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Announcements and latest updates

Welcome to the Right Decision Service (RDS) newsletter for August 2024.

  1. Contingency planning for RDS outages

Following the recent RDS outages, Tactuum and the RDS team have been reviewing the learning from these incidents. We are committed to doing all we can to ensure a positive outcome by strengthening the RDS to make it fully robust and clinically resilient for the future.

We would like to invite you to a webinar on 26th September 3-4 pm on national and local contingency planning for future RDS outages.  Tactuum and the RDS team will speak about our business continuity plans and the national contingency arrangements we are putting in place. This will also be a space to share local contingency plans, ideas and existing good practice. We would also like to gather your views on who we should send communications to in the event of future outages.

I have sent a meeting request for this date to all editors – please accept or decline to indicate attendance, and please forward on to relevant contacts. You can also contact Olivia.graham@nhs.scot directly to register your interest in participating.

 

2.National  IV fluid prescribing  calculator

This UK CA marked calculator is now live at https://righdecisions.scot.nhs.uk/ivfluids  . It has been developed by a multiprofessional steering group of leads in IV fluids management, as part of the wider Modernising Patient Pathways Programme within the Centre for Sustainable Delivery.  It aims to address a known cause of clinical error in hospital settings, and we hope it will be especially useful to the new junior doctors who started in August.

Please do spread the word about this new calculator and get in touch with any questions.

 

  1. New toolkits

The following toolkits are now live;

  1. Updated guidance on current and future Medical Device Regulations

We have updated and simplified this guidance within our standard operating procedures. We have clarified the guidance on how to determine whether an RDS tool is a medical device, and have provided an interactive powerpoint slideset to steer you through the process.

 

  1. Guide to six stages of RDS toolkit development

We have developed a guide to support editors and toolkit leads through the process of scoping, designing, delivering, quality assuring and implementing a new RDS toolkit.  We hope this will help in project planning and in building shared understanding of responsibilities throughout the full development process.  The guide emphasises that the project does not end with launch of the new toolkit. Implementation, communication and evaluation are ongoing activities throughout the lifetime of the toolkit.

 

  1. Training sessions for new editors (also serve as refresher sessions for existing editors) will take place on the following dates:
  • Thursday 5 September 1-2 pm
  • Wednesday 24 September 4-5 pm
  • Friday 27 September 12-1 pm

To book a place, please contact Olivia.graham@nhs.scot, providing your name, organisation, job role, and level of experience with RDS editing (none, a little, moderate, extensive.)

7 Evaluation projects

Dr Stephen Biggart from NHS Lothian has kindly shared with us the results of a recent survey of use of the Edinburgh Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh Anaesthesia toolkit. This shows that the majority of consultants are using it weekly or monthly, mainly to access clinical protocols, with a secondary purpose being education and training purposes. They tend to find information by navigating by specialty rather than keyword searching, and had some useful recommendations for future development, such as access to quick reference guidance.

We’d really appreciate you sharing any other local evaluations of RDS in this way – it all helps to build the evidence base for impact.

If you have any questions about the content of this newsletter, please contact his.decisionsupport@nhs.scot  If you would prefer not to receive future newsletters, please email Olivia.graham@nhs.scot and ask to be removed from the circulation list.

 

With kind regards

 

Right Decision Service team

Healthcare Improvement Scotland

Out of hours handover

Introduction

To ensure continuity of care in patients with palliative care needs, information needs to be shared to allow all services who may potentially be involved with a patient to have access to important clinical information and decisions.

When a patient is discharged home from secondary care it is important that relevant information is shared with the general practitioner (GP) and that this is in turn shared with those who may be involved in the patient’s care in the future when the GP is unavailable. Community nursing teams must be informed of a patient’s discharge home at end of life. 

This information should cover:

  • medical diagnoses
  • patient and carers’ understanding of diagnosis and prognosis
  • patient wishes
  • prescribed medication, including oxygen
  • information on medication and/or equipment left in patient’s home
  • details of care provision
  • appropriate levels of intervention.

 

Management

Key Information Summary

The Key Information Summary (KIS) is a shared electronic record which includes palliative care information. The information is selected by the GP from their record and updated every 2 hours when any changes are made to this. The KIS information goes from GP records to a central store, where it can be accessed by providers of unscheduled care. Unscheduled care includes NHS 24, the GP out-of-hours service, the Scottish Ambulance Service and hospital emergency departments or admissions units. The information can also be viewed by secondary care clinicians and hospices.

While the KIS is applicable for anyone with a chronic or a complex medical problem, there is a specific ‘palliative care’ tab which allows more detailed palliative and end of life care information to be uploaded and shared.

Currently, information can only be uploaded from GP practices (usually by GPs, but in some areas district nurses or community palliative care nurses have access to the GP system to upload information). Other agencies, such as heart failure nurses or hospices, may ask the practice to include specific information on their patients. Information may only be uploaded with explicit consent from the patient or someone who is legally appointed to act on the patient’s behalf. Information can be shared without consent of the patient if the patient is a vulnerable adult or child, or is a danger to themselves or others and this must be documented on the record.

Where community nurses are unable to either upload information to KIS or to view the information out of hours, it is important that an alternative mechanism is in place to share clinical information. Many district nursing teams use the multidisciplinary information system (MiDIS) for this purpose.

 

Information extracted from GP records to KIS includes:

  • patient and carer details
  • patient’s own GP and nurse
  • patient medical condition:
    • main diagnosis
    • other relevant issues
    • allergies and drug reactions
    • current drugs and doses
    • additional drugs available at home
  • current care arrangements:
    • syringe pump at home
    • catheter and continence products at home
    • moving and handling equipment at home
  • patient and carer awareness of condition:
    • understanding of diagnosis and prognosis
  • advice for out-of-hours care:
    • care plan agreed
    • preferred place of care
    • should GP be contacted out of hours? (if yes, contact details)
    • resuscitation status agreed? (if yes, status)
    • will GP sign death certificate in normal circumstances?
    • additional useful out-of-hours information.
  • the Anticipatory Care Plan (ACP) is not visible in secondary care:
    • ACP details must be added in special notes section.

 

Discharge

When patients are discharged from secondary care to the community, refer to Rapid transfer home in last days of life guideline:

  • contact GP regarding discharge; a request should also be made to add the patient to their Palliative Care Register and update electronic palliative care summary (ePCS)/KIS
  • district nurses should be contacted by nursing team
  • ensure original ‘Do Not Attempt Cardio Pulmonary Resuscitation (DNACPR)’ form goes home with the patient
  • send supply of current medication home with the patient  
  • consider prescribing “just in case” medications for patients being discharged for end of life care.

 

Practice points

  • The original DNACPR form should be with the patient – this means it should also follow patients into a hospital or hospice from the community.
  • The KIS can be printed so that a copy can be left with the patient.