7th york cardiac care conference york racecourse 25 april 2007

36
How we met the NSF targets for cardiac rehabilitation and what patients valued about it Dr H Dalal, MD FRCGP GP, Truro, Cornwall 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007

Upload: marvin

Post on 05-Feb-2016

27 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

How we met the NSF targets for cardiac rehabilitation and what patients valued about it Dr H Dalal, MD FRCGP GP, Truro, Cornwall. 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007. Cardiac rehabilitation: Is it working? Hasnain M Dalal. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007

How we met the NSF targets for cardiac rehabilitation and what patients valued about it

Dr H Dalal, MD FRCGP GP, Truro, Cornwall

7th York Cardiac Care Conference

York Racecourse

25 April 2007

Page 2: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007

Cardiac rehabilitation: Is it working?

Hasnain M Dalal

4th York Cardiac Care & Rehabilitation Conference

University of York

17 April 2003

Page 3: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007

Not rocket science

Page 4: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007

How we met NSF targets for CR

• Listened to patients and practitioners

• Listened to experts

• Pilot project in one general practice

• Worked with the PCT to roll out a ‘seamless’ service

Page 5: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007

Problem with CR1

• CR provision patchy in Cornwall

• Funding for <50% of patients who survive MI

• Hospital-based programme with limited places

• No formal link between 1 and 2 care

• Cornwall and Isles of Scilly Health Authority identified areas for improvement:

• Coordination of services between 1 and 2 care

• Community-based CR service for patients who find it difficult to access hospital facilities

1Dalal HM, Evans PH. BMJ 2003;326:481–4.

Page 6: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007

What the experts said

• Calls for different ways to provide traditionally hospital-based CR1

• Integration of 2 and 1 care services2

• “Rehabilitation after heart attack should be more flexible and integrated with cardiac aftercare and primary care”

• WHO3

• “Rehabilitation cannot be regarded as an isolated form or stage of the therapy but must be integrated within secondary prevention services of which it forms only one facet”

1De Bono DP. BMJ 1998;316:1329-30. 2Mayou R. BMJ 1996;313:1498-9. 3WHO, 1993.

Page 7: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007

CR after heart attack…

“…should be more flexible and integrated with cardiac aftercare and primary care”

Richard MayouBMJ 1996;313:1498-9

Page 8: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007

NSF goal1

• >85% of patients discharged from hospital with primary diagnosis of acute MI should be offered CR

• At one year after discharge, 50% of people should be non-smokers with BMI <30 kg/m2

1Department of Health. NSF for CHD. London: DoH, 2000.

Page 9: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007

How we met NSF targets for CR

• Identified patients with MI in hospital

• Patients seen by CR nurse before discharge

• Patients offered choice of CR programme

• Patient discharge information passed to community/practice nurse

• Links maintained between hospital and 1º care

Page 10: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007

Identification of patients after acute MI

• Inpatient CR nurse given daily printout of cardiac enzymes

Page 11: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007

Patients seen before discharge

• Patients assessed at bedside by CR nurse

• Education , lifestyle advice and data collected for appropriate secondary prevention measures and psychological status (HADS)

Page 12: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007

Choice of CR

Page 13: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007
Page 14: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007
Page 15: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007

Choice of CR

• Patients offered choice of:

• Hospital-based rehabilitation (8x once weekly outpatient classes)

• Home-based rehabilitation with Heart Manual

• Patients not suitable for either offered tailored package (CAPTURE Cornwall)

Page 16: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007

Discharge details sent to 1º care

• Standard form sent by CR nurse to practice CHD nurse and GP

Page 17: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007

Links maintained between hospital and 1º care

• Practice nurses:

• Trained in secondary prevention of CHD by Heartsave

• Biannual study updates

• Follow-up data collected 12–15 months post-MI

• Height, weight and BP measured

• Serum total cholesterol and smoking status from practice records

1Dalal HM, Evans PH. BMJ 2003;326:481–4.

Primarycare (after discharge)

Week 1• Cardiac liaison nurse visits or

calls patients who chose Heart Manual

Weeks 2–6 • Heart Manual patients have

telephone contact• Hospital-based patients given:

• Appointment for assessment • Times to attend programme

Weeks 7–12• Follow up by dedicated CHD

nurse• Secondary prevention factors

checked• Referral to GP if appropriate

Annual follow up• Patient seen in practice CHD

clinic by nurse or doctor

Patient’s typical management

Page 18: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007

Two key measures for improvement1

• Proportion of patients completing CR programme after MI

• Proportion of patients with optimal secondary prevention measured by:

• Smoking status

• BMI

• Cholesterol <5.0 mmol/l

• BP <140/85 mmHg

1Dalal HM, Evans PH. BMJ 2003;326:481–4.

Page 19: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007

Effects of change1

• Detailed audit of 179 patients with MI in 2000–1

• At 12 months, follow-up data available for 106 patients

• 82 (77%) male

• Mean age 66 years

• 32 (30%) patients <60

years

46 (26%)

17 (6%)

10 (9%)

106 (59%)

1Dalal HM, Evans PH. BMJ 2003;326:481–4.

Data available

>85 years,comorbidity,not suitable for rehabilitation

Died

Transferred out of practice,moved out of area,

not seen since discharge

Page 20: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007

Effects of change1

• Follow-up data available for 106 patients at 12 months

• Patients aged >60 years and self-employed preferred home-based CR

• No significant sex differences between groups

47 (44%)

35 (33%)

24 (23%)

1Dalal HM, Evans PH. BMJ 2003;326:481–4.

Heart Manual

Alternativepackage

Hospital-based rehabilitation

Page 21: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007

Effects of change1

Percentage of patients achieving modifiable risk factors

1. Dalal HM, Evans PH. BMJ 2003;326:481–4. 2. EUROASPIRE II study group. Eur Heart J 2001;22:554–72.

0

20

40

60

80

100

Non-smokers Body mass index <30 kg/m2 Total cholesterol <5 mmol/ l Blood pressure 140/85 mmHg

Discharge Follow up EUROA SPIRE II

*EUROASPIRE II included two patients with MI, coronary revascularisation and myocardial ischaemia.†EUROASPIRE II set a target of <140/90 mmHg. ‡No specific target set by national service framework.

NSF target‡*†

• All four secondary prevention measures improved at 12 months

• Largest change in number of patients with cholesterol <5 mmol/l

• Data compare favourably with those from EUROASPIRE II survey2

Page 22: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007

What patients valued about our scheme

Page 23: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007

Listening to patients: choice in cardiac rehabilitation

Wingham J et al. Eur J Cardiovasc Nurs 2006;5:289-94

Page 24: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007

What patients feel after a heart attack

• Disbelief

• Fear of death

• Loss of confidence

Page 25: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007

Patient expectation of CR

• Seeking to change lifestyle:

• “Change your way of living to go on living”

• Need for specific guidance from healthcare professional

Page 27: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007

Preference for home or hospital based CR1

• Hospital-based CR

• Peer support and group discipline

• Home-based CR

• Travel and parking problems

1. Wingham J et al. Eur J Cardiovasc Nurs 2006;5:289-94.

Page 28: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007

Hospital-based CR group: supervision by experts

• Someone else in control in case something happens – eg chest pain

• Exercise set at correct level

• Lack of self-discipline

• Group camaraderie – an opportunity to meet others

Page 29: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007

Home-based CR group: Heart Manual supported by nurse

• Flexibility – fits in with lifestyle

• Dislike groups – “may not measure up to others”

• Self-disciplined

• Transport/parking problems

Page 30: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007

Lessons learnt1

• Daily cardiac enzyme printouts accurately identified patients with acute MI

• Seeing patients before discharge important

• Offering choice helps increase uptake of CR

• Integration of 2 and 1 care services allowed NSF targets for CR to be met

• Links through nurse education meetings strengthen service

1Dalal HM, Evans PH. BMJ 2003;326:481–4.

Page 31: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007

Next steps

• Campaign for continued funding for CR

• Roll out scheme to all localities within new PCT boundary

• Closer collaboration

• Engage GPs, staff in 1º and 2º care

• Business case for practice-based commissioning

Page 32: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007

CR, secondary prevention or CDM?Do we need a name change?

“…reasons cited for a lack of success of current secondary prevention programmes are a lack of consideration of patients’ and carers’ perspective…”

Austin and ClossEur J Cardiovasc Nursing 2007;6:6–8 [Editorial]

Page 33: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007

The big question: One year to save the NHS…what would you do?

“There is huge potential in the NHS for integrated care…There needs to be better collaborative management between primary care trusts and hospital trusts, and this will lead to an improved patient journey”

Donald Beswick, President, Institute for Healthcare Improvement, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA

BMJ 2007;334:180

Page 34: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007

Our health, our care, our say

“...aims to bring care ‘closer to home’ with a series of initiatives to improve local community based services”

Department of Health white paper, 2006

Page 35: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007

Message from President of BACR

“To survive in today’s NHS it will become necessary to provide CR to a wider range of patients in a variety of settings”

Bernie DowneyCardiac Rehab UK newsletter, January 2007

Page 36: 7th York Cardiac Care Conference York Racecourse 25 April 2007