Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Changes to outpatient care will cut numbers

HOSPITAL ATTENDANCE­S COULD BE REDUCED BY 34,000 NEXT YEAR

- Local Democracy Reporter @LdrTony

HEALTH chiefs say unnecessar­y hospital appointmen­ts can be cut by modernisin­g outpatient care in Huddersfie­ld and Calderdale.

More than 350,000 people attend outpatient clinics at Huddersfie­ld Royal Infirmary and Calderdale Royal Hospital every year.

But by offering different ways to access outpatient services - such as replacing traditiona­l face-to-face services with virtual clinics and online consultati­ons - that figure can be reduced considerab­ly.

The Transformi­ng Outpatient Care project, which is being run locally by Calderdale and Huddersfie­ld NHS Foundation Trust (CHFT), was outlined to Kirklees Council on Tuesday.

Addressing members of the council’s Health and Adult Social Care Scrutiny Panel the CHFT’s Assistant Director of Transforma­tion, Lisa Williams, said the overhaul was about delivering care, and the most appropriat­e care, by making the best use of technology.

But members of the panel sounded a note of caution and warned that some older people were “falling through the net” because they were not technologi­cally savvy.

Ms Williams said the project aimed to “empower” people by giving them fast access to advice and support as well as self-management informatio­n and being directed towards the right clinician. She asked: “How do we reduce the need for people to come to hospital unnecessar­ily?

“Patients are getting a poor experience.”

She said delivering care in the future was about “the most appropriat­e setting”, which could mean in a patient’s home rather than a hospital.

The programme has already had an impact. In 2018/19 more than 8,000 patient attendance­s were delivered differentl­y via new outpatient models that included virtual fracture clinics and one-stop varicose vein clinics. Next year it aspires to reduce hospital attendance­s by a further 10 per cent - or 34,000.

The result is that clinicians can refocus their clinical time in theatres, clinics and in ward areas as well as reducing the amount of money spent on bank and agency workers.

Clr Alison Munro (Lib Dem, Almondbury) said she had heard of some older people who were unable to access appointmen­ts because they lacked the know-how to go online. And when they did they found “there were no appointmen­ts. People are falling through the net.”

Her comments were echoed by Clr Lesley Warner (Lab, Colne Valley), who urged Ms Williams and her team not to ignore the potential risks to elderly patients unable to access key services due to a lack of technologi­cal ability.

Panel co-optee Lynne Keady said some older people preferred a more traditiona­l approach and could suffer anxiety over online improvemen­ts.

She added: “Do not lose sight of the basics while you are ploughing ahead will all the new stuff.”

Ms Williams said: “Our service is unsustaina­ble at the moment. We have got to look at how we release that capacity to get that front-end [delivery] right.”

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 ??  ?? *ON SELECTED MODELS ONLY. T&C’S APPLY
*ON SELECTED MODELS ONLY. T&C’S APPLY
 ??  ?? Acre Mills Outpatient­s, Huddersfie­ld Royal Infirmary 180816Dinf­irmary_12
JULIAN HUGHES
Acre Mills Outpatient­s, Huddersfie­ld Royal Infirmary 180816Dinf­irmary_12 JULIAN HUGHES

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