Title: Commissioning Support for London
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2- Commissioning Support for London
- Increasing MMR uptake
- Debrief on HCP Stakeholder Workshop
- and Project Recommendations
- 9th September 2010
A partnership between The Information Centre for
health and social care and Dr Foster Holdings
LLP FESC approved supplier
2
3Purpose
To share output from the HCP Stakeholder Workshop
held on 23rd August, 2010. To make, discuss and
agree recommendations for next steps.
3
4Context
Kensington Chelsea
Newham
Higher SEG Workshop
Higher SEG Workshop
Lower SEG Workshop
Lower SEG Workshop
Quantity of Ideas
Stakeholder Workshop
Refined Intervention Ideas
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5An aside Asian paired depths
There were two differences compared to non Asian
responses 1. Their GP practice places
responsibility on them to make appointments It
is our responsibility to make the appointments
for the injections. They dont call you or send
you a letter to remind you. It is left entirely
to you.
5
6An aside Asian paired depths
2. They are culturally pre-disposed to
comply.. I got the MMR and other jabs
because it is the procedure. It is in the red
book and the midwife told me I must get all of
them on time. You dont question health
professionals. They know best. MMR-It was
just like any other jab. You got to do it because
it is in the book. There is no question about it.
It is also for the safety of my son. But they
want and seek out information in a way their
mothers never did We had concerns about all
the injections in general and wanted to find out
more about side effects for all of them. Our
mothers simply followed the procedures without
asking any questions.
6
7An aside Asian paired depths
They perceive the potential barriers in their
community to be language and accessible
information These women would not know when
to make the appointments. There is no one to
remind women to get the jabs and the
responsibility is entirely on you to get it done.
We were proactive about it because we are
educated. But it is easy for many to forget it
because of the language barrier. If they
cant read the Red Book they wont know what to
do.
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8HCP Workshop - Sample
From Newham 2 GPs School nurse Health
Visitor Practice Nurse From KC Practice
Manager GP Practice Nurse Immunisation
Improvement Nurse Specialist Team Co-ordinator
Health Visiting 2 School Nurses
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9HCP Workshop
- Objective
- To assess a range of ideas generated by primary
care givers, to build on - those ideas and generate additional ones which
can then be taken into - further research.
-
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10HCP Workshop - Findings
- What issues do you have with the child
immunisation journey? - 1. Parents
- If I could get away without having the parents
there it would be great! PN - They make it harder
- Children tend to exhibit their worst behaviour in
the presence of their parents. - The 4-5 year olds are the worst because they
fight and kick. - They can adversely influence the child
- Quite often the parents have warned the child
youre - going to have an injection so theyre
screaming before they arrive.
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11HCP Workshop - Findings
- What issues do you have with the child
immunisation journey? - 1. Parents
- They have lots of questions or anxieties
- You find in KC that you have a lot of Google
mothers and they challenge everything with lots
of questions ... but they listen more to the GP
than they do to nurses. - The parents who resist usually know someone who
has had a bad experience or theyve heard
something on the grape vine but they dont tell
you this when they come in so its really
difficult to work with because you dont really
know what the issue is -
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12HCP Workshop - Findings
- What issues do you have with the child
immunisation journey? - Parents
- They often dont want to hold the child
- At our practice weve had to train the
receptionist to hold the child - Its why school nurses enjoy immunisation the
parents arent present and the children are
reluctant to make a fuss in front of a teacher or
class mates -
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13HCP Workshop - Findings
- What issues do you have with the child
immunisation journey? - 2. The effects of the MMR diseases are not well
enough known by parents - We cover a travellers site and they point blank
refused to have the vaccine until one of the
children got mumps and they saw how sick they
were and they all came in for their vaccine. PN
KC - The acronym MMR
- Parents have an issue with MMR because it is 3
in 1, yet have already had a 5 in 1
(DTaP/IPV/Hib) without demur. Should the name
change to make it less obviously 3 in 1? -
-
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14HCP Workshop - Findings
- What issues do you have with the child
immunisation journey? - 4. Administrative hassle
-
- Unclean databases
- Were chasing ghost patients that we know dont
exist because the records arent updated - Effort required to gain recalls
- Weve started doing text message recalls and
that works so much better than the letters. -
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15HCP Workshop - Findings
- What issues do you have with the child
immunisation journey? - Dislocated System
- Accessing and sharing patient records across
different reporting systems can be very
frustrating. - Co-operation between GPs, Practice Nurses,
Health Visitors, School Nurses, PCTs is not as
good as it needs to be. - It should be compulsory for private practices to
share details of their patients who have/have not
had their vaccinations.
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16HCP Workshop - Findings
- What issues do you have with the child
immunisation journey? - Inconsistency of information messaging
- There is no anchor information source for them
- Perceive currently available leaflets to be
vague or insufficiently detailed - Perceive there to be nothing available in a wide
range of languages. -
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17HCP Workshop - Findings
What issues do you have with the child
immunisation journey? 7. Migrants Families
coming from abroad have had MMR in their home
country but not to the same level as in the UK
nurses have to titrate the vaccination to bring
them up to the UK standard. 8. Distrust within
the Somali community Perception fanned by
propaganda that vaccinations are insidious
invasions of Muslims. Suggestion to get Mosques
on side to communicate the importance of
vaccination for the health of the child.
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18HCP Workshop - Findings
- Training Education
- All, bar GPs, had and continue to receive
training. - Most believed it to be good and some thought it
had improved recently - Updates are sometimes irrelevant e.g. health
visitor going to training for HPV which they do
not give - All claimed they had received no training in
dealing with anxious patients. - All claimed to read CMO letters and Vaccination
Update and appeared well informed.
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19HCP Workshop Idea Assessment
Patient Ideas assessed against 3
criteria Cost 1 Inexpensive 5 Extremely
Expensive Practicality 1 Highly Practical 5
Extremely Impractical Time to Effect 1
Short 5 Extremely long Treat results with
caution!
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20Idea Assessment
- What would be the best way to find out about
jabs? - Before the birth
- 1. Face to Face
- At hospital appointments 2.5
- Ante-natal class on subject 2.1
- Pre-appointment with GP or at check-up 2.0
- Meeting with other new parents in a facilitated
group 2.1
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21Idea Assessment
- What would be the best way to find out about
jabs? - Before the birth
- Communications
- DVD given during pregnancy 2.9
- TV screens in ante-natal departments 2.4
- TV channel (not subscription) 2.3
- Written
- In Pregnancy book, but easy to read with more
visuals 2.0 - Emmas Diary 2.0
- NHS leaflet sent to home or in Bounty Pack 2.0
- Text 2.1
- i-phone app 2.2
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22Idea Assessment
- What would be the best way to have your questions
answered? - Moderated Group discussion 3.4
- On-line forum 2.2
- Specialised jabs web-site 2.6
- Pharmacist 2.8
- Top supermarkets / Boots stand 2.5
- Imms helpline 2.7
-
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23Idea Assessment
- Where would be best?
-
- At home 4.0
- Mobile unit 3.4
- Specialised centre for immunisation 3.3
- Childrens environments 3.7
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24Idea Assessment
- Who could administer the jabs?
-
- Midwives 2.7
- Child-friendly nurses 2.2
- Health visitor 1.9
- Community immunisation specialist 2.3
- Parents, specifically Dads 3.7
- Phlebotomist 3.4
- Health advisor 3.1
- Pharmacist 2.8
- Paramedics 3.6
- Health care assistants 3.1
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25Idea Assessment
- When would be best?
-
- Greater flexibility 2.6
- Enable the making of appointments 2.7
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26Idea Assessment
- How could the experience be better?
- A less clinical environment 3.4
- Have a play worker 2.8
- Have a more calming position for the child 2.3
- Options of 2.1
- A nurse to hold the baby
- Take baby away
- Character transfer on plaster 2.3
- Reward for the child e.g. lollipop 2.3
- Telephone call to the parent 24 hours later 2.3
- Enable anonymous feedback 1.8
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27HCP Workshop Their Ideas
- What information should be made available and
how? - Timeline on an A4 sheet showing what vaccine is
due when - Visual aids specifically for showing how bad the
diseases are - Given 34-36 weeks in pregnancy
- Ideally the health visitor would meet with the
mum at 34-36 weeks to give them the red book and
the birth to 5 book and talk them through what to
expect when the baby is born including imms. - Have vaccination leaflets in different languages
- I can print off information for all sorts of
things in any language but I can only get
information for vaccinations in a few languages
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28HCP Workshop Their Ideas
- What information should be made available and
how? - Reminder letter to be sent out with a leaflet
- Have one good web-site that all HCPs use and to
which to direct patients - Parents evening at schools invite parents who
have had MMR to explain MMR to worried parents
(similar to what is currently offered for
breastfeeding) - Provide answers to frequently asked questions on
Mums Net - Proactive media relations to counteract negative
comment - Vanessa Feltz was going on about how bad MMR is
on the radio the other day.
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29HCP Workshop Their Ideas
- Training
- HCPs should have a better understanding of the
patient's journey - Workshop presentation was enlightening for many
and copies were requested - Training in dealing with anxious parents and the
best ways to address - specific myths.
-
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30HCP Workshop Their Ideas
- Who, Where, When
- Imms centre separate from GPs - offering
flexible hours - Immunisation days at nurseries and at schools
- Make it compulsory for children to have complete
MMR vaccinations up to the British standard in
order for them to gain entry into the UK -
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31HCP Workshop Their Ideas
- The Experience
- Better preparation for parents so they know
what to expect - Sweets before the jab
- Play specialist e.g. like they have at Great
Ormond St - Ensure the waiting time is short
- Reduce the turnover of practice nurses so that
parents can see the - same nurse each time they visit
- More time to give the jab
- the actual time it takes to give the jab is not
the problem its the engagement thats a
problem
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32HCP Workshop Findings
What degree of change is desirable? Incremental
5 or Radical 6 Voting in line with the
degree to which they might lose
income/responsibility/satisfaction.
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33Recommendations
- The Project originally envisaged that the next
stage be the - development of stimulus for intervention
concepts for further research. - Based on the findings to date we no longer feel
this to be appropriate. - The ideas that have been generated are
predominantly simple conceptually, and many would
undoubtedly be validated in a further round of
research.
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34Recommendations
- There is a strong strategic case to explore a
radical option placing responsibility for child
immunisation within a new or existing (NHS Blood
Transplant Immunisation) organisation, operating
pan London at the outset - Focus
- Economies of scale
- Obviate many current issues
- data collection and sharing across different
systems - requirement for collaboration across differing
organisations and professionals - inadequate core information
- GPs and HCPs seen as partial or having vested
interests -
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35Recommendations
- We should initiate projects in two areas that
will have specific influence on MMR uptake - 3.1 HCP Training
- A training course for HCPs involved in
immunisation should be scoped and developed. - Aims is to help HCPs to better empathise with
and confidently reassure anxious parents. - Should draw on the Patient Journey insights
gleaned from the Workshops and make use of the
Conversations videos. - Suggested Next Step Scope the course.
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36Recommendations
- 3.2 Central Information Content Provision - a
dedicated and actively managed Pan London
resource providing - a website and online forum, consistently
optimised for search - search engine marketing to guide parents
unerringly to the site - a range of leaflets, letter and text templates,
parent pre-briefing materials in multiple
languages - content to and influence with the publishers of
Emmas Diary, Red Book - a narrative line that works from pros (mumps is
deeply unpleasant) to cons (there has been a now
discredited link to autism) rather than from cons
to pros as in MMR the facts - Suggested Next Step Draft scope and brief
-
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37Recommendations
4. We should meet in a separate session or
workshop to review the balance of ideas generated
and determine whether and how they might be
progressed.
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