development of alcohol liaison within the royal devon and exeter hospital sally jarmain clinical...
Post on 28-Dec-2015
217 Views
Preview:
TRANSCRIPT
Development of alcohol liaison within the Royal Devon and Exeter hospital
Sally JarmainClinical Lead in Alcohol
Why bother?
12% of A&E attendances are alcohol related (Pirmohamed, 2000)
34-36% of orthopaedic admissions and 33-50% of head injury patients are drinking at hazardous levels (Chick, 1991)
20% of patients admitted for non-alcohol related reasons are drinking at harmful levels (RCP, 2001)
Hospital admissions for the 3 main alcohol-specific conditions (mental health, liver disease and acute intoxication) has doubled in the last 10 years (National Audit Office, 2008)
Royal College of Physicians (2001) Alcohol: Can the NHS afford it? Screening tools to be used to detect problem drinkers;
A recognised management plan and established protocols to be developed;
Pharmacology pathways to be used to ensure safe detoxification;
Concurrent vitamin therapy to be administered to patients with alcohol-related problems;
Alcohol education and training to be given to hospital staff to improve their practice with and attitudes to this patient group;
Appropriate counselling and onward referral to be offered to patients;
Alcohol liaison nurses to be appointed within all acute hospitals to effect the above recommendations and raise the issue of alcohol-related administration and governance.
Aims of Project
Encourage hospital staff to screen patients using a screening questionnaire
Give brief advice where appropriate
Provide advice and information to medical/nursing staff on the management of people with alcohol problems
Reduce hospital bed days by facilitating community detoxification where appropriate
Development of post within RD&E so far...
Communication about role
Screening tools
Care pathways
Guidelines
Screening tools
Paddington alcohol test
Audit
Fast
Others e.g. MAST, Cage
ICP following referral to Liaison NurseReferral received by alcohol liaison nurse. Patient will be triage assessed on the ward,
within 1 working day of the referral being received. Assessments will normally take place during the morning.
Does client want to be seen by alcohol
service?
Yes No
Is the client dependant on alcohol?
Provide “Sensible drinking” and “Addaction” leaflets. Give brief advice on reducing alcohol consumption
Yes No
Is the client currently prescribed medication for alcohol
detoxification (including medication for delirium tremens or alcohol-related hallucinosis)?
Client will be referred for ENDAS keyworker by alcohol liaison nurse.
Does the client have complex needs? (learning disability, repeated presentations at A and E for
suicidal ideation, a mental health care manager or child protection issue)
No
Is the client drinking at a harmful or hazardous level?
YesNo
Alcohol liaison nurse will refer to Addaction and
provide “sensible drinking” and “Addaction” leaflets.
Provide “Sensible drinking” leaflet. Give brief advice on
reducing alcohol consumption
Yes
Yes
No
Alcohol liaison nurse will offer monitoring and support for client
whilst they remain in hospital and will assess suitability for community
detoxification if appropriate.
Following detoxification or discharge from hospital (whichever happens first), client will be referred by liaison nurse to ENDAS
keyworker for relapse prevention work. Liasion nurse will continue to offer support to client until a keyworker is allocated.
Outcomes
Briefadvice/screening
Full assessment
Currently in tier 3treatment
Did not engage intreatment
Successfullycompleted treatment
38 39
16
14
9
Learning and future development
Audit
Changes to referral system/care pathways
Development of guidelines
Training
Increasing wards covered by nurse
A&E
Contact details
Sally Jarmain (Clinical lead in alcohol)EndasWonford House HospitalDryden RoadExeterEX2 5AF
Tel: 01392 208210Sally.jarmain@nhs.net
top related