HRG4 Design and Clinical Engagement Dr. N.K.Griffin Consultant Paediatrician Northampton General Hospital Part time secondment to HSCIC.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Independent Prescribing and the Clinical Research Nurse Dr Kathryn Jones Deputy Director of Nursing For the Research Nurse Professional Development Meeting:
Advertisements

Booking & Choice Colin Innes Executive Lead Choose and Book.
Nursing Advisor Modernisation Agency
Nina Dunham R&D Manager
Future directions for CHAs Benchmarking Member Service.
Payment by Results: Implications for Acute Trusts CIMA briefing, November 2004.
1 Vision for better co-ordinated care: how could mental health payment systems serve as a key enabler for integration and personalised care? Mental Health.
Community Pharmacy – Call to Action Derbyshire / Nottinghamshire Area Team.
Options for the Future of Payment by Results (PbR) – Consultation exercise Sebastian Habibi – May 2007.
Informed Consent For Chemotherapy
NICE Guidance and Quality Standard on Patient Experience
Engaging Patients and Other Stakeholders in Clinical Research
Epidemiology and benefit to patients from accurate coding Heather Walker CHKS Consultancy and Marketing Director 4 th May 2012.
Features of HRG4 Paula Monteith Principal Casemix Consultant – Finance & Commissioning.
PROFESSIONAL NURSING PRACTICE
TRANSITION AND BEYOND- THE DOUGLAS HOUSE PERSPECTIVE Dr Laura Middleton GPwSI Speciality doctor Helen and Douglas House.
South West Experience. How we went about Different Perspectives Findings Questions But first …………………..
Future of Payment by Results (PbR) PCT network – 19 Feb 2007.
Patient-Focused Funding & Payment by Results The UK Experience CEO Forum, Kananaskis, Alberta February 16, 2009 Robert J. Bell – Chief Executive Royal.
Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network (SIGN)
 Is blood transfusion an important issue?  Is current transfusion practice adequate?  How can decision support software help?  Do the results support.
Improve accuracy of clinical coding
1 What is Hospice Palliative Care? The Canadian Hospice Palliative Care Association defines hospice palliative care as a special kind of health care for.
Introduction to HRG4 Reference Cost Grouper Presented by Chris Knee Senior Information Analyst and Peter Broughton Senior Casemix Consultant.
Sue Roberts Chair, Year of Care Partnerships
Modernising Nursing Careers NMC Pre-registration Nursing Review Lesley Barrowman Workshop 26 th July 2007.
Clinical Audit as Evidence for Revalidation Dr David Scott, GMC Associate, Consultant Paediatrician and Clinical Lead for Children’s Services, East Sussex.
Paediatric palliative care: Welsh policy changes 2009 Dr Jo Griffiths Paediatric palliative care lead, ABM university NHS Trust Disclaimer: Whilst every.
Clinical Coding Service Manager
Registered charity no Revalidation in Surgery [name] [Council Member] Royal College of Surgeons of England.
WHAT CAN YOUR NURSING TEAM DO FOR YOU?. Over the last few years General Practice has changed. Nurses now undertake a more responsible role other than.
Children and Young People Dr P J Carragher Chair of SLWG 6, L&DW.
Excellence in specialist and community healthcare Clinical Coding Mr Buddhi Pant Deputy General Manager Children’s Services SGUHT.
Healthcare Resource Groups. What are HRGs? Casemix methodology underpinning system of payment to providers and contract pricing Aggregation of OPCS or.
The power of information Putting all of us in control of the health and care information we need Dr Susan Hamer National Director of Nursing, Midwifery.
Developments & Issues in the Production of the Summary Hospital-level Mortality Indicator (SHMI) Health and Social Care Information Centre (HSCIC)
CAMHS Data Event Barbara Fittall 5 th March 2013.
A View from Hampshire Jonathan Montgomery Chair NHS Hampshire.
The Practical Challenges of Implementing a Terminology on a National Scale Professor Martin Severs.
Liberating the NHS - A consultation on proposals Transparency in outcomes: a framework for the NHS.
Judith Bennion - Nurse Manager (General Medicine) A Recipe for Care - Not a Single Ingredient.
HRG4 HealthCheck. The Science of Casemix The Operating Environment Now and Next HRG4 HealthCheck Things you Need to Know Help! Key Messages Session Overview.
Support and aspiration: Implementing the SEN and Disability Reforms.
‘A Different Way of Working’ Chairs Presentation 1.
Risk Sharing Schemes Dr Rafiq Hasan Director of Market Access
HRG4 Reference Costs Roadshow Ginny Jordan Head of Methodology The Casemix Service.
Why Develop HRG4? John Madsen, Programme Manager Stephen Cole, Principal Casemix Consultant.
Welcome…. Boleslaw Posmyk Durham, Darlington and Tees The NHS in Darlington, Durham and Tees 150,000 NHS staff 1.2m population 6 hospitals GP practices.
Speech, Language and Communication Therapy Action Plan: Improving Services for Children and Young People (2011/ /13) Mary Emerson AHP Consultant.
HRG4: Impact on Arrhythmia Care Donna Elliott-Rotgans Cardiology Service Manager UCLH / The Heart Hospital.
The importance of the ICD for Casemix/Activity Based Funding work in Australia Prof Ric Marshall and Stuart Mcalister Health Reform Transition Office Hospital.
EC TWINNING PROJECT Development of National Coding Standards within the Czech DRG System CZ2005/IB/SO/03.
Diseases of Childhood Expert Working Group 1 st March 2012.
What does the cancer intelligence landscape look like now? Dr Mick Peake Clinical Lead, National Cancer Intelligence Network.
Reclaiming generalism An international perspective.
National Clinical Audit and Patients Outcome Programme (NCAPOP) Richard Arnold Clinical Programme Lead, NHS England.
South East Public Health Observatory Hospital Episodes Statistics (HES) Steve Morgan - Senior Public Health Intelligence Analyst - SEPHO Day 2 – Session.
A ssociation of Public Health Observatories Hospital Activity data Roy Maxwell SWPHO & Bristol University Dr Richard Wilson Sandwell PCT.
EC TWINNING PROJECT Development of National Coding Standards within the Czech DRG System CZ2005/IB/SO/03.
NHS West Kent Clinical Commissioning Group CCG Performance Reporting arrangements Patient Participation Group Chairs 31 st March 2015.
Implementing Clinical Governance COMPASS Consultant Outcome Indicators Programme.
Making Enfield an Autism Friendly Place
Community Facilitator Introduction to FORGE AHEAD
Evidence-based Medicine
Records, standards and coding: What, why and how
CRUK working group MDT effectiveness proposal
Severe Chronic Conditions Substantial Service Needs
Supporting Our Doctors and Peer to Peer Support
Health Advocate Overview
TELEMEDICINE PROJECT IN MONTENEGRO
Presentation transcript:

HRG4 Design and Clinical Engagement Dr. N.K.Griffin Consultant Paediatrician Northampton General Hospital Part time secondment to HSCIC

PbR’s requirements of HRGs  Encourage patient choice  Provide care in different settings  Recognise legitimate variations in costs  Improve performance  Capable of development in line with PbR expansion

How we Developed HRG4  Requirements from PbR and NHS  The Design Team  Design Rules & Framework  The intention…  The expectation…  The implementation

Key design rules  Consistent style and editorial approach across chapters  >600 cases or >£1.5m per annum  Limited variance  Setting independence  Unbundled elements form separate, additional HRG

Steering Group  Steering Group managed the process  Ensured compliance with the Design Framework  33 Expert working Groups, predominantly clinicians, with Casemix support

HRG4 Development process  Overall control by Steering Group  33 Expert Working Groups  4 Expert Reference Panels  Cancer  Children's Services  Specialised services  Chronic disabling disease

How we Developed HRG4  The Steering Group – task force  Pilot studies  Changing datasets  OPCS 4.3 [Effective April 2006]  25% increase in codes  Reflecting modern practise  Non-operative interventions

HRG4  Conform to Design Framework to ensure consistency across chapters  Improved statistical performance  Extend coverage of HRGs  Reflect current clinical practice

HRG4  Based on:  Routinely available data  Spells not FCEs  Resources not LoS  OPCS4.3 intervention codes  Complications/co-morbidities  Age splits  Unbundling  Increase from 19 to 29 Chapters

The results  Better reflection of cost  Greater clinical relevance  Unbundling to give better setting- independent costing  Age-specific costing  Greater complexity  Untried and untested

Children’s Services  Children are treated in practically every specialty  ICD/OPCS Codes may not reflect very different styles or cost of treatment  Recognise different child/adult costs  Attempt to separate child from adult HRGs  Need for a consistent age split  Similar issues for the elderly

Clinical Involvement  Clinician chaired Design Team and member of Steering Group  283 clinicians were members of EWGs  51 Colleges and Professional Associations represented  Practising doctors, nurses and AHPs released by their trusts

The Clinicians  Represented a Royal College or Professional Association  Relevant knowledge and experience  Understand the process and purpose  Supported but not paid  Travel and expenses  Administrative and secretarial

Why every trust needs their clinicians involved  To ensure accurate coding and optimise HRG classification  To help develop meaningful reference costs  They need ownership to accept and use the data  To help you interpret variations from the norm

How to get your clinicians involved: the simple answers  Threats of violence  Bribery  Coercion  Blackmail  Promises of fame and fortune

How to get your clinicians involved: the difficult answers  Make it interesting  Make it relevant  Make it easy  Make it useful  Provide the resources  Make time available

How to get your clinicians involved: the real answers  Respect their opinions  Recognise their different agenda  Accept that they have useful knowledge and experience  Identify the champions  Justify your views  Use the product honestly and wisely  Reward involvement with clinical benefits

ANY QUESTIONS?