About
Facing the current and future challenges for EDs and ICUs
This event takes a close look at the highly stressful areas of the Emergency Department and Intensive Care, and the current challenges facing staff and patients. With expected workforce shortages and an older, urbanised and more ethnically diverse population with more complex medical problems, how will these units look in the future? We examine examples of best practice in developing safe staffing levels and how the workforce is adapting to meet future need.
Focus on new initiatives to improve patient outcomes
We look at some initiatives to improve patient outcomes; the 6-hour targets and hospitals after hours. Does primary care need to do more to remove the barriers to patient care in the community?
Rights and responsibilities in difficult situations and adverse events
We also investigate the requirements for care and how to deal with some of the difficulties that eventuate when dealing with patients and their families. What treatment options are available for mentally ill and addicted patients and what protection is available for children in critical care?
Registration specials
• 2 for 1 special: bring along a colleague for free! Simply register two people from the same organisation at the same time and the 2nd attends for free (conference only).
• Register and pay before 16th December 2011 to take advantage of our early bird specials.
Workshop
The art of managing patient flow
Full day separately bookable workshop: 22 February 2012
9.00am – 5.00pm
Solving the issues of flow in an Emergency Department requires a whole-of-health system approach. This workshop will provide insight into the tools and concepts that enable a complex health system to create flow. Participants will have the opportunity to practice these new skills and will leave the workshop having a better understanding of the key design elements for redesigning patient flow.
In this all-day workshop you will explore how health can learn about the art of designing business processes to enable flow from manufacturing and service businesses. Participants will be asked to redevelop a fictitious pharmaceutical business using techniques and ideas borrowed from industries such as auto-manufacturing, logistics and telecommunications. Participants will apply their learning using simulation exercises which replicate a complex manufacturing environment. The group will explore the impact of these ideas on our health system, and look at how these ideas can be incorporated into daily health operations.
Key areas of learning will involve:
• Queuing theory (understanding and managing variation in patient demand)
• The importance of single piece flow vs batch processing patients
• The foundation principles of Lean Thinking and Constraint Theory
• An overview of production planning principles applied to health
• The art of managing change in complex systems
Your workshop facilitators
Richard Hamilton, Business Development Manager, Canterbury DHB
Richards’s primary focus for the DHB is process redesign built around value streams, implementing the use of production planning methods in conjunction with Lean Thinking management principles.
Richard has over 20 years’ experience in production planning and management for logistics and service industries. Richard has specialised in working with service industries which can’t cap demand, such as Postal Authorities, Health Services, and Call Centres.
The key focus of Richard’s work is on identifying opportunities to improve process flows, and focusing on what information and tools frontline staff need to maintain a regular rate of work. ‘Improving the Patient Journey’ is a significant strategic programme focused on delivering these attributes within the Canterbury DHB.
Brian Dolan, Director of Service Improvement, Canterbury DHB; Director, Dolan & Holt Consultancy Ltd, UK
Brian’s role includes work on the ‘Improving the Patient Journey’ programme incorporating Collabor8 (lean thinking and leadership course) and the ward-based ‘Making Time for Caring’ projects. In the UK, he works with organisations undertaking leadership development, improvement in patient flow and systems reform. He did his psychiatric nurse training in Ireland and his general nurse training at St Mary’s Hospital, Paddington and worked in a number of London A&E departments.
Brian recently ran the ‘Lean thinking and leadership’ workshops for the Nursing and Midwifery Office of New South Wales Health, Australia. He has published over 100 papers in a range of nursing, medical and paramedic journals and is the co-editor of an international best-selling book on emergency nursing, the third edition of which will be published in 2012. He is currently writing up a doctoral dissertation at Oxford University into the consultation skills of emergency nurse practitioners.
Agenda
Agenda: Day 1
8.30
Registration and coffee
9.00
Opening remarks from the Chair
9.10
Setting the scene: Big picture problems for ED and ICU
• ED and ICU as the “safety police” of the health service
• Skill mix, appropriate service utilisation and service interfaces
• Championing quality and cost-effectiveness at the heart of the public health system
Dr Tim Parke, Clinical Director Adult Emergency Department, Auckland DHB
9.50
Meeting the targets while maintaining the quality of outcomes in the ED
• How the different DHBs have been meeting their target
• Have reduced waiting times seen a measurable improvement in quality of care?
• Meeting the targets within existing resources and the effect of seasonal variation
Professor Mike Ardagh, Professor of Emergency Medicine, University of Otago
10.30
Morning tea
10.50
Meeting increasing demand for the ICU
• Clinical governance in the ICU
• The increase in demands from surgery
• Pressure to move people out of ICU before they are ready
Dr Janet Liang, Clinical Director Intensive Care Unit, Waitemata DHB
11.30
Access block and its effect on the ED targets and the ICU
Dr Peter Jones, Director of Emergency Research, Auckland DHB
12.10
Helping families make the best decision
• Breaking bad news and who should be delivering it
• Managing the family dynamic
• Communicating the options and their consequences
• The cultural issues to be considered in end of life decisions
Cindy Penny, Social Worker, Emergency Department
Matalau Loli, Practice Supervisor Adult Social Work Team, Auckland DHB
Joanne Herd, Practice Supervisor Adult Social Work Team, Auckland DHB
12.50
Lunch
1.40
Hospitals after hours: Improving ED and ICU outcomes
John Crozier and Jane Goodwin, Clinical Team Coordinators, Christchurch Hospital
2.20
Case Study: Why patient flow is not just about the ED and ICU
Brian Dolan, Director of Service Improvement, Canterbury DHB
3.00
Afternoon tea
3.15
Case Study: Examining the primary care and ED interface and the need for more accessible primary care
• Cost, convenience and access: the blocks to primary care
• The further plans by primary care to lower the barriers to primary care experienced by some patients
• Is a 15-minute GP consultation suitable for all patients?
Dr Vanessa Thornton, Clinical Head Emergency Care, Counties Manukau DHB
Dr Ian Scott, Chair, Afterhours Alliance Taskforce; Chair, Auckland PHO
4.05
Panel Discussion: Is primary care coming to the ED?
• The extra resources required for extra screening
• The expected effect of integrated family health centres on the bundle of care
Dr Vanessa Thornton, Clinical Head Emergency Care, Counties Manukau DHB
Dr Ian Scott, Chair, Afterhours Alliance Taskforce; Chair, Auckland PHO
Alex Boersma, Service Manager Emergency Care, Counties Manukau DHB
5.00
End of day one & networking drinks
Agenda: Day 2
9.00
Welcome back from the Chair
Dr Ross Freebairn, Vice President, College of Intensive Care
9.05
Dealing with the shortage of ICU specialists in New Zealand
• The historical reasons for the shortage of intensivists
• Would NZ be better off adapting the model used in other regions?
• Addressing competency issues and a shrinking workforce
• The impact of less specialised and/or unregulated staff working in the traditionally closed environment of the ICU
Dr Ross Freebairn, Medical Director Intensive Care Services Clinical Director Acute Services, Hawke’s Bay Hospital
9.50
Case Study: Getting the staffing mix right in the ED: Best practice
• An agreed set of indicators for variance
• Triggers for action at ED and operations level
• Standard Operating Responses with accountabilities for action
• A multi-disciplinary approach
Rhonda McKelvie, CCDM Programme Consultant, Bay of Plenty DHB
10.30
Morning tea
10.50
Expanding the role of nurse practitioners
• What are the gaps in the service nurse practitioners are aiming to fill?
• Developing an independent and autonomous role
• Autonomous practice and clinical error
Michael Geraghty, Nurse Practitioner Adult Emergency Care, Auckland DHB
11.35
Learning from adverse events - managing information safely
• Engaging staff in review processes
• Interviewing staff
• Protected Quality Assurance Activities
• Disclosure to patients and families
• Disseminating learnings to staff
• Providing feedback to third party providers such as GP or ambulance staff
• Use of information in other legal processes such as HDC or Coroners Court
• Media requests
Peter Le Cren, Legal Counsel, Auckland DHB
12.15
Lunch
1.05
Treatment for mental health patients in acute care settings
• Options available when dealing with mental health patients
• Are the new health targets improving access for mental health patients?
• Understanding the Mental Health (Compulsory Assessment and Treatment) Act
Representatives from Department of Liaison Psychiatry,
Auckland DHB
1.50
When to say when: Managing patients’ demands for treatment, withdrawal of treatment, and dealing with difficult patients
• Demands for treatment by competent patients
• End of life decisions for the young
• Treatment vs care
Penny Andrew, Senior Associate, Buddle Findlay
Catherine Miller, Senior Solicitor, Buddle Findlay
2.35
Advance directives in the ICU and ED: Supporting the patient’s wishes
New Zealand. Advance directives are an important mechanism by which a patient can make a choice about possible treatment in the future.
• The legal standing of advance directives
• Establishing the validity of advance directives
• Respecting the patient’s wishes when families and/or clinicians disagree
• Advance refusals vs advance requests for treatment
• Strengthening the right to express wishes about future treatment
Amy de Joux, Senior Solicitor, Buddle Findlay
Iris Reuvecamp, Senior Associate, Buddle Findlay
3.15
Afternoon tea
3.30
The rights and responsibilities of child patients in critical care situations
• Patient confidentiality and the information that can be given to parents and caregivers
• Dealing with separated parents
• The State’s obligation to provide care
Maria Kazmierow, Family law barrister and mediator
4.15
Closing remarks from the Chair and end of conference

