The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

‘NHS revamp needs help from heroes’

Exclusive: Shake-up of healthcare revealed

- BY CALUM ROSS

THE boss of NHS Highland has urged communitie­s across the north to show “courage” as he unveiled his vision for a radical shake-up of health services.

David Alston called for a new army of “local heroes” to be recruited in rural areas, combining roles of retained firefighte­rs, first-responders and health workers. And the health board chairman-outlined proposals to create an entire “new profession” of highly-skilled care workers to ease pressure on local GPs and nurses.

But he warned communitie­s across the region that they must be prepared to show “courage” as much-loved services are reformed.

Mr Alston revealed that after financial uncertaint­y in recent years, the lo-

cal NHS would come in on budget this year, but warned “fundamenta­lly different ways of doing things” were being explored as an unpreceden­ted £100million of cuts hit the service over the next three years.

The former Highland Council budget leader has spent his first year in the NHS job travelling the vast region, engaging with communitie­s and other health boards, and has also gone on shift with hospital porters, care workers and other service providers.

He said the role was a “privilege” which he was enjoying “tremendous­ly”, not least because of the love and pride workers and the public feel for the NHS.

But Mr Alston said that affection also created resistance to change, which he aims to overcome.

“Just because of the way people feel so strongly about the health service, people feel very attached to ways of delivering the health service which have delivered for them in the past, and I understand that as well,” he said.

“But sometimes, for all of us, I think we can be locked into old models that aren’t going to work and it takes an act of courage – and that’s lots of individual acts of courage – to look to the future and say ‘no, we need to do it a different way’.”

“We can be locked into old models, it takes courage to do it a different way”

Key changes over the coming years will include dramatical­ly cutting the amount of time people spend in hospitals, and an overhaul of the way the adult care service works.

“What we desperatel­y need is everybody working at the top of their ability, or licence or skills,” he said.

“You can’t run a system if you’ve got highly-trained people and you’re using them to do something that could be done by someone else with different skills, less training,” he said.

“And we need new profession­s. That’s absolutely clear in care.

“If you go out with a care worker you realise how much they are doing in medicine management.

“People sometimes criticise ‘what can you doin a 10 minute visit’, well in 10 minutes you can check if someone is taking their medicines, you can get an impression if something is wrong that day.

“So as long as people who are doing that job have got the skills to be able to escalate and say the medicines haven’t been taken, that is a vital part of the service and that doesn’t need a visit from a nurse or aGP, but it does need a visit from someone who has the right skills.

“We need a new profession, we need to create a profession.”

Mr Alston said the change would involve the creation of new, potentiall­y higher paid jobs, and compared it to the developmen­t in recent years of the “early years service” for children.

Asked if everyone in the Highlands would witness the change in services in the next few years, Mr Alston said: “Yes, I think so.”

But he believed the bulk of the £100million saving could be made up by making the NHS more efficient.

“One of the big changes culturally is that people used to spend weeks in hospital because that was what was thought would be best for them,” he said.

“We now know, and this is all evidence-driven, hospital is not a good place to be for a number of reasons, not least because it debilitate­s people.

“You should be in hospi-

tal when you need to be in hospital but you should be in hospital for as little time as possible, and one of our biggest challenges is getting that flow through hospitals working better than it is at the moment.

“That means if you’re going to get people through hospital much quicker then you’re looking much more imaginativ­ely at how people can stay in their own homes.”

One of the most controvers­ial changes agreed by Mr Alston’s board in the last year was cutting the number of remote communitie­s which receive emergency cover from a nearby GP.

The chairman said new “local hero” roles should be establishe­d in such places to provide a range of services to communitie­s.

Mr Alston said: “I think the problems often hit remote and rural communitie­s first. But that can be an opportunit­y because you’re at the forefront of trying to find new solutions.

“We need to get much smarter about being able to bring together skills.

“At the end of the day it’s daft in remote communitie­s with small population­s having some people who are firefighte­rs, some people are first responders, some people are health and care workers. We need to be able to bring them together into some kind of generic worker.

“I think they are the local heroes for their communitie­s and they’ve got to have the profession­al training and the respect that comes with that.”

“They’ve got to have the profession­al training”

 ??  ?? REFORMS: David Alston, chairman of NHS Highland, wants people to show ‘courage’ as services change
REFORMS: David Alston, chairman of NHS Highland, wants people to show ‘courage’ as services change
 ?? Photograph: Sandy McCook ?? REFORMS: David Alston has unveiled his vision for a radical shake-up of healthcare in the Highlands.
Photograph: Sandy McCook REFORMS: David Alston has unveiled his vision for a radical shake-up of healthcare in the Highlands.
 ??  ?? CARE CHANGE: The length of time people are staying in hospitals, such as Belford Hospital, FortWillia­m, is being decreased so patients can recover at home
CARE CHANGE: The length of time people are staying in hospitals, such as Belford Hospital, FortWillia­m, is being decreased so patients can recover at home

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