a bad debt provision.
The carrying amount of the financial assets is
reduced when the outstanding debt is greater
than 6 months and payment has not been
agreed with the respective debtor. Due to the
complexities of Private Patient debt recovery
the reduction in these debts is based on
outstanding debts greater than one year
where payment has not been agreed with the
respective debtor.
1.16. Leases
Finance leases
Where substantially all risks and rewards of
ownership of a leased asset are borne by the
NHS Foundation Trust, the asset is recorded
as property, plant and equipment and a
corresponding liability is recorded. The value
at which both are recognised is the lower of
the fair value of the asset or the present value
of the minimum lease payments, discounted
using the interest rate implicit in the lease.
The asset and liability are recognised at the
commencement of the lease. Thereafter the
asset is accounted for an item of property
plant and equipment.
The annual rental is split between the
repayment of the liability and a finance cost so
as to achieve a constant rate of finance over
the life of the lease. The annual finance cost
is charged to Finance Costs in the Statement
of Comprehensive Income. The lease liability,
is de-recognised when the liability is
discharged, cancelled or expires.
Operating leases
Other leases are regarded as operating
leases and the rentals are charged to
operating expenses on a straight-line basis
over the term of the lease. Operating lease
incentives received are added to the lease
rentals and charged to operating expenses
over the life of the lease.
Leases of land and buildings
Where a lease is for land and buildings, the
land component is separated from the building
component and the classification for each is
assessed separately.
1.17. Provisions
The Foundation Trust recognises a provision
where it has a present legal or constructive
obligation of uncertain timing or amount; for
which it is probable that there will be a future
outflow of cash or other resources; and a
reliable estimate can be made of the amount.
The amount recognised in the Statement of
Financial Position is the best estimate of the
resources required to settle the obligation.
Where the effect of the time value of money is
significant, the estimated risk-adjusted cash
flows are discounted using the discount rates
published and mandated by HM Treasury.
Clinical negligence costs
The NHS Litigation Authority (NHSLA)
operates a risk pooling scheme under which
the foundation trust pays an annual
contribution to the NHSLA which in return
settles all clinical negligence claims. The
contribution is charged to expenditure.
Although the NHSLA is administratively
responsible for all clinical negligence cases
the legal liability remains with the Foundation
Trust. The total value of clinical negligence
provisions carried by the NHSLA on behalf of
the foundation trust is disclosed at note 18.
Non-clinical risk pooling
The foundation trust participates in the
Property Expenses Scheme and the Liabilities
to Third Parties Scheme. Both are risk pooling
schemes under which the foundation trust
223
pays an annual contribution to the NHS
Litigation Authority and, in return, receives
assistance with the costs of claims arising.
The annual membership contributions, and
any excesses payable in respect of particular
claims are charged to operating expenses as
and when they become due.
1.18. Contingencies
A contingent asset is a possible asset that
arises from past events and whose existence
will be confirmed by the occurrence or nonoccurrence of one or more uncertain future
events not wholly within the control of the
foundation trust. A contingent asset is
disclosed where an inflow of economic
benefits is probable.
Contingent liabilities are not recognised, but
are disclosed in Note 19, unless the
probability of a transfer of economic benefits
is remote. Contingent liabilities are defined as:
 possible obligations arising from past
events whose existence will be confirmed
only by the occurrence of one or more
uncertain future events not wholly within
the entity's control; or
 present obligations arising from past
events but for which it is not probable that
a transfer of economic benefits will arise
or for which the amount of the obligation
cannot be measured with sufficient
reliability.
IAS 32.
A charge, reflecting the cost of capital utilised
by the foundation trust, is payable as public
dividend capital dividend. The charge is
calculated at the rate set by HM Treasury
(currently 3.5%) on the average relevant net
assets of the NHS foundation trust during the
financial year.
Relevant net assets are calculated as the
value of all assets less the value of all
liabilities, except for:
donated assets (including lottery funded
assets);
 average daily cash balances held with the
Government Banking Services (GBS) and
National Loans Fund (NLF) deposits,
excluding cash balances held in GBS
accounts that relate to a short-term
working capital facility;
 any PDC dividend balance receivable or
payable. In accordance with the
requirements laid down by the Department
of Health (as the issuer of PDC), the
dividend for the year is calculated on the
actual average relevant net assets as set
out in the ‘pre-audit’ version of the annual
accounts.
The dividend thus calculated is not revised
should any adjustment to net assets occur as
a result the audit of the annual accounts.
1.20. Value added tax
Where the time value of money is material,
contingencies are disclosed at their present
value.
224
1.19. Public dividend capital
Most of the activities of the Foundation Trust
are outside the scope of VAT and, in general,
output tax does not apply and input tax on
purchases is not recoverable.
Public Dividend Capital (PDC) is a type of
public sector equity finance based on the
excess of assets over liabilities at the time of
establishment of the predecessor NHS Trust.
HM Treasury has determined that PDC is not
a financial instrument within the meaning of
Irrecoverable VAT is charged to the relevant
expenditure category or included in the
capitalised purchase cost of fixed assets.
Where output tax is charged or input VAT is
recoverable, the amounts are stated net of
VAT.
1.21. Corporation tax
The Finance Act 2004 amended S519A
Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988
provided power to the Treasury to make
certain non-core activities of Foundation
Trusts potentially subject to corporation tax.
This legislation is effective from September 12
2005. Any outstanding payments of
corporation tax as at the end of the financial
year are provided for in the Statement of
Comprehensive Income.
The Foundation Trust did not incur
Corporation Tax in 2014-15 as the Trust did
not generate any taxable income. The
corporation tax in the accounts relate to the
subsidiary.
1.22. Foreign exchange
The functional and presentational currencies
of the Trust are sterling.
A transaction which is denominated in a
foreign currency is translated into the
functional currency at the spot exchange rate
on the date of the transaction.
The Foundation Trust does not have material
foreign currency transactions.
Exchange gains or losses on monetary items
(arising on settlement of the transaction or on
re-translation at the Statement of Financial
Position date) are recognised in income or
expense in the period in which they arise.
Exchange gains or losses on non-monetary
assets and liabilities are recognised in the
same manner as other gains and losses on
these items.
1.23. Third party assets
Assets belonging to third parties (such as
money held on behalf of patients) are not
recognised in the accounts since the NHS
Foundation Trust has no beneficial interest in
them. However, third party assets are
disclosed in Note 24 to the accounts in
accordance with the requirements of the HM
Treasury Financial Reporting Manual.
1.24. Losses and special payments
Losses and special payments are items that
Parliament would not have contemplated
when it agreed funds for the health service or
passed legislation. By their nature they are
items that ideally should not arise. They are
therefore subject to special control procedures
compared with the generality of payments.
They are divided into different categories,
which govern the way that individual cases
are handled.
Losses and special payments are charged to
the relevant functional headings in
expenditure on an accruals basis, including
losses which would have been made good
through insurance cover had NHS bodies not
been bearing their own risks (with insurance
premiums then being included as normal
revenue expenditure).
However the losses and special payments
note is compiled directly from the losses and
compensations register which reports on an
accrual basis with the exception of provisions
for future losses.
1.25. Segmental analysis
The foundation trust has a number of
business divisions which are aggregated
under one reportable segment being the
provision of healthcare. The Foundation Trust
provides Private Patient, Research and
Development and Training and Education
services within this healthcare sector, but as
they do not have a material impact they are
aggregated under this one reportable
segment. Note 2 entitled "Other Operating
Income" includes the relevant income figures
for these services.
225
The subsidiary figures have not been
disclosed separately in this note as the figures
have been considered to be not material.
the reasons outlined above, including planned
reductions in activity commissioned from the
Trust and the need to reduce the underlying
cost base of the Trust to continuously align
capacity and demand.
1.26. Going concern
IAS 1 requires management to undertake an
assessment of the NHS Foundation’s Trusts
ability to continue as a going concern. Due to
the materiality of the financial issues, the
Board has carefully considered whether the
accounts should be prepared on the basis of
being a ‘Going Concern’. The Board
considered the advice in the Government
Reporting Manual that “The anticipated
continuation of the provision of a service in
the future, as evidenced by inclusion of
financial provision for that service in published
documents, is normally sufficient evidence of
going concern.”
The Trust has prepared its financial plans and
cash flow forecasts on the assumption that
support funding will continue to be received
through the Department of Health/Monitor.
These funds are expected to be sufficient to
prevent the Trust from failing to meet its
obligations as they fall due and to continue
until adequate plans are in place to achieve
financial sustainability for the Trust.
The current economic environment for all
NHS Trusts and NHS Foundation Trusts is
challenging with on-going internal efficiency
gains necessary due to annual tariff (price)
reductions; cost pressures in respect of
national pay structures; non-pay and drug
cost inflation; as well as nationally set contract
penalties for contract performance deviations,
combined with local commissioner (CCG)
QIPP targets such as reducing activity
through local area networks.
The Trust has incurred a deficit of (£52.1m)
for the year ended 31 March 2015. The
Directors consider that the outlook presents
significant challenges in terms of cash-flow for
226
The Trust has secured £59.7m of Interim
Revolving Working Capital Support Funding
from Monitor/DoH to support the Trust’s
revenue position for working capital. This
funding will be required for the duration of the
financial year whilst the internal savings plans
are embedded.
The Trust is facing a period of unprecedented
change over the coming years and planning
undertaken by the Trust has recognised that
without significant change, the Trust will
remain in deficit during the foreseeable future.
Positive cash balances are likely to be
maintained throughout the period through
successfully securing commitments to
necessary funding from external bodies
(DoH/Monitor) and contracts with the lead
commissioners which give assurance of
income flows.
The significant risks facing the Trust are
summarised as follows:
1) The Trust has prepared a cash flow
forecast which shows a minimum level of
headroom of £3m. The Trust has
developed its financial plans to include the
agreed interim funding and thus continue
on a going concern basis.
2) There is uncertainty over whether the
Trust can deliver its financial plans
including efficiency savings of £86m,
which has been assumed in its financial
plan for 2015/16. This is a level of savings
which is extremely challenging and must
be supported with adequate clinical focus
and engagement in quality process
improvement against agreed and
appropriately detailed and delivery plans.
There is thus a material uncertainty which
may cast significant doubt as to the Trust’s
ability to continue as a going concern and
therefore it may be unable to realise its assets
and discharge its liabilities in the normal
course of business.
The financial statements do not include any
adjustments that would result if the going
concern basis were not appropriate.
After making enquiries, the directors have
concluded that there is sufficient evidence that
services will be continue to be provided and
that there is financial provision within the
forward plans of commissioners. This
provision will also be dependent on both
acceptance and delivery of the financial
recovery plans and continuation of support
from the Department of Health. The Directors
have a reasonable expectation that this will be
the case and have therefore prepared these
financial statements on a going concern basis.
1.27. Critical accounting judgements and
key sources of estimation
uncertainty
In the application of the foundation trust’s
accounting policies, management is required
to make judgements, estimates and
assumptions about the carrying amounts of
assets and liabilities that are not readily
apparent from other sources. The estimates
and associated assumptions are based on
historical experience and other factors that
are considered to be relevant. Actual results
may differ from those estimates. The
estimates and underlying assumptions are
reviewed on an on-going basis. Revisions to
accounting estimates are recognised in the
period in which the estimate is revised if the
revision affects only that period or in the
period of the revision and future periods if the
revision affects both current and future
periods.
Management has made the following critical
judgements in the process of applying the
entity’s accounting policies and this has had a
significant effect on the amounts recognised
in the accounts:
1) Land and buildings have been valued on a
modern equivalent asset basis as at 31st
March 2015 by an independent
professionally qualified valuer (see note
1.11). In between formal valuations,
management make judgements about the
condition of assets and review their
estimated lives;
2) In recognising provisions and in addition to
widely used estimation techniques,
judgement is required when determining
the probable outflow of economic benefits
relating to early voluntary retirement
pension and injury benefit liabilities; and
3) Management has used their judgement to
decide when to write-off receivables or to
provide against the probability of not being
able to collect debt.
The following are the key sources of
estimation uncertainty at the end of the
reporting period, that have a significant risk of
causing a material adjustment to the carrying
amounts of assets and liabilities within the
next financial year:
1) Clinical Income from activities includes an
estimate in respect of income relating to
patient care spells that are part-completed
at the year end (see note 1.8);
2) Estimations as to the recoverability of
receivables have been made in
determining the carrying amounts of these
assets.
3) The use of estimated asset lives in
calculating depreciation (see note 1.11
and 1.12); and
4) Provisions for early voluntary retirement
pension contributions and injury benefit
obligations are estimated using expected
227
life tables and discounted at the pensions
rate of 2.2%.
1.28. Early adoption of standards,
amendments and interpretations
No new accounting standards or revisions to
existing standards have been early adopted in
2014/15.
1.29. Future changes in accounting
policy
The following changes to standards issued by
the IASB have not been implemented in these
accounts. The foundation trust does not
expect these changes to have a significant
impact in the period of initial application.
Change published
Published
by IASB
Financial year for which the change
first applies
IFRS 9 Financial Instruments
October 2010
Uncertain. Not likely to be adopted by the
EU until the IASB has finished the rest of
its financial instruments project.
IFRS 13 Fair Value Measurement
May 2011
Adoption delayed by HM Treasury. To be
adopted from 2015/16.
IAS 36 (amendment) – recoverable
amount disclosures
May 2013
To be adopted from 2015/16 (aligned to
IFRS 13 adoption)
Annual Improvements 2012
December 2013
Effective from 2015/16 but not yet EU
adopted
Annual Improvements 2013
December 2013
Effective from 2015/16 but not yet EU
adopted
IAS 19 (amendment) – employer
contributions to defined benefit
pension schemes
November 2013
Effective from 2015/16 but not yet EU
adopted
IFRIC 21 Levies
May 2013
EU adopted in June 2014 but not yet
adopted by HM Treasury.
* This reflects the EU-adopted effective date rather than the effective date in the standard.
228
2.
Operating income
2.
1
Income from activities by classification
Elective income
Non-elective income
Outpatient income
Accident and emergency income
Other NHS clinical income*
Private Patient income
Other non-protected clinical income
Total income from activities
Other operating income
Total operating income
Group
2014-15
2013-14
£000
£000
160,444
183,300
153,000
28,000
364,508
12,648
3,703
905,603
178,179
1,083,782
128,598
145,188
122,874
22,028
312,044
13,149
6,157
750,038
142,016
892,054
* Other NHS clinical income includes HIV/AIDS funding, NSCG funding for liver services, bone marrow
transplant funding, critical care funding from CCGs, off-tariff drugs and devices, renal dialysis, direct
access, community midwifery, community dental services, national screening programmes, RTA funding
and IVF services.
Other operating income includes the following:
Research and development
Education and training
Received from NHS charities: donations for capital acquisitions
Received from NHS charities: other charitable and other contributions to
expenditure
Non-patient care services to other bodies
Other**
Rental revenue from operating leases
Total
Group
2014-15
2013-14
£000
£000
11,474
49,101
134
12,117
49,652
32
10
89,153
26,912
1,395
178,179
312
69,836
9,795
272
142,016
** Other income includes NHS provider-to-provider services, clinical excellence awards, staff nursery, car
parking, accommodation and commercial rents.
2.
2
Income from activities arising from commissioner requested and non-commissioner requested
services
Under the terms of its Provider License, the trust is required to analyse the level of income from activities
that has arisen from commissioner requested and non-commissioner requested services. Commissioner
requested services are defined in the provider license and are services that commissioners believe would
need to be protected in the event of provider failure. This information is provided in the table below:
Group
2014-15
2013-14
£000
£000
Commissioner requested services
Non-commissioner requested services
Total
911,092
172,690
1,083,782
779,310
112,744
892,054
229
2.3
Operating lease income
Rental revenue from operating leases
Future minimum lease payments due on leases of buildings expiring
- not later than one year
- between one and five years
- later than five years
Total
2.4
Group
2014-15
2013-14
£000
£000
1,395
272
31 March
2015
£000
31 March
2014
£000
1,392
760
2,152
1,230
839
135
2,204
Income from activities by type
Group
2014-15
2013-14
£000
£000
NHS Foundation Trusts
NHS Trusts
Clinical Commissioning Groups and NHS England
Department of Health
NHS Other (including Public Health England and Prop Co)
Non-NHS
Local Authorities
Private patients
Overseas patients (non-reciprocal)
Injury costs recovery*
Other**
Total
1,574
1,313
862,345
7,200
2,123
700
1,382
720,658
1,934
5,136
12,648
3,703
4,277
5,284
905,603
201
13,149
6,157
3,055
2,802
750,038
* NHS Injury Scheme income is subject to a provision for doubtful debts of 18.9% to reflect expected rates of
collection. The total outstanding claims against this scheme at 31 March 2015 were £10.403m (31 March 2014:
£8.735m), and a provision of £1.966m (31 March 2014: £1.380m) was raised against this amount.
** Non-NHS Other income includes patient care provided to devolved administrations, personal contributions for IVF
treatment and services to prisons.
2.5
Income relating to overseas visitors
Income recognised this year
Cash payments received in-year
Amounts added to provision for impairment of receivables
Amounts written off in-year
230
Group
2014-15
2013-14
£000
£000
3,703
1,100
2,256
2,305
6,157
1,261
2,381
3,078
3.
Operating expenses
3.1
Operating expenses by type
Group
2014-15
£000
Drug inventories consumed
Supplies and services - clinical
Supplies and services - general
Establishment
Transport
Premises
Rentals under operating leases - minimum lease payments
PFI service costs
Clinical negligence
Purchase of healthcare from non-NHS bodies
Services from NHS bodies
NHS Foundation Trusts
NHS Trusts
Other NHS bodies
Non-cash movements on non-current assets
Depreciation on property, plant and equipment
Amortisation on intangible assets
Impairments and reversals of property, plant and equipment
Loss on disposal of property, plant and equipment
Non-cash movements on provisions
Increase in provision for impairment of receivables
Audit fees payable to the external auditor
Statutory audit
Regulatory reporting
Other auditor remuneration
Non-Executive Director benefits
Other*
Total operating expenses (excluding employee benefits)
Employee benefits
Executive Director benefits
Other employee benefits
Redundancy costs
Total employee benefits
Total
2013-14
£000
117,959
96,228
3,848
4,538
10,991
26,571
11,998
43,468
20,796
31,970
90,028
79,702
3,453
4,220
9,156
31,215
8,625
39,511
13,336
25,808
6,091
12,399
17
2,403
3,999
2
21,148
1,006
4,535
285
16,226
699
2,648
430
13,333
4,597
128
19
137
52,321
479,794
141
2
155
138
35,814
372,308
1,642
618,276
619,918
1,601
497,966
499,567
1,099,712
871,875
* Other operating expenses include expenditure on consultancy costs, leasing equipment, training and legal fees.
231
3.2
Operating leases
Rentals under operating leases include the following:
Hire of plant and machinery
Rental of buildings
Total
Group
2014-15
£000
2013-14
£000
8,343
3,655
11,998
6,069
2,556
8,625
2014-15
£000
2013-14
£000
7,809
19,958
1,783
29,550
8,038
22,823
1,336
32,197
3,272
3,544
55
6,871
2,594
5,190
115
7,899
Future minimum lease payments fall due as follows:
Hire of plant and machinery
- not later than one year
- between one and five years
- later than five years
Total hire of plant and machinery
Rental of buildings
- not later than one year
- between one and five years
- later than five years
Total rental of buildings
3.3
Better Payment Practice Code - measure of compliance
The Better Payment Practice Code requires the Foundation Trust to aim to pay all undisputed invoices by the due date
or within 30 days of receipt of goods or a valid invoice, whichever is the earlier. The Foundation Trust's performance
against this target was as follows:
Group
Group
2014-15
2013-14
Number
£000
Number
£000
Non-NHS trade invoices:
169,034 492,506
Paid in the year
147,920
384,944
90,009 380,084
Paid within target
86,196
304,352
53%
77%
Percentage paid within target
58%
79%
NHS trade invoices
4,239 139,395
Paid in the year
3,399
108,086
1,685 117,504
Paid within target
1,887
90,460
40%
84%
Percentage paid within target
56%
84%
3.4
Late Payment of Commercial Debts (Interest) Act 1998
Compensation paid to cover debt recovery costs under this
legislation
3.5
Audit fees (external auditors)
There was no limitation on auditor's liability in 2014-15 or in 2013-14.
232
2014-15
£000
2013-14
£000
4
3
4
Employee benefits and staff numbers
4.1
Employee benefits
Group
2014-15
Salaries and wages
Social security costs
Employer contributions to NHS Pensions
Other pension costs
Agency and contract staff
Gross employee benefits
Less income where netted off expenditure from:
NHS bodies
Other bodies
Total
Total
£000
477,863
36,427
52,486
54,961
621,737
£000
475,621
36,427
52,486
564,534
Other
£000
2,242
54,961
57,203
(601)
(1,218)
619,918
(601)
(1,218)
562,715
57,203
Group
2013-14
Salaries and wages
Social security costs
Employer contributions to NHS Pensions
Other pension costs
Agency and contract staff
Gross employee benefits
Less income where netted off expenditure from:
NHS bodies
Other bodies
Total
4.2
Employee numbers
Total
£000
393,316
30,310
43,622
733
34,013
501,994
£000
331,127
30,310
43,622
733
405,792
Other
£000
62,189
34,013
96,202
(1,842)
(585)
499,567
(1,842)
(585)
403,365
96,202
Group
2014-15
Group
2013-14
Total
Other
Total
Average employee numbers
Medical and dental
Administration and estates
1,802
2,104
805
1,947
997
157
1,533
1,720
Healthcare assistants and other support staff
Nursing, midwifery and health visiting staff
936
3,678
927
3,419
9
259
707
2,992
16
8
8
13
1,601
10
1,315
11,462
1,415
8
8,529
186
2
1,315
2,933
1,364
7
655
8,991
Nursing, midwifery and health visiting learners
Scientific, therapeutic and technical staff
Social care staff
Other
Total
233
4.3
Staff sickness absence
2014-15
Number
83,183
10,280
8.1
Total days lost
Total staff years
Average working days lost
2013-14
Number
54,665
8,436
6.5
Average sickness absence days are provided by the Department of Health, and are calculated using calendar years,
rather than financial years.
4.4
Early retirements due to ill health
Early retirements on the grounds of ill-health
2014-15
Number
6
2013-14
Number
7
Early retirements on the grounds of ill-health
£000
170
£000
353
The cost of ill-health retirements is borne by NHS Pensions.
4.5
Termination benefits
4.5a
By number of cases:
Exit package cost band (including any special payment
element)
Less than £10,000
£10,000 - £25,000
£25,001 - £50,000
£50,001 - £100,000
£100,001 - £150,000
£150,001 - £200,000
Greater than £200,000
Total
4.5b
2014-15
Compulsory
redundancy
-
Other
departures
agreed
7
1
1
9
2013-14
Total
7
1
1
9
By value of payments:
2014-15
Exit package cost band (including any special payment
element)
Less than £10,000
£10,000 - £25,000
£25,001 - £50,000
£50,001 - £100,000
£100,001 - £150,000
£150,001 - £200,000
Greater than £200,000
Total
234
Total
14
6
3
23
Compulsory
redundancy
£000
-
Other
departures
agreed
£000
27
14
36
77
2013-14
Total
£000
27
14
36
77
Total
£000
61
115
97
273
4.5c
Other departures agreed are as follows:
2014-15
Number
£000
Contractual payments in lieu of notice
Exit payments following Employment Tribunal or court orders
9
77
-
-
Of which:
Non-contractual payments made to individuals where the payment value was more than 12
months of their annual salary
2013-14
Number
£000
Contractual payments in lieu of notice
Exit payments following Employment Tribunal or court orders
16
-
112
-
-
-
Of which:
Non-contractual payments made to individuals where the payment value was more than 12
months of their annual salary
4.6 Salary and pension entitlements of senior managers
4.6a Median salary disclosures
2014/2015
(bands of
£5,000)
Band of highest paid director's total remuneration
Median total remuneration (£)
Ratio
255 - 260
38,067
6.8
2013/2
014
(bands
of
£5,000)
245 250
37,947
6.6
The above note discloses the median remuneration of the Trust's staff and the ratio between this and the mid-point
of the banded remuneration of the highest paid director. The calculation is based on full-time equivalent staff of the
reporting entity at the reporting period end date on an annualised basis.
4.6b Business related travel and subsistence expenses
Four Executive Directors received travel and subsistence expenses totalling £7,218
(2013-14: five, £4,609).
One Non-Executive Directors received travel and subsistence expenses totalling £721
(2013-14: two, £710).
Two Governors received travel and subsistence expenses totalling £482
(2013-14: three, £539).
235
4.6 Salary and pension entitlements of senior managers
4.6c Remuneration
2014-15
Name
Angela Huxham
Chief Executive
Chief Financial Officer
Executive Director of Operations
Interim Chief Operating Officer
Executive Medical Director
Executive Director of Nursing, Midwifery and Infection
Control
Executive Director of Workforce Development
Co-opted members of the Trust's board
Jane Walters
Director of Corporate Affairs
Jacob West
Director of Strategy
Pedro Castro**
Interim Director of Strategy
David Dawson
Interim Director of Strategy
Trudi Kemp
Director of Strategy
Ahmad Toumadj
Interim Director of Estates and Capital
Steve Leivers **
Director of Transformation and Turnaround
Pedro Castro**
David Dawson
Trudi Kemp
Steve Leivers**
Jeremy Tozer**
Ahmad Toumadj
236
Salary &
Fees
(bands of
£5,000)
Other
remuneration
(bands of
£5,000)
Total
(bands of
£5,000)
Salary &
Fees
(bands of
£5,000)
55 - 60
10 - 15
10 - 15
10 - 15
10 - 15
10 - 15
-
-
55 - 60
10 - 15
10 - 15
10 - 15
10 - 15
10 - 15
55 - 60
10 - 15
10 - 15
10 - 15
10 - 15
10 - 15
-
125 - 130
-
55 - 60
10 - 15
10 - 15
140 - 145
10 - 15
10 - 15
255 - 260
150 - 155
185 - 190
5 - 10
105 -110
20 - 22.5
42.5 - 45
20 - 22.5
35 -40
105 - 110
255 - 260
210 - 215
230 - 235
5 - 10
235 - 240
245 - 250
150 - 155
185 - 190
85 - 90
32.5 - 35
32.5 - 35
50 -52.5
25 - 30
105 - 110
245 - 250
210 - 215
215 -220
245 - 250
155 - 160
155 - 160
70 - 72.5
40 - 42.5
-
230 - 235
200 - 205
150 -155
145 - 150
35 - 37.5
67.5 - 70
-
185 - 190
210 - 215
130 - 135
55 - 60
15 - 20
70 - 75
15 - 20
20 - 25
117.5 - 120
145 - 147.5
-
-
250 - 255
55 - 60
15 - 20
215 - 220
15 - 20
20 - 25
125 - 130
100 - 105
125 - 130
-
47.5 - 50
30 - 32.5
-
-
170 - 175
130 - 135
-
Total
(bands of
£5,000)
Title
Chairman and Non-Executive Directors
Professor Sir George Alberti
Chairman
Graham Meek
Vice Chairman
Faith Boardman
Non-Executive Director
Marc Meryon *
Non-Executive Director
Professor Gulam J. Mufti
Non-Executive Director
Sue Slipman
Non-Executive Director
Chris Stooke
Non-Executive Director
Executive Directors
Tim Smart
Simon Taylor
Roland Sinker
Jeremy Tozer **
Michael Marrinan
Dr Geraldine Walters
2013-14
Pension
Related
Other
Benefits remuneration
(bands of
(bands of
£2,500)
£5,000)
Pension
Related
Benefits
(bands of
£2,500)
Interim Director of Strategy
Interim Director of Strategy
Director of Strategy
Director of Transformation and Turnaround
Interim Chief Operating Officer
Interim Director of Estates and Capital
1 April 2014 - 30 June 2014
1 July 2014 - 30 September 2014
1 October 2014 - 31 March 2015
9 March 2015 - 31 March 2015
23 March 2015 - 31 March 2015
1 March 2015 - 31 March 2015
None of the Non-Executive or Executive Directors received benefits in kinds in 2014-15 or 2013-14.
* Marc Meryon has waived his fee.
** S. Leivers and J. Tozer are employed through an external company to provide the services noted. The amount included reflects the amount paid to the company for these services.
This applied to P. Castro during the period he was at the Trust.
4.6d Pension entitlements at 31 March 2015
Name
Real
increase
in pension
at age 60
£000
(bands of
£2,500)
Real
increase
in pension
lump sum
at age 60
£000
(bands of
£2,500)
Total
accrued
pension
at age 60
£000
(bands of
£5,000)
Lump sum
at age 60
£000
(bands of
£5,000)
2.5 - 5.0
0 - 2.5
0 - 2.5
2.5 - 5
5 - 7.5
15 - 20
60 - 65
35 - 40
2.5 - 5
0 - 2.5
10 -12.5
2.5 - 5
5 - 7.5
2.5 - 5
-
17.5 - 20
10 - 12.5
-
CETV
at start of
year
£000
CETV
at end of
year
£000
Real
Normal
increase Retirement
in CETV
Age
£000
190 -195
115 - 120
143
1,196
865
183
1,264
-
40
40
(865)
65
60
60
60 - 65
55 - 60
190 - 195
170 - 175
1,309
-
1,442
-
133
-
60
60
55 - 60
15 - 20
-
165 -170
55 - 60
-
284
85
355
-
70
(85)
60
60
65
Title
Non-Executive Directors
Non-Executive Directors do not receive pensionable remuneration.
Executive Directors
Roland Sinker
Executive Director of Operations
Simon Taylor
Chief Financial Officer
Michael Marrinan
Executive Medical Director
Executive Director of Nursing, Midwifery and Infection
Dr Geraldine Walters Control
Angela Huxham
Executive Director of Workforce Development
Co-opted members of the Trust's board
Jane Walters
Director of Corporate Affairs
Trudi Kemp
Director of Strategy
Jacob West
Director of Strategy
During the 2014-15 the total value of employer contributions to the pension scheme in respect of Board member directors was £114k (2013-14: £138k).
Simon Taylor - Real Increase in CETV is proportioned over the time in the Pension Scheme.
A Cash Equivalent Transfer Value (CETV) is the actuarially assessed capital value of the pension scheme benefits accrued by a member at a particular point in time. The benefits
valued are the member’s accrued benefits and any contingent spouse’s pension payable from the scheme. A CETV is a payment made by a pension scheme or arrangement to
secure pension benefits in another pension scheme or arrangement when the member leaves a scheme and chooses to transfer the benefits accrued in their former scheme. The
pension figures shown relate to the benefits that the individual has accrued as a consequence of their total membership of the pension scheme, not just their service in a senior
capacity to which disclosure applies. The CETV figures and the other pension details include the value of any pension benefits in another scheme or arrangement which the
individual has transferred to the NHS pension scheme. They also include any additional pension benefit accrued to the member as a result of their purchasing additional years of
pension service in the scheme at their own cost. CETVs and other disclosures are provided by NHS Pensions, and are calculated within the guidelines and framework prescribed by
the Institute and Faculty of Actuaries.
The real increase in CETV reflects the increase in CETV effectively funded by the employer. It takes account of the increase in accrued pension due to inflation, contributions paid
by the employee (including the value of any benefits transferred from another scheme or arrangement) and uses common market valuation factors for the start and end of the period.
237
4.7 Pension costs
Past and present employees are covered
by the provisions of the NHS Pensions
Scheme. Details of the benefits payable
under these provisions can be found on
the NHS Pensions website at
www.nhsbsa.nhs.uk/pensions. The
scheme is an unfunded, defined benefit
scheme that covers NHS employers, GP
practices and other bodies, allowed under
the direction of the Secretary of State, in
England and Wales. The scheme is not
designed to be run in a way that would
enable NHS bodies to identify their share
of the underlying scheme assets and
liabilities. Therefore, the scheme is
accounted for as if it were a defined
contribution scheme: the cost to the NHS
Body of participating in the scheme is
taken as equal to the contributions
payable to the scheme for the accounting
period.
In order that the defined benefit
obligations recognised in the financial
statements do not differ materially from
those that would be determined at the
reporting date by a formal actuarial
valuation, the FReM requires that “the
period between formal valuations shall be
four years, with approximate assessments
in intervening years”. An outline of these
follows:
a) Accounting valuation
A valuation of the scheme liability is
carried out annually by the scheme
actuary as at the end of the reporting
period. This utilises an actuarial
assessment for the previous accounting
period in conjunction with updated
membership and financial data for the
current reporting period, and are accepted
as providing suitably robust figures for
financial reporting purposes. The valuation
of the scheme liability as at 31 March
2015, is based on valuation data as 31
March 2014, updated to 31 March 2015
with summary global member and
accounting data. In undertaking this
238
actuarial assessment, the methodology
prescribed in IAS 19, relevant FReM
interpretations, and the discount rate
prescribed by HM Treasury have also
been used.
The latest assessment of the liabilities of
the scheme is contained in the scheme
actuary report, which forms part of the
annual NHS Pension Scheme (England
and Wales) Pension Accounts, published
annually. These accounts can be viewed
on the NHS Pensions website. Copies can
also be obtained from The Stationery
Office.
b) Full actuarial (funding) valuation
The purpose of this valuation is to assess
the level of liability in respect of the
benefits due under the scheme (taking into
account its recent demographic
experience), and to recommend the
contribution rates.
The last published actuarial valuation
undertaken for the NHS Pension Scheme
was completed for the year ending 31
March 2012.
The Scheme Regulations allow
contribution rates to be set by the
Secretary of State for Health, with the
consent of HM Treasury, and
consideration of the advice of the Scheme
Actuary and appropriate employee and
employer representatives as deemed
appropriate.
c) Scheme provisions
The NHS Pension Scheme provided
defined benefits, which are summarised
below. This list is an illustrative guide only,
and is not intended to detail all the
benefits provided by the Scheme or the
specific conditions that must be met
before these benefits can be obtained:
The Scheme is a “final salary” scheme.
Annual pensions are normally based on
1/80th for the 1995 section and of the best
of the last three years pensionable pay for
each year of service, and 1/60th for the
2008 section of reckonable pay per year of
membership. Members who are
practitioners as defined by the Scheme
Regulations have their annual pensions
based upon total pensionable earnings
over the relevant pensionable service.
With effect from 1 April 2008 members
can choose to give up some of their
annual pension for an additional tax free
lump sum, up to a maximum amount
permitted under HMRC rules. This new
provision is known as “pension
commutation”.
Annual increases are applied to pension
payments at rates defined by the Pensions
(Increase) Act 1971, and are based on
changes in retail prices in the twelve
months ending 30 September in the
previous calendar year. From 2011-12 the
Consumer Price Index (CPI) has been
used and replaced the Retail Prices Index
(RPI).
5
Early payment of a pension, with
enhancement, is available to members of
the scheme who are permanently
incapable of fulfilling their duties effectively
through illness or infirmity. A death gratuity
of twice final year’s pensionable pay for
death in service, and five times their
annual pension for death after retirement
is payable.
For early retirements other than those due
to ill health the additional pension liabilities
are not funded by the scheme. The full
amount of the liability for the additional
costs is charged to the employer.
Members can purchase additional service
in the NHS Scheme and contribute to
money purchase AVC’s run by the
Scheme’s approved providers or by other
Free Standing Additional Voluntary
Contributions (FSAVC) providers.
Finance revenue
Interest on bank accounts
Interest on loans and receivables
Total
6
Finance expenses
Interest on Loans from the Independent Trust Financing Facility
Finance costs on PFI and other service concession arrangements
Main finance cost
Contingent finance cost
Total
7
Impairments
Changes in market price - charged to operating expenses
Changes in market price - charged to the revaluation reserve
Total
Group
2014-15
2013-14
£000
£000
143
101
70
68
213
169
Group
2014-15
2013-14
£000
£000
1,809
749
17,279
6,164
25,252
12,313
3,997
17,059
Group
2014-15
2013-14
£000
£000
4,535
5,595
10,130
2,648
2,139
4,787
239
Asset valuations were undertaken in 2014 as at the prospective valuation date of 31
March 2015.
The valuation resulted in an increase in revaluation reserve of £2.441m for land owned by the Trust and an overall
increase to buildings and dwellings revaluation reserve value of £17.746m.
A net impairment amount of £4.535m has been charged to the Statement of Comprehensive Income. This is as a
result of a decrease in value of certain buildings leading to an impairment of £5.439m. This impairment has been
offset by the reversal of prior year impairments of £0.904m where buildings values has increased in 2014/2015.
The buildings which decreased in value include Imaging block (£2.557m), Binfield Court (£257k), Orpington
Medical Record (£226k), PRUH Medical Record (£768k), PRUH Education Centre (£161k) and other buildings
including professional fees (£566k).
8
Share of operating profit in associates and joint ventures
Group
2014-15
2013-14
£000
£000
1,357
(600)
(266)
1
492
Viapath Group LLP
Kings College Hospital Clinics LLC (KCHC)
NIHR/Wellcome Trust Clinical Research Facility
King’s Hewitt Fertility Centre
9
Intangible non-current assets
9.1
Intangible non-current assets - current year
1,278
(361)
917
Software
licences
£000
Development
expenditure
£000
Total
Cost or valuation
At 1 April 2014
Additions purchased
Reclassifications
Upward revaluation/positive indexation
Disposals
At 31 March 2015
9,344
2,664
90
(3,760)
8,338
687
20
707
10,031
2,664
90
20
(3,760)
9,045
Amortisation
At 1 April 2014
Transfer by absorption from SLHT
Charged during the year
Reclassifications
Upward revaluation/positive indexation
Disposals
At 31 March 2015
7,575
1,006
22
(3,760)
4,843
687
20
707
8,262
1,006
22
20
(3,760)
5,550
3,495
3,495
-
3,495
3,495
48
(11)
37
-
48
(11)
37
Group and trust
Net book value
Purchased
Total at 31 March 2015
Revaluation reserve balance
At 1 April 2014
Indexation movement in year
At 31 March 2015
£000
Development expenditure represents the implementation cost of the Activity Based Costing project, which was
completed in 2006-07, and is still in use.
240
9.2
Intangible non-current assets - prior year
Group and trust
Cost or valuation
At 1 April 2013
Transfer by absorption from SLHT
Additions purchased
Reclassifications
At 31 March 2014
At 1 April 2013
Transfer by absorption from SLHT
Charged during the year
Reclassifications
At 31 March 2014
Net book value
Purchased
Total at 31 March 2014
Revaluation reserve balance
At 1 April 2013
Indexation movement in year
At 31 March 2014
Software
licences
£000
Development
expenditure
£000
Total
4,820
3,721
803
9,344
687
687
5,507
3,721
803
10,031
3,423
3,455
697
7,575
685
2
687
4,108
3,455
699
8,262
1,769
1,769
0
1,769
1,769
48
0
48
0
0
48
0
48
£000
241
10
Property, plant and equipment
10.1 Property, plant and equipment - current year
Land
£000
Buildings
excluding
dwellings
£000
Cost or valuation
At 1 April 2014
Additions purchased
Additions leased
Additions donated
Reclassifications
Disposals
Upward revaluation/positive indexation
Impairments/negative indexation
Reversal of impairments
At 31 March 2015
75,680
2,441
78,121
442,513
5,681
16,790
5,654
(5,595)
465,043
2,470
545
3,015
14,725
30,216
500
(16,799)
(1,188)
27,454
68,533
4,974
1,635
105
(8,753)
917
67,411
14,264
3,472
50
(181)
(1,700)
15,905
1,809
52
(5)
(8)
32
1,880
619,994
44,395
1,635
550
(90)
(10,461)
8,401
(5,595)
658,829
Depreciation
At 1 April 2014
Charged during the year
Reclassifications
Disposals
Upward revaluation/positive indexation
Impairments/negative indexation
Reversal of impairments
At 31 March 2015
-
4
13,770
(17,084)
3,347
37
58
(58)
-
(1,188)
1,188
-
41,383
5,254
39
(8,337)
456
38,795
6,354
1,882
(61)
(1,700)
6,475
637
184
(8)
14
827
48,378
21,148
(22)
(10,045)
(17,860)
4,535
46,134
Net book value
Owned - purchased
Owned - donated
On balance sheet PFI
Total at 31 March 2015
62,217
2,514
13,390
78,121
222,867
13,177
228,962
465,006
2,546
469
3,015
26,665
789
27,454
21,856
1,763
4,997
28,616
9,373
57
9,430
1,031
22
1,053
346,555
18,791
247,349
612,695
Revaluation reserve balance
At 1 April 2014
Revaluation and indexation in year
At 31 March 2015
39,614
2,441
42,055
95,707
17,144
112,851
1,132
603
1,735
-
8,268
44
8,312
-
228
18
246
144,949
20,250
165,199
Group and Trust
242
Dwellings
Assets under
construction
Plant &
machinery
Information
technology
Furniture
& fittings
Total
£000
£000
£000
£000
£000
£000
11
Investments
11.1
Subsidiary undertakings, associates and joint ventures held
The Foundation Trust's principal subsidiary undertakings, associates and joint ventures as included in its
consolidated accounts are set out below. The Trust’s unconsolidated investment holding in its subsidiary
undertaking, KCH Commercial Services Ltd, is £0.25m (2013/14:£0.25m)
The accounting date of the financial statements for the subsidiaries is 31 March 2015, and for the associate, 31
December 2014. For the associate undertaking that has a different accounting year-end date, interim accounts to
31 March 2015 have been consolidated.
Country of
Incorporation
Beneficial
interest
Principal activity
UK
100%
Holding company
UK
UK
100%
Healthcare services
100%
Software consultancy and
supply
UK
UAE
33.3%
Healthcare services
49%
Specialist outpatient
healthcare treatment
35%
Research
54%
Research
50%
Assisted Conception
Directly owned subsidiary undertakings
KCH Commercial Services Ltd
Indirectly owned subsidiary undertakings
KCH Management Ltd
Agnentis Ltd
Associates
Viapath Group LLP (Viapath)
Kings College Hospital Clinics LLC (KCHC)
Joint operations
NIHR/Wellcome Trust
Clinical Research Facility* (CRF)
Equity
UK
Constructions
King’s Hewitt Fertility Centre**
UK
* The Foundation Trust entered into a joint operation with King's College London and South London and Maudsley
NHS Foundation Trust for the construction and use of premises known as the NIHR/Wellcome Trust Clinical
Research Facility, which opened in November 2012.
The Foundation Trust has capitalised 54% of the cost of the building, and equipment assets therein based on the
construction proportion. The Foundation Trust recognises 35% of revenue and expenditure generated by the facility,
based on the equity proportion as stipulated in the Collaboration Agreement.
** The Foundation Trust entered into a joint operation with Liverpool Women’s NHS Foundation Trust through the
development of satellites to improve access to the Assisted Conception Unit (ACU) and improve the best outcomes
in London. The joint operation started in December 2014.
11.2
Carrying value of investments held
Balance of 1 April
Acquisitions in year
Share of profit / (loss)
Other equity movements
Balance at 31 March
2014-15
2014-15
2014-15
2013-14
Viapath
KCHC
Total
Total
£000
£000
£000
£000
2,094
1,504
3,598
816
-
-
-
1,504
1,357
(600)
757
1,278
-
31
31
-
3,451
935
4,386
3,598
243
11.3
Interests in associates accounted for using the equity method
Total gross assets of the entity as at 31 March
Total gross liabilities of the entity as at 31 March
Total revenues for the year ending 31 March
Profit/(loss) for the year ending 31 March
11.4
2014-15
Viapath
£000
2014-15
KCHC
£000
2014-15
Total
£000
2013-14
Total
£000
37,471
(34,655)
97,058
4,125
7,112
(1,172)
28
(1,201)
44,583
(35,827)
97,086
2,924
38,075
(36,508)
92,524
3,834
2014-15
CRF
£000
2014-15
KHFC
£000
2014-15
Total
£000
2013-14
Total
£000
4,682
1,044
(266)
342
(341)
861
1
5,024
(341)
1,905
(265)
5,025
1,060
(361)
Group and Trust
Consumables
Energy
£000
£000
Total
£000
Interests recognised in relation to joint operations
Assets as at 31 March
Liabilities as at 31 March
Revenues for the year ending 31 March
(Loss)/profit for the year ending 31 March
12
Inventories
12.1
Inventories - current year
Drugs
£000
At 1 April 2014
Additions
Inventories consumed and expensed
Transfer by absorption from
SLHT
At 31 March 2015
12.2
4,893
119,379
(117,912)
10,385
95,332
(94,999)
14
712
(714)
15,292
215,423
(213,625)
6,360
10,718
12
17,090
Inventories - prior year
Drugs
£000
At 1 April 2013
Additions
Inventories consumed and expensed
Transfer by absorption from
SLHT
At 31 March 2014
244
Group and Trust
Consumables
Energy
£000
£000
Total
£000
3,566
90,535
(90,028)
7,767
73,846
(72,601)
310
(323)
11,333
164,691
(162,952)
820
4,893
1,373
10,385
27
14
2,220
15,292
13
Trade and other receivables
13.1
Trade and other receivables
Group
31 March
2015
£000
31 March
2014
£000
Trust
31 March
31 March
2015
2014
£000
£000
Current
Trade receivables due from NHS bodies
Receivables due from NHS charities
Other receivables due from related parties
Capital receivables
Provision for impaired receivables
Deposits and advances
Prepayments (non-PFI)
Accrued income
Interest receivable
PDC dividend receivable
VAT receivable
Other receivables
Total current receivables
40,156
212
4,021
(18,321)
2,027
7,581
27,913
11
362
3,753
30,325
98,040
68,120
199
840
95
(7,576)
1,527
4,739
22,243
11
3,267
24,670
118,135
40,156
212
4,021
(18,321)
2,027
7,579
27,913
11
362
3,752
31,156
98,868
68,120
199
840
95
(7,576)
1,527
4,739
22,243
11
3,266
25,021
118,485
Non-current
Receivables with related parties
- revenue
Non-NHS receivables - revenue
Total non-current receivables
Total
5,459
1,813
7,272
105,312
2,596
1,571
4,167
122,302
6,832
1,813
8,645
107,513
3,707
1,571
5,278
123,763
The majority of trade is with NHS England and Clinical Commissioning Groups. As these bodies are funded by
Government to buy NHS patient care services, no credit scoring of them is considered necessary.
The largest debtor at 31 March 2015 was NHS England, with outstanding invoices totalling £8.058m.
13.2
Receivables past their due date but not impaired
By up to three months
By three to six months
By more than six months
Total
13.3
Provision for impairment of receivables
Balance at 1 April
Amount written off during the year
Amount recovered during the year
Increase in receivables impaired
Balance at 31 March
Group and Trust
31 March
31 March
2015
2014
£000
£000
10,894
7,612
16,469
34,975
17,842
11,263
11,063
40,168
Group and trust
31 March
31 March
2015
2014
£000
£000
7,576
(2,588)
(655)
13,988
18,321
4,666
(1,687)
(1,751)
6,348
7,576
245
13.4
Impaired receivables past their due date
Group and trust
31 March
31 March
2015
2014
£000
£000
By up to three months
By three to six months
By more than six months
Total
14
Cash and cash equivalents
Opening balance
Net change in year
Closing balance
Made up of
Cash with Government Banking Service
Commercial banks and cash in hand
Cash and cash equivalents as in statement of
financial position
Patients' money held by the Foundation Trust, not
included above
15
10,582
59
7,680
18,321
Group
31 March
31 March
2015
2014
£000
£000
Trust
31 March
31 March
2015
2014
£000
£000
54,535
(11,090)
43,445
40,502
14,033
54,535
54,185
(11,522)
42,663
40,328
13,857
54,185
40,117
3,328
51,060
3,475
40,117
2,546
51,060
3,125
43,445
54,535
42,663
54,185
8
12
8
12
Trade and other payables
Group
31 March
31 March
2015
2014
£000
£000
Current
Receipts in advance
NHS trade payables
Amounts due to other related parties
Other trade payables
Capital payables
Social security costs
Other taxes payable
Other payables
Accruals
PDC dividend payable
Total
1,651
9,735
41,600
1,741
5,460
5,757
8,272
89,879
164,103
All trade and other payables are current; there are no non-current balances.
246
713
531
6,332
7,576
1,428
5,619
967
36,922
3,410
5,260
5,744
9,607
67,568
804
137,329
Trust
31 March
31 March
2015
2014
£000
£000
1,651
9,735
41,536
1,741
5,460
5,757
8,240
89,824
163,952
1,428
5,619
967
36,829
3,410
5,260
5,744
9,588
67,591
804
137,240
16
Deferred income
Group and trust
31 March
31 March
2015
2014
£000
£000
Current
Deferred income
Total
10,189
10,189
9,989
9,989
All deferred income is current; there are no non-current balances.
17
Borrowings
Group
31 March
31 March
2015
2014
£000
£000
Trust
31 March
31 March
2015
2014
£000
£000
Current
Loans from the Independent Trust Financing Facility
Other loans
Obligations under PFI contracts
Total current borrowings
3,868
206
3,550
7,624
1,012
78
3,199
4,289
3,868
17
3,550
7,435
1,012
78
3,199
4,289
65,974
1,488
155,108
222,570
230,194
47,842
1,700
157,023
206,565
210,854
65,974
155,108
221,082
228,517
47,842
17
157,023
204,882
209,171
Non-current
Loans from the Independent Trust Financing Facility
Other loans
Obligations under PFI contracts
Total non-current borrowings
Total
247
18
Provisions
18.1
Provisions - current year
Group and trust
Total
£000
Early
Departure
costs
£000
At 1 April 2014
Arising during the year
Utilised during the year non-cash
Utilised during the year cash
Reversed unused
Unwinding of discount
At 31 March 2015
8,030
382
7,307
-
562
207
90
-
71
175
(90)
-
-
(90)
-
(816)
(125)
153
7,534
(746)
144
6,705
(70)
(123)
9
585
-
(2)
244
1,239
747
248
-
244
3,215
3,080
7,534
2,988
2,970
6,705
227
110
585
-
244
Total
£000
Early
Departure
costs
£000
Legal
claims
£000
£000
Other
£000
10,209
7,600
165
2,309
135
431
555
5
279
426
115
90
71
(197)
(187)
(10)
-
-
(2,607)
(526)
165
8,030
(547)
157
7,307
(13)
(129)
8
562
(2,047)
(262)
90
(135)
71
1,144
749
234
90
71
3,161
3,725
8,030
2,993
3,565
7,307
168
160
562
90
71
Expected timing of cash flows:
No later than one year
Later than one year and
not later than five years
Later than five years
Total
18.2
Redundancy
£000
Other
£000
Provisions - prior year
Group and trust
At 1 April 2013
Transferred by absorption from
SLHT
Arising during the year
Utilised during the year non-cash
Utilised during the year cash
Reversed unused
Change in discount rate
Unwinding of discount
At 31 March 2014
Expected timing of cash flows:
No later than one year
Later than one year and
not later than five years
Later than five years
Total
248
Legal
claims
£000
18.3
Provisions - further information
Clinical negligence
£194.211m (31 March 2014: £141.982m) is included in the provisions of the NHS Litigation Authority at 31
March 2015, in respect of the estimated clinical negligence liabilities of the Foundation Trust.
Pensions
The measure of the Foundation Trust's pension liability for early retired staff was recalculated in
2012-13, using the Office for National Statistics life expectancy tables. Expected future cash flows have been
discounted using the real discount rate of 2.2% (set by HM Treasury) to determine the full liability.
Legal claims
The provision is based upon information provided by the NHS Litigation Authority and refers to non-clinical
claims against the Foundation Trust (e.g. public and employer's liability cases).
Other
The Foundation Trust has provided £0.244m (31 March 2014: £0.071m) for outstanding Employment
Tribunal cases and associated legal fees.
19
Contingencies
Group and Trust
31 March 31 March
2015
2014
£000
£000
Contingent liabilities
Non-clinical legal claims
96
97
The above contingencies refer to non-clinical legal claims, dealt with by the NHS Litigation Authority on
behalf of the Foundation Trust.
The Foundation Trust has no contingent assets.
20
Contracted capital commitments
Group and Trust
31 March 31 March
2015
2014
£000
£000
38,657
Property, plant and equipment
45,550
These contracts include the Critical Care Unit (£33.552m), the Helipad (£3.703m), HV Infrastructure (£698k),
Sitewide Infrastructure (£282k), Liver Portakabins Replacement (£360k) and Building refurbishment (£62k).
It is anticipated that all these projects will be completed in the next financial year except the Critical Care
Unit.
21
Revaluation reserve
Group and trust
At 1 April
Transfers by absorption from SLHT
Impairments
Revaluations
Disposals
At 31 March
Intangibles
£000
48
(11)
37
Property,
plant and
equipme
nt
£000
144,949
(5,595)
26,261
(416)
165,199
31 March
2015
31 March
2014
Total
£000
144,997
(5,595)
26,261
(427)
165,236
Total
£000
87,536
280
(2,139)
59,758
(438)
144,997
249
22
PFI - additional information
22.1
On SoFP liabilities
31 March 2015
£000
31 March 2014
£000
431,926
448,902
Of which liabilities are due:
- not later than one year
- later than one year and not later than five years
- later than five years
Total
Finance charges allocated to future periods
Net PFI liabilities
20,512
81,355
330,059
431,926
(273,268)
158,658
20,479
78,954
349,469
448,902
(288,680)
160,222
Of which liabilities are due:
- not later than one year
- later than one year and not later than five years
- later than five years
Total
3,550
13,168
141,940
158,658
3,199
12,135
144,888
160,222
Gross PFI liabilities
22.2
Commitments
Commitments in respect of the service element will fall due:
- not later than one year
- later than one year and not later than five years
- later than five years
Total
250
Group and Trust
Group and Trust
31 March
31 March
2015
2014
£000
£000
40,153
171,486
1,025,534
1,237,173
36,627
156,228
994,343
1,187,198
22.3 PFI Schemes
King's College Hospital
The PFI consisted of two phases: phase 1
(construction of the new Golden Jubilee
Clinical Wing) and phase 2 (refurbishment
of the existing Ruskin Wing). The project
enabled the centralisation of acute
services on the Denmark Hill site following
the transfer of services from Dulwich
Hospital and Mapother House. As part of
the scheme, HpC (King's College
Hospital) plc also took responsibility for
the provision of site-wide catering,
domestic and portering services from April
2000. As a result recurrent revenue
savings were achieved.
The project has been financed by a means
of a wrapped, index linked bond
guaranteed by MBIA-AMBAC and debt
and equity capital provided by Costain,
Skanska, Sodexho and Edison Capital.
The contract period is 38 years. The
annual payments by the Trust are
dependent on availability and service
quality standards being met.
The commitments above include an
inflationary increase of 2.63% based on
the rate used for 2014-15.
Princess Royal Hospital - Building PFI
Under the building PFI, United Healthcare
(Bromley) Ltd provided the land, building
and site-wide hard and soft facilities
management at the Princess Royal
Hospital.
The capital funding is a combination of
senior debt and equity finance. The senior
debt financing was originally provided by
way of loan from Commerzbank AG (and
others). There was a refinancing process
in 2004 which involved the issue of
3.018% index-linked guaranteed secure
bonds, repayable in 66 six monthly
instalments which commenced in 2004
and will end in 2036, and are subject to
half yearly indexation in line with RPI.
Princess Royal Hospital - Managed
equipment services PFI
The MES PFI Scheme agreement dated
22 March 2002 is a 30 year PFI
agreement and relates to the purchase of
medical equipment, and the installation,
maintenance and replacement of this and
other clinical equipment. This agreement
is between (1) The Trust, (2) United
Healthcare (Bromley) Limited and (3)
Healthsource (Bromley) Limited and
commenced on the 1st of January 2003.
23 Financial instruments
23.1 Risk profile and management
Financial risk management
Financial reporting standard IFRS 7
requires disclosure of the role that
financial instruments have had during the
period in creating or changing the risks a
body faces in undertaking its activities.
Because of the continuing service provider
relationship that the Foundation Trust has
with NHS England and clinical
commissioning groups, and the way those
commissioners are financed, the
Foundation Trust is not exposed to the
degree of financial risk faced by business
entities. Also financial instruments play a
much more limited role in creating or
changing risk than would be typical of
listed companies, to which the financial
reporting standards mainly apply. The
Foundation Trust has limited powers to
borrow or invest surplus funds and
financial assets and liabilities are
generated by day-to-day operational
activities rather than being held to change
the risks facing the Foundation Trust in
undertaking its activities.
The Foundation Trust's treasury
management operations are carried out by
the finance department, within parameters
251
defined formally within the Foundation
Trust's standing financial instructions and
policies agreed by the board of directors.
This treasury activity is subject to review
by the internal auditor.
Currency risk
The Foundation Trust is principally a
domestic organisation with the great
majority of transactions, assets and
liabilities being in the UK and sterling
based. The Foundation Trust holds a 49%
share in an associate organisation, King's
College Hospital Clinics LLC (KCHC),
operating in the United Arab Emirates.
The Trust, via its wholly owned subsidiary,
KCH Commercial Services Ltd, has taken
out a loan denominated in Emirati Dirhams
(AED) for the initial setup costs of KCHC.
The Foundation Trust therefore has
exposure to currency rate fluctuations on
the interest payments and capital
repayment of the loan. At 31 March 2015,
the outstanding loan amount was £1.677m
(31 March 2014: £1.683m).
Interest rate risk
67% of the Foundation Trust's financial
assets and 99.5% of its financial liabilities
carry nil or fixed rates of interest. The
Foundation Trust is not, therefore,
exposed to significant interest-rate risk.
The two tables below show the interest
rate profiles of the Foundation Trust's
financial assets and liabilities.
Credit risk
Because the majority of the Foundation
Trust's revenue comes from contracts with
other public sector bodies, the Foundation
Trust has low exposure to credit risk. The
maximum exposures as at 31 March 2015
are in receivables from customers, as
disclosed in the trade and other
receivables note.
Liquidity risk
The Foundation Trust’s operating costs
are incurred under contracts with clinical
commissioning groups and NHS England,
which are financed from resources voted
252
annually by Parliament. The Foundation
Trust funds its capital expenditure from
loans obtained from Independent Trust
Financing Facility.
The Foundation Trust is currently exposed
to liquidity risk due to its requirement for
working capital support. The Trust has
secured £59.7m of Interim Revolving
Working Capital Support Funding from
Monitor/DoH but agreement is required
from Monitor regarding the amount that
may be drawn down on a monthly basis.
The Directors have reasonable
expectation that the Trust will continue as
a going concern (note 1.26).
23.2
Financial assets
Total
Floating
rate
Fixed
rate
Noninterest
bearing
£000
£000
£000
£000
133,283
160,095
43,445
54,535
-
89,838
105,560
-
85,957
107,022
Group
Gross financial assets
at 31 March 2015
at 31 March 2014
Trust
Gross financial assets
at 31 March 2015
128,628
42,663
at 31 March 2014
161,207
54,185
The weighted average interest rate for total financial assets was 0.2% (2014-15: 0.3%).
The weighted average period for which fixed years was unlimited (2014-15: unlimited).
The non-interest bearing weighted average term years was nil (2014-15: nil).
23.3
Financial liabilities
Total
Floating
rate
Fixed
rate
Noninterest
bearing
£000
£000
£000
£000
388,964
340,862
1,677
1,683
236,035
216,832
151,252
122,347
236,034
216,831
151,279
122,258
Group
Gross financial liabilities
at 31 March 2015
at 31 March 2014
Trust
Gross financial liabilities
at 31 March 2015
387,313
at 31 March 2014
339,089
The weighted average interest rate for total financial liabilities was 8.0% (2013-14: 8.6%).
The weighted average period for which fixed years was unlimited (2013-14: unlimited).
The non-interest bearing weighted average term years was nil (2013-14: nil).
23.4
Fair values of financial assets by category
Group
Trade and other receivables
Cash and cash equivalents
Total
Trust
31 March
2015
£000
31 March
2014
£000
31 March
2015
£000
31 March
2014
£000
89,838
43,445
133,283
105,560
54,535
160,095
85,957
42,663
128,6420
107,022
54,185
161,207
253
23.5
Fair values of financial liabilities by category
Group
Borrowings (excluding finance leases and the PFI
liability)
Obligations under PFI arrangements
Trade and other payables excluding non-financial
liabilities
Provisions under contract
Total
Trust
31 March
2015
£000
31 March
2014
£000
31 March
2015
£000
31 March
2014
£000
71,536
158,658
50,632
159,948
69,859
158,658
48,948
159,948
151,412
7,534
389,140
122,252
8,030
340,862
151,262
7,534
387,313
122,163
8,030
339,089
Fair value is not significantly different to book value, because in the calculation of book value the expected cash
flows have been discounted by the HM Treasury discount rate of 2.2% in real terms.
23.6
Maturity of financial liabilities
Group
In one year or less
In more than one year but not more than two years
Trust
31 March
2015
£000
31 March
2014
£000
31 March
2015
£000
31 March
2014
£000
160,084
127,684
159,934
127,594
7,669
7,102
7,669
7,102
24,183
197,204
389,140
23,681
182,395
340,862
24,183
195,527
387,313
23,681
180,712
339,089
In more than two years but not more than five years
In more than five years
Total
24
Third party assets
At 31 March 2015, the Foundation Trust held £7,570 (31 March 2014: £11,618) cash at bank and in hand that
related to monies held by the Foundation Trust on behalf of patients. This has been excluded from the cash at
bank and in hand figure reported in the accounts.
25
Events after the reporting period
There have been no material adjusting or non-adjusting events after 31 March 2015.
254
26
Related parties
King's College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust is a body corporate established by order of the Secretary of State
for Health.
During the year, none of the Board members, the Foundation Trust's governors, members of the key
management staff or parties related to them have undertaken any material transactions with the Foundation Trust.
The Department of Health is regarded as a related party. During the year, the Foundation Trust has had a
significant number of material transactions with the Department, and with other entities for which the Department
is regarded as the parent department.
The main local commissioners are Lambeth, Southwark, Lewisham, and Bromley Clinical Commissioning Groups
(CCGs). Significant commissioning is also carried out by NHS England.
In addition, the Foundation Trust has transacted with a large number of other CCGs and NHS Trusts, as well as
the NHS Litigation Authority and the NHS Business Services Authority (including NHS Supply Chain).
The Foundation Trust has also received revenue and capital payments from a number of charitable funds,
principally the King's College Hospital Charitable Fund.
The Foundation Trust has entered into the following material related party transactions:
Department of Health
NHS England
NHS Bexley CCG
NHS Bromley CCG
NHS Croydon CCG
NHS Dartford, Gravesham And Swanley CCG
NHS Greenwich CCG
NHS Lambeth CCG
NHS Lewisham CCG
NHS Medway CCG
NHS Southwark CCG
NHS Wandsworth CCG
NHS West Kent CCG
Guys And St Thomas NHS Foundation Trust
Income
£000
10,290
405,033
36,305
161,359
19,583
10,922
19,400
83,386
32,440
3,496
106,204
2,355
10,824
7,060
Expenditure
£000
6
16
2,329
Receivables
£000
7,595
8,058
2,051
3,629
743
782
1,049
1,732
668
433
4,941
438
823
3,573
Payables
£000
54
5,213
South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust
1,147
1,572
1,714
719
Lewisham and Greenwich NHS Trust
5,158
8,039
5,024
NHS Litigation Authority
20,796
2,310
NHS Blood and Transplant
1,609
7,439
12
982
HM Revenue and Customs
36,427
3,753
11,217
King's College Hospital Charitable Fund
761
328
Viapath Group LLP
14,972
33,934
3,130
1,969
Kings College Hospital Clinics LLC
632
632
NHS Pension Scheme
52,486
186
Kings College London
4,691
7,484
4,182
6,460
There were many transactions with King’s College London in respect of education, training and research and
development.
255
27
Losses and special payments
Group and Trust
Losses of cash due to:
- theft, fraud etc
- overpayment of salaries
Bad debts and claims abandoned in relation to:
- private patients
- overseas visitors
- other
Damage to buildings, property etc due to:
2014-15
Number
Value
£000
2013-14
Number
Value
£000
2
119
1
43
3
21
0
11
93
613
36
131
2,305
66
364
696
-
236
3,078
-
20
883
10
2,556
13
1,097
5
3,330
Special, ex-gratia, payments due to:
- loss of personal effects
Total special payments
33
33
15
15
20
20
12
12
Total losses and special payments
916
2,571
1,117
3,342
- theft, fraud etc
Total losses
In 2014-15 there were no cases where the loss or special payment exceeded £250,000 (2013-14: 0).
Losses and special payments are disclosed on an accruals, rather than a cash, basis, but exclude provision for
future losses.
256
28
Split by site
The information below provides a split of the Trust's income and expenditure between the Denmark Hill Site
(including new services on the Orpington Site) (KCH) and the Princess Royal University Hospital (including
Beckenham Beacon, Queen Mary's Sidcup and existing Orpington Sites) (PRUH).
KCH
2014-15
£000
PRUH
2014-15
£000
Total
2014-15
£000
850,535
(849,069)
1,466
233,247
(250,643)
(17,396)
1,083,782
(1,099,712)
(15,930)
213
(11,780)
(144)
(9,539)
(21,250)
(13,472)
(9)
(1,911)
(15,392)
213
(25,252)
(153)
(11,450)
(36,642)
757
(250)
-
757
(250)
(19,277)
(32,788)
(51,065)
KCH
2013-14
£000
PRUH
2013-14
£000
Total
2013-14
£000
769,843
(752,754)
17,089
122,211
(119,121)
3,090
892,054
(871,875)
20,179
169
(10,520)
(151)
(8,479)
(18,981)
(6,539)
(14)
(1,716)
(8,269)
169
(17,059)
(165)
(10,195)
(27,250)
Share of profit of associates
accounted for using the equity method
1,278
-
1,278
Deficit from continuing operations
(614)
(5,179)
(5,793)
Operating income from continuing operations
Operating expenses of continuing operations
Operating surplus
Finance income
Finance expense - financial liabilities
Finance expense - unwinding of discount on provisions
PDC Dividends payable
Net finance costs
Share of profit of associates
accounted for using the equity method
Corporate tax expense
Deficit from continuing operations
Operating income from continuing operations
Operating expenses of continuing operations
Operating surplus
Finance income
Finance expense - financial liabilities
Finance expense - unwinding of discount on provisions
PDC Dividends payable
Net finance costs
257
To clarify details in this report please contact:
Foundation Trust Office
King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
Denmark Hill
London
SE5 9RS
Email: [email protected]
258