Steering
committee to look at expanding complex care in London
Friday, June 30, 2006 -- Craig Anderson
A diverse group of health care professionals in the London region
have formed a steering committee to address gaps in service for patients
with complex and chronic medical needs.
The group, which includes long term care administrators,
doctors, physiotherapists, and hospital administrators want to develop
alternate, collaborative solutions to a “bottlenecking”
problem with patients who are ready to leave acute care, says Yolanda
Camiletti, coordinator of the 3B West Unit of Complex Continuing
Care at Parkwood Hospital.
The problem with “bottlenecking” begins
when a patient with significant, chronic medical needs is ready
to leave an intensive, acute care setting but still needs comprehensive
nursing support.
In the London area, these patients are typically
referred to Complex Care at Parkwood Hospital.
The program, which offers medical management,
nursing support and a range of diagnostic, technological and therapeutic
services, is designed to meet medical needs that can’t be
adequately addressed in the community or in long term care.
Once stabilized, the next step for many patients
in the Complex Continuing Care program is transfer to a long term
care home.
But with a shortage of beds and a lack of resources
or staff to adequately care for incoming residents with chronic
medical needs, LTC homes are hesitant to admit these residents,
which would over burden nursing staff.
For example, says Cameletti, a patient who requires
regular traceostomy suctioning but is otherwise well is technically
able to leave Complex Continuing Care.
The problem is, many long term care homes don’t
have the staffing or technological resources to perform the routine
suctioning to keep tracheostomy patients well.
So, they remain in Complex Continuing Care occupying
a bed that an acute care patient will soon need.
“It makes no sense,” she says.
The committee, who met Tuesday, June 20 at Parkwood
want to move from identifying gaps, says Camiletti, towards developing
strategies to deal with re-curring blockages in the health care
system.
“The time is right to make some good system
decisions,” she says. “We all have a sense of frustration
but a burning desire to improve things.”
A funding request for increase Complex Care beds
is one necessary step, she says, although a past request was denied.
Increasing the number of LTC beds is another route.
The committee plans to hold a workshop for local
and provincial politicians and LHIN representatives in the fall
to stress the areas in care where attention is needed.
The collaboration process, the “breaking
down of silos,” says Camiletti, has decreased some of the
frustration and enmity shown by different providers sharing the
same patience. Instead of blame, now there is greater understanding,
she says.
“It used to be ‘what are you
people doing over there?’” she says. “Now it’s
‘I understand, and how can I help?’”
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