14
SCOTTISH AMBULANCE SERVICE Managing demand across Scheduled and Unscheduled Care Peter Ripley Director of Service Delivery

SCOTTISH AMBULANCE SERVICE

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

SCOTTISH AMBULANCE SERVICE. Managing demand across Scheduled and Unscheduled Care Peter Ripley Director of Service Delivery. Background. The Service employs 4,300 staff Responds to 600,000 unscheduled care calls per year Undertakes 1.6 million scheduled care patient journeys - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

SCOTTISH AMBULANCE SERVICE

Managing demand across Scheduled and Unscheduled Care

Peter RipleyDirector of Service Delivery

Background

• The Service employs 4,300 staff

• Responds to 600,000 unscheduled care calls per year

• Undertakes 1.6 million scheduled care patient journeys per year• Staff based at over 170 locations

• There are three Emergency Medical Dispatch Centres (Glasgow, Edinburgh and Inverness)

• 3 Special Operations Response Team’s

• Four Air Ambulances

• Generally the Service coped really well despite the challenges

• Comprehensive planning• With good communications• We improved response times for life

threatening calls across Scotland to an average of 6.9 minutes versus 7.2 minutes the previous year – this is world class!

• Introduced the new Resource Escalatory Plan

Overview

Preparation for Winter

• Demand & Capacity Planning – Nationally & Divisionally

• Strategic Coordinating Centre

• Winter Event Planning

• Pandemic Flu arrangements

• Resource Escalatory Action Plan (REAP)

Strategic Coordinating Centre

• SCC operating 24/7 during key periods (REAP Level 4 +)

• Regular briefing reports to managers, health boards and to the Scottish Government

• Support from voluntary agencies in the SCC

• Co-ordination of four wheel drive capability

• Provision of specialist vehicles

REAP

REAP Level 6 Potential Service Failure

REAP Level 5 Critical

REAP Level 4 Severe Pressure

REAP Level 3 Moderate Pressure

REAP Level 2 Concern

REAP Level 1 Normal Service

• Positive attitude of staff and managers

• Staff and staff side worked with the organisation

• Huge effort made by staff to get to work

• Sickness levels reduced

• Excellent support from PTS staff, both in and out of normal working hours

• ‘Buddy’ system with other ambulance services

Staff support

Partnership working with NHS organisations

• Regular communication with health boards & NHS 24 to agree local priorities

• With hospitals for patient admissions, transfers and discharges

• With hospitals for Scheduled Care

• Liaison with GPs and local hospitals

• BASIC’s

Partnership working with other agencies

• Support from voluntary agencies, providing staff and vehicles

• NHS24 support at times of peak demand • SAS managers triaging calls in police control rooms

• Liaison with other UK ambulance services

• Local authorities • Met Office

Communications with the general public

• Communicated key messages through the media from October onwards

• Emphasised the increased demand over the winter period

• Focussed on not drinking to much alcohol

• Signposting patients to other suitable alternatives e.g. NHS 24

Key Learning

• More effective engagement and involvement in planning with Local Authorities

• Improved demand and capacity planning

• REAP triggers and understanding

• Call handling capacity for clinical triage

• Better planning for accessing renal patients

• Tactical use of 4 x 4 assets • National co-ordination but meeting local need

Key Learning

• Work with Acute Hospitals looking at elective planning

• Involvement where wards are being closed to new admissions

• Treating patients nearer home to reduce inter hospital transfers

• Managing the impact of reduced medical cover at rural hospitals

• Need to use Met Office services e.g. they have tools to predict changes in demand by condition as weather changes

Thank you