Mental health
Intelligent clinical leadership in mental health
Dr Alex Horne of North East
London NHS Foundation Trust examines why high quality business
intelligence is critical to meeting the unique set of challenges
being faced by mental health trusts and to creating future clinical
leaders.
July 2009
For decades, the focus in healthcare business intelligence has
been on acute hospitals, almost to the exclusion of all other
sectors. Even when other areas began to acquire systems, the
tendency was to start with primary care, and then commissioners, and
leave mental healthcare as something of an afterthought.
What has caused that to change has been the move towards
foundation trust status. Over half of all mental health trusts have
now achieved foundation status, putting them on a par with their
counterparts in the acute sector. As foundation trust enjoy
increased autonomy they face a requirement for improved management
and more robust financial control, which in turn poses a significant
and unique challenge to mental health trusts.
So what are the specific obstacles faced, and what role can
business intelligence play in helping to not only meet mandatory
mental health reporting requirements, but also to transform
healthcare delivery?
Bridging the geographical divide
Mental health trusts can operate over hundreds of sites across large
geographical areas, and across multiple local authorities and PCTs.
A large proportion of the work carried out by mental health
hospitals takes place on neither an inpatient nor an outpatient
basis, but through community contacts.
All of which poses a challenge in ensuring unified and accessible
clinical records — multiple case notes at different sites can make
it difficult for health and social care teams, clinicians and
managers to share patient data effectively to deliver the best
possible care.
The deployment of electronic patient record systems will improve
accessibility, but challenges remain, both in developing more
flexible systems which can be adapted to the needs of the clinicians
who use them, and also in educating clinicians on these new systems
and the way in which data needs to be recorded.
The approach we have taken at North East London is to deploy a
single data warehouse from Ardentia, to ensure the information silos
that can all too easily exist within the distributed geography of
mental health are broken down.
A web-based approach also means data
can be shared more easily. Improving access to data in this way will
not only improve care delivery, and meet management reporting
requirements, but is also a fundamental building block to
transforming healthcare delivery, giving clinicians the ability to
lead, in line with the recommendations of the Darzi review.
Business intelligence for business processes
Foundation status requires trusts to function on a robust and clear
business footing. Greater autonomy brings with it the need for more
far-reaching management decisions, based on reliable evidence and
giving clear understanding of the issues that need to be addressed.
There is also a requirement for far more detailed financial
reporting, a mandated requirement from Monitor, which oversees
foundation trust applications, regulates performance and requires
the development of service line reporting to meet these financial
requirements.
The challenge for senior clinicians is to understand the
financial and management issues related to the care being delivered,
in order to ensure more robust management. They need accurate
information on resources used, quality of care and financial
performance, and to access this, they need powerful business
intelligence solutions.
Dealing with complex patient pathways
Many patients with mental health have long-standing and complex
needs. Unlike acute physical care — where clear-cut pathways
determine the intervention needed — the challenge in mental health
is to bring the relevant services together at the right time,
according to patient need, ensuring the appropriate care bundles are
delivered.
Within the treatment of a single patient for a single condition,
there may be moments when the patient moves from one bundle of care
to another. This would be the case, for example, when the patient is
being treated for a sub-psychotic condition but goes through a
psychotic episode in the course of treatment. This all impacts on
resource usage and the costs involved.
Mental health trusts therefore require good quality data on
multiple patient episodes and need to reason in terms of real
pathways of care, in order to develop comprehensive reports and
develop the right care package. Business intelligence systems must
be able to bring together and link data from many different systems,
to build pathways that identify community contacts, therapy
sessions, outpatient attendances and so on into coherent pathways,
to be analysed as a package.
Bringing it all together
That kind of complex care then needs to be married with financial
data drawn from our accounting systems so that we can provide
service line reporting and meet the management requirements set out
by Monitor.
Looking at the financial implications and management issues
associated with the care delivered in this way also does something
else that is profoundly important: just as it brings together data
about the healthcare activity we carry out, the inpatient stays,
outpatient attendances and community contacts we deliver, with data
from our accounts, so it brings together clinicians who provide the
care with the finance managers who are answerable for the
performance of the Trust.
Bringing together clinicians and managers to break down
information barriers and meet the unique data challenges within
mental health will not happen overnight, but in doing so, will
generate unprecedented improvements in patient care.
Creating the clinical leaders of the future
The Department of Health, guided by the recommendations of the Darzi
review, is committed to bringing senior clinicians and consultants
to the very heart of decision-making. To do so requires clinicians
to have an understanding of the wider financial and management
issues, and the resulting challenge for trusts is to provide the
necessary data. This is where business intelligence is crucial,
bringing together information on care delivered, outcomes and the
financial costs attached.
North East London Foundation Trust is working closely with
Ardentia to ensure we have good quality service line reporting which
provides the data we need on cost, activity and outcome. As a
result, for the first time, clinicians will get a more comprehensive
understanding of the care delivered, empowering them to make more
meaningful decisions, and to work more closely with commissioners to
shape future healthcare delivery.
Give senior clinicians the data they need, and you give them the
capacity to lead, to function in a business manner as proposed in
the Darzi review, and as a result to transform care delivery and
meet the needs of those who need it.
Dr Alex Horne, Medical Director at North East
London NHS Foundation Trust.
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