Skip to content
Skip to navigation
Email this page Print this page

Sharing Current Scottish Practice

Poster abstracts of the month: February

The SPPC Annual Conference in 2016 featured 36 poster displays, sharing work and research underway across Scotland. Each month, this blog focuses on the content of a few of these posters. This month, we focus on:

Developing Documentation for End of Life Care

Author(s)

Farquharson J

Following the recommendations of the Neuberger Report1 on the use of the LCP and subsequent guidance from SG we developed a means of recording, evidencing and auditing end of life care (EOLC) which met requirements of the SG’s four principles.

Thirteen key objectives were agreed in relation to evidencing and auditing appropriate EOLC. These were translated into an End of Life Care Record (EoLCR).

The project comprised two stages:

Stage 1 (5 week pilot)

ž Ward A: Patients identified as being in the last days/hours of life, care documented in EoLCR

ž Ward B: Patients identified as being in the last days/hours of life, care documented in Personal Care Records (PCR).

ž All data compared against the 13 objectives

ž EoLCR rolled out to all wards.

Stage 2 (Retrospective Audit)

A retrospective audit was undertaken of all deaths within the hospice over 3 months of implementation

We aimed to develop a robust means of evidencing EOLC which followed SG’s 4 principles. This relates to NHS Scotland’s 2020 vision that care will be provided to the highest standards of quality and safety, with the person being centre of all decisions.

The retrospective audit showed improvements in recording EOLC.

Using the EoLCR allowed us to evidence the principles of good EOLC especially in relation to nutrition, hydration and communication with patients/ families.

Development of the Scottish Acute Palliative Care Clinical Nurse Specialist Forum

Author(s)

Ewan D

Hospital palliative care teams have developed inconsistently over the past few decades and differ in their structure and numbers of healthcare professionals involved. The main role of an acute hospital palliative care team is to work collaboratively with other healthcare clinical specialties in an advisory, supportive and educative capacity to improve care delivered to palliative patients and families. The clinical nurse specialist in palliative care provides the backbone to these services across Scotland but with increasing clinical workloads, the demands on other key dimensions of the service such as research/audit/quality and service improvement can suffer. The founder of the group wanted to heighten the work that hospital palliative care teams do and provide a forum for acute palliative care clinical nurse specialists to network, provide information and support and collaboration on joint initiatives for practice and service development for hospital palliative care services across Scotland. The group developed named the Scottish Acute Palliative Care Clinical Nurse Specialist Forum consists of 30 members from 10 health boards across Scotland. The aims, objectives and workplan for the group are displayed on the poster along with contact details.

Difficult conversations with families and patients about end of life care after stroke: what are the educational needs of health care professionals?

Author(s)

Bailey F et al

This poster shows the results of a survey monkey in to the training and educational needs around having difficult and sensitive conversations with patients and families after an acute stroke. The participants were asked 9 questions related to their experience of this difficult area of work and what they felt were the most important areas for improving their own practice in future. This was the basis for a new STARS (Stroke Training Awareness Resource) module which was published on line in January 2016.

Does a pre-visit phone call result in improvement?

Author(s)

Smyth S

An area for improvement suggested by the Care Inspectorate was to 'consider' an audit of medication procedures in the CHAS at Home (CaH) Teams. We have four CaH Teams, one based at Rachel House, Robin House, Inverness and Aberdeen. Audits were carried out in 2015 and 2016 looking at the reviewing of the medication chart at the Pre Visit Phone Call and then on the arrival at the house. The five audit questions were based upon standards set out in the Standard Operating Procedure for Checklists were introduced between round one and two looking at standardising the pre visit phone call, preparing for a visit an on arrival at a visit checks.

The focus of this poster is looking at one of the five questions, 'Was a pre-visit phone call made to the parent/ carer to confirm the visit and check for if there have been any changes to the medication prescription since CHAS's last contact with the family?' The child's prescription often will have been altered by our acute and community colleagues. The poster demonstrates the before and after results following the introduction of the checklists and the feedback we later received from the Care Inspectorate.


More in your region
Loading ...