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Practice Team Leader

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Practice Team Leader Induction Training – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Practice Team Leader


1
Practice Team Leader
Induction Training
2
Objectives of session
  • Overview of strategic plan 10 key themes
  • Improving practice and service quality
  • Sustaining and developing local services
  • Increasing reach and local presence
  • Explore what are our practice strengths,
    challenges and opportunities
  • How can you build on these and continue to
    improve?

3
Strategic Plan- Ten Themes
  • Raising awareness
  • Influencing change and promoting rights
  • Sustaining and developing local services
  • Increasing reach and local presence
  • Improving practice and service quality
  • Investing in our people
  • Research and collaboration
  • Efficiency and effectiveness
  • Raising funds and increasing support
  • Developing innovations and creating new
    opportunities

4
Improving practice and service quality
  • Introduce, train and support new service role of
    Practice Team Leader (PTL)
  • Every member of service staff will be trained to
    the appropriate level on Promoting Excellence
    Framework
  • Introduce a leadership training programme for all
    managers
  • Ensure maximum use of professional development
    fund
  • Support all staff to attain relevant level of
    Scottish Vocational Qualification (SVQ) and
    registration
  • Ensure that the quality, delivery and content of
    training programme is of the highest standard and
    relevant to the issues faced by local staff and
    services
  • Support services to develop and improve
    transition planning post diagnostic support
    service audit and quality approaches and person
    centred support
  • Engage with relevant lesbian, gay, bisexual and
    transgender (LGBT) organisations and develop an
    organisational strategy to ensure equality of
    access and treatment
  • Engage with relevant black and minority ethnic
    (BME) organisations and develop an organisational
    strategy to ensure equality of access and
    treatment

5
Sustaining and developing local services
  • Develop new Enhanced Sensory Community Care
    (ESCC) therapeutic model for people with advanced
    dementia using our services and use this to
    inform 2015 policy report
  • Open three new Dementia Resource Centres (DRCs)
    each year
  • Develop a strategy for each region to promote
    personalised support services and self-directed
    support
  • Consolidate and build on the role of Link Worker
    ensuring all Link Workers deliver on the 5 pillar
    model and meet the new Post Diagnostic Support
    HEAT target
  • Ensure that each service area provides a balance
    of peer support activity and therapeutic group
    activity
  • Ensure that the Dementia Advisor Network
    continues to offer a high quality local service,
    reaching as many people and carers as possible
  • Ensure that our services are financially
    competitive and sustainable and local fundraised
    contributions are used to add value
  • Make sure our services are the best possible
    quality

6
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7
Increasing reach and local presence
  • Recruit, induct and train six new Deputy Regional
    Manager (DRM) posts
  • Each Regional Manager will develop a regional
    strategy that will include supporting new and
    existing membership engagement liaison and links
    with branches regional fundraising focus and
    strategy ensuring representation and policy
    engagement in new integrated bodies
  • Develop a national campaign to increase members
    and develop an on-going engagement strategy to
    link members into both national and local
    activity
  • Use social media to engage regionally locally
    and extend reach
  • Develop Alzheimer Scotland online community
    groups, blogs, live chat and QA
  • Put in place a clear database strategy
    profiling, data capture, re-segmentation and
    re-targeting
  • Review and develop Alzheimer Scotlands brand and
    introduce across each region and nationally

8
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9
What are our practice strengths
  • What do we mean by dementia specific?
  • How do we evidence this in our day services and
    individual support?
  • What type of activities best support this and how
    does this relate to each person's support plan?
  • Do we explain this to partners and families?

10
What are our practice challenges?
  • How do we deal with more complex care within same
    staffing and budgets?
  • How do we continue to demonstrate we offer better
    value for money in this funding climate?
  • How do we ensure all staff are driven by our
    practice values and provide best possible
    standard of care at all times?

11
Role of Practice Team Leader
  • So whats different?
  • What do you want to change or improve?
  • What is your role as a leader and change agent?
  • What will you need to help you in this?
  • What will your personal action plan be?

12
Policy into Practice
13
Human rights based approach
  • Participation
  • Accountability
  • Non Discrimination
  • Empowerment
  • Legality

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16
Personalised supports
  • Mandatory training aligned to Promoting
    Excellence Framework
  • Peer Support
  • Person Power Module

17
Support for carers
  • Lloyds Live Well Officer - 3 year post
  • Creative Breaks Fund - into year 3 (helping to
    inform Self-Directed Support activities
    self-design)

18
What else?
  • Getting to know me
  • KIS (NHS Key Information Summary)
  • Sensory Programme (ESCC)
  • LGBT champions
  • Black Minority Ethnic (BME) work
  • Telecare e.g. GPS systems
  • Induction revision (training for trainers)

19
Innovation in PracticeFrom dogs to clocks
20
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21
Valuable Digital Applications for people affected
by Dementia
22
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23
the game jam
24
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25
Pocket Pal allows people to record personalized
support prompts for their daily tasks, such as
making coffee and washing clothes.
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Transitions
28
People may need to consider
  • What information they need to make their decision
  • What are their options
  • What are the potential costs and benefits of each
    option (this may be financial, emotional,
    practical)
  • Do they have any experience of making similar
    decisions or would they like to speak to someone
    who has had a similar experience or is there a
    resource you can signpost them to.

29
Making transitions easier
  • Always tell people from the outset about
    transitions and how they will be informed and
    supported during these times
  • What are the persons preferences what is
    practical and possible to achieve within their
    chosen preference?
  • Who is in their circle of support and how will
    they be involved in assisting the person to make
    their decision?
  • How can the person be supported to maintain links
    to their community, spirituality and their social
    networks?
  • What type of activities interest the person and
    how can they be supported to engage in them?

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30
  • Identifying and communicating potential
    transition points i.e when your service would no
    longer be suitable for the person.

31
  • Talk to the person, their family and people who
    know them well to gather information about how
    they have managed other transitions in their life
    and what their personal preferences are

32
  • Discuss transitions with the person and record
    who else they may wish to consider involving at
    these times

33
  • Advise when they likely major transitions points
    will be and how you will communicate when those
    points are approaching.

34
  • If there is a clear pathway in place for people
    to transition, let people know what the pathway
    is.

35
  • Keeping the person and their family/ supporters
    and other professionals informed when possible
    transitions are approaching and discuss their
    feelings about it.

36
  • Discuss the possible options available at the
    transition point, ensure the person has the right
    information, advice and support to enable them to
    make an informed choice and agree a plan for the
    transition.

37
  • Discuss possible transitions at outcomes focused
    review session.

38
  • Consider the impact of the transition on the
    persons sense of identity, independence and
    self-esteem and agree a plan to minimise any
    negative effects. Ensure family/carers/supporters
    feelings are addressed within the transition
    support plan.

39
  • Ensure support is in place for the person to
    adapt to their new circumstances

40
Risk Enablement
41
  • Risks should be taken to achieve specific goals
    in the light of possible harms occurring
  • (David Carson 1988)

42
  • Pursue a course of action in order to realise
    one or more beneficial outcomes, in the knowledge
    that there are consequences or outcomes that
    would be perceived as negative or harmful in
    nature should they occur
  • (Saunders 1998)

43
The Law
  • The Health Safety at Work Act 1974
  • The Management of Health and Safety at Work
    Regulations 1999 (Risk Assessment)
  • The Human Rights Act 1998
  • The law requires reasonable professional conduct
    according to appropriate standards

44
The Law
  • No law prohibits safe risk-taking
  • Legal areas which affect practice
  • Recklessness (criminal)
  • Negligence (civil)

45
Risk a matter of balance?
  • Potential beneficial results
  • Harms that might result

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Justifying Risk Taking
  • Make the possible positive outcomes explicit!
  • Why are we taking these risks?

48
Ethics and Benefits of Risk Taking
  • Benefits judged more important than possible
    harms
  • Risk taking is value laden but should consider
    moral values
  • Outcomes can be beneficial, harmful or both

49
Rights and Risks
  • The right to exercise informed choice
  • There may be tension between physical safety and
    right to self-determination
  • There may be differing agendas
  • Recognise strengths and abilities as well as
    difficulties

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50
Decision Making
  • A process
  • Must be shared
  • Must be monitored and reviewed
  • Needs to be modified by people/circumstances
  • Needs relevant expertise

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51
Risk Management
  • Risk will not
  • usually be eliminated!

52
Formal Approaches
  • When
  • Very serious outcomes are possible
  • The situation is very complex
  • Opinions differ and a consensus is not easily
    reached
  • An existing plan is not working or is not adhered
    to
  • On basis of experience probability of high risk

53
The Planning Meeting
  • Must be recorded
  • Assessments and opinions shared
  • Identify key stakeholders
  • What do people have to gain or lose?
  • Information available considered
  • Recommendations made plan of action roles and
    responsibilities arrangements to monitor and
    review

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54
Be a Risk Taker
  • Support pwd in the taking of risks
  • Feel good about the decisions you have made
  • Understand and be able to explain to others why
    you have made these decisions include
    values/principles that underlie your decisions

55
Case Study
  • Mrs D has been attending your day service for 2
    years. She has Alzheimers disease and you have
    noted a marked change in recent months in Mrs Ds
    abilities
  • One of the few activities Mrs D still enjoys is
    being in the kitchen and helping with cooking and
    clearing up. She now shows a greatly reduced
    awareness of factors relating to her own safety
    and that of others. She moves very quickly,
    lifting and laying hot items and becomes very
    irritated with anyone who tries to help her or
    guide her away from hazardous activities. At
    home, Mrs Ds husband has fitted a lock to their
    kitchen door and doesnt let her in there at all.
    He reports that although this keeps her safe, she
    becomes extremely agitated and angry with him.
    You have decided to carry out a risk assessment
    because Mrs D says she loves being at the centre
    so that she can be in the kitchen
  • Complete a risk assessment enablement plan for
    Mrs D

56
Being Person Centred and Planning Outcomes
57
A good life for Alastair
  • Case study
  • How could Alastair
  • be best supported?

58
What do we mean by being person-centred?
  • Person-centred thinking and planning is a set of
    values and skills that involves asking questions
    that keep the focus on the person and the
    persons priorities for their own life.
  • The person is kept at the centre, and the
    expertise of the person and those closest to them
    are valued as key sources of person-centred
    information about how the person wishes to live,
    their hopes and dreams, their gifts and skills,
    what is important to them, and what makes good
    support for them.
  • Person-centred approaches provide an agenda that
    is focused on the values of inclusion and on
    enabling the person to live a valued life as a
    contributing citizen and friend in the community
    on their own terms.

59
Person Power(person centred thinking ( acting))
  • Whats important to/for you?
  • The power of relationships friendship
  • Circle of Support

60
Personalising support
  • The power of contribution!
  • Gifts

61
Loneliness and isolation
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62
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63
Outcomes
  • The impact or end result of services/supports on
    a persons life
  • The person or carer is involved in identifying
    desired outcomes setting goals in partnership
    with services

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64
A good life?
  • What makes life worth living for you?
  • Any themes emerging?

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66
Talking Points Outcomes
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67
Having an outcomes focused conversation.
  • What do you say?

68
Therapeutic Interventions? (8 Pillars model)
  • What kinds of things are we doing?
  • Cognitive Stimulation Therapy (CST) ?
  • Inheritance tracks
  • http//www.playlistforlife.org.uk/

69
The Nun Study
  • Aging with Grace
  • The Nun Study and the Science of Old Age How we
    can all live longer, healthier and more vital
    lives
  • By David Snowdon
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vnw2lafKIEio

70
Capturing the Outcomes
71
Participation empowerment
Agreement that everyone is very enthusiastic
about the group with the men saying that of
themselves and of the staff and volunteers
Always like outings so more of them would be
welcome
Whole layout is fantastic. Bigger than was led
to believe. Great place. Should be replicated.
gardens are kept nice- lovely If choice
between something like building being painted and
other staff, would choose staff how building
looks is not a priority.
72
  • How do we do this at the moment?
  • Could we be more creative?

73
Managing Staff
74
Topics
  • Personalising approaches to recruitment
  • Increasing staff retention satisfaction
  • Balancing contracted/sessional staff
  • Managing banked hours

75
Personalising Approaches to Recruitment
  • Standardised recruitment procedures
  • Care Inspectorate requirements
  • Areas to be standardised
  • Advertising
  • Application Form
  • Shortlisting and interviewing
  • Pre-employment checks

76
  • Areas that can be personalised
  • Where to advertise
  • Recruitment tests

77
  • Staff Retention
  • Average length of service is 14 years.
  • Key areas of turnover occur
  • Within the first 6 months
  • Between 3 4 years service
  • Initiatives to reduce help improve retention
  • Remember not all turnover is negative.

78
Increasing staff retention satisfaction
continued
  • Staff Satisfaction
  • 2013 Staff Survey - 86.4 level of satisfaction
  • Line managers impact on staff satisfaction
  • Communication team meetings
  • Support Guidance supervision appraisals
  • Autonomy control experienced staff
  • Team working

79
Balancing contracted/sessional staff
  • Service Dependent
  • Flexibility
  • Risks
  • High contracted hours/low availability
  • Sessional staff can refuse shifts
  • Employment law status

80
Managing banked hours
  • Key points when managing flexible contracts
  • Regular monitoring
  • Availability
  • Review contract hours
  • Communications
  • Ownership

81
  • Questions?

82
Quality Control
83
Service Audit
  • Tool is currently being reviewed
  • Can be used as a checklist to ensure standards
    and procedures are being followed
  • Includes
  • Self-assessment section (pre service audit)
  • Main audit sections general quality check
  • Personnel file audit template
  • Enhanced Performance Checklist (spot checks)
  • Carried out by Regional Manager or another
    Service Manager

84
Care Inspectorate (CI)
  • 2 sets of guidance on intranet (care at home /
    not care at home)
  • Guidance follows CI quality themes / statements
  • Includes suggestions of possible evidence sources
    from
  • Alzheimer Scotland policies and procedures
  • Local service approaches
  • Legislation and external guidance
  • Be aware of different terminology used by CI
    (personal plan)
  • Can be useful to gather documented evidence on
    ongoing basis to present at inspection

85
Customer Satisfaction Questionnaires
  • Strategic Plan(2013-2016)...90 of people with
    dementia and carers using our services rate them
    very good or excellent
  • Results fed into Survey Monkey
  • Services produce local summary report (template
    on intranet)
  • Organisation-wide summary report produced by PDT

86
Participation empowerment
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87
Support Worker Feedback
  • Vital aspect of evidencing quality of service
  • Guidance on intranet for this
  • Use of case studies/examples in how to feedback
    effectively
  • Can be used at support supervision to
    facilitate discussion and capture outcomes
  • Feed into review process and updating of support
    plans as required

88
Reviews
  • Initial review at 6 weeks after service starting
  • Ongoing reviews must be no less than 6 monthly
  • Need to capture both outputs and outcomes of
    support
  • Dont need to be face to face meetings be
    guided by individual preference (recorded in
    Support Agreement)
  • Can do telephone reviews
  • Any changes to Support Plan/Risk Enablement Plans
    must be signed and dated

89
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