National Practitioner Programme An Update on the National Practitioner Programme Jackie Younger National Practitioner Programme Lead
National Practitioner Programme
An Update on the National Practitioner Programme
Jackie Younger
National Practitioner Programme Lead
National Practitioner Programme
Which Practitioner Programmes Have Moved Where and For How Long?
• New Ways of Working in Surgery (NWWS) – North West London HA (18 months)– SCPs– Endoscopy practitioner– Assistant theatre practitioner
• Perioperative Specialist Practitioner (PSP)– North West London HA (24 months)
• Emergency Care Practitioners– SfH with the career framework team (24 months)
National Practitioner Programme
Which Practitioner Programmes Have Moved Where and For How Long?
• New Ways of Working in Critical Care– North West London HA (12 months)– Assistant critical care practitioners– Advanced critical care practitioners
• Anaesthesia Practitioners– Shrops & Staffs HA (18 months)
• Medical Care Practitioners – South West London HA (24 months)
National Practitioner Programme
The Role of National Practitioner Lead
• Ensure links continue between NPP streams of work
• Identify & tackle common issues• Retain links to DH policy and HRD teams• Retain links to other teams e.g. skills for health• Ensure links to SHAs and all other key
stakeholders• Communication strategy
National Practitioner Programme
The journey towards mainstream
National Practitioner Programme
Surgical Care Practitioner
• Pre, intra & post operative role• Diagnostic and surgical intervention• Started Feb 2003 • Now 54 trainees in 32 organisations• 3 training centres• Definitive curriculum framework to be
published within two weeks• Assess initial demand
National Practitioner Programme
SCP Priorities
• Commission national training centres
• Continue to monitor progress & outcomes
• Quality and standards processes
• External evaluation
• Mainstream
National Practitioner Programme
Perioperative Specialist Practitioner
• Pre & Post operative role (ward / clinic only)• WTD pilot from April 2003• 5 sites – 12 trainees• One training centre – Imperial College• Success converted to commercial programme• WDDs pay for places
National Practitioner Programme
PSP Priorities
• Now into 3rd cohort• Monitor outcomes Cohorts 1, 2 and 3• Feedback to other WDDs / advertise places• Continue to monitor demand • Curriculum framework developments from SCP work
– interchange between roles• Masters level accreditation now optional• Mainstream
National Practitioner Programme
Assistant Theatre Practitioner
• Led by NSC WDD across – NSC, Essex, NRL, B&H
• Nurses and ODPs – advance their roles• So HCAs have to advance their roles• Scoping existing developments
National Practitioner Programme
ATP Priorities
• Share scoping work• Report potential of the roles• Link with wider stakeholder group• Testing SfH competences – sites selected• Recommend national transferable
developments
National Practitioner Programme
Endoscopy
• Small pilot in April 2003
• Who can be trained to do flexible sigmoidoscopy?
• 3 trainees – nurse, physiologist, PA
• Colonoscopy waiting down from 20 – 6 months
• National HRM awards runner up - 2004
National Practitioner Programme
Endoscopy Continued
• 8 new sites commenced in September 04
• Monitor outcomes and progress
• Report potential of the role
• Monitor year 2
• Impact on bowel screening ?
• Demand and ? more training centres
National Practitioner Programme
Endoscopy Priorities
• Now career framework for endoscopy
• 3 year – step on step off training in Hull
• Foundation – diploma – degree
• Monitor year 1 trainees - outcomes
• Recruit for 2006
• Promote programme widely
• Mainstream
National Practitioner Programme
NWW in Critical Care
• Assistant critical care practitioners• Senior & advanced practitioners• Scope existing roles • Developing R & R strategies• 8 development sites
National Practitioner Programme
CC Priorities
• Develop a career framework in critical care
• Map roles nationally
• Map national competences and training opportunities
• Look at care pathways
• Mainstream
National Practitioner Programme
New Ways of Working in AnaesthesiaTo develop an advanced practitioner role within
the anaesthetic team that will:• maintain patient safety• have transparency to the public, with particular
reference to responsibility, delegation and the referral of patients
• be supported by appropriate transferable education and training
• with medically qualified anaesthetic staff in a supervised capacity as part of the team
National Practitioner Programme
Anaesthesia Practitioner
• Started with 5 sites exploring & testing
overseas practitioners & development of a
redesigned role
• Commenced phase 2 October 2005 with 8
cluster networks involving 25 sites
• Developed a national learning programme
National Practitioner Programme
Anaesthesia Practitioner
• Exploring career pathway with different
entry levels including graduates
• Identify demand
• Record how the programme will influence – Doctors training in the future & WTD Compliance
– Theatre Utilisation
– Role and Career Pathways of ODPs and
Perioperative Nurses and others
National Practitioner Programme
Examples of Work • Pre operative assessment • Insertion of lines• Transfers to recovery / critical care• Assist with induction and reversal• Maintain anaesthesia• Post operative pain management
National Practitioner Programme
AP Priorities
• Start phase 3 and monitor the training programme delivery through all phases
• Promote the programme• Monitor outcomes• Explore workforce issues for whole theatre team• External evaluation• Mainstream
National Practitioner Programme
Medical Care Practitioners
• Increasing capacity in primary and secondary care through widening the source of healthcare professionals
• Recruitment – science graduates, armed forces etc
• Medical model supporting physicians but working in a multi-professional team
• Level of decision making based upon competence
National Practitioner Programme
Medical Care Practitioners
• Learning from global best practice e.g. US Physician Assistants
• Two pilot SHAs – North East London and South West London working in primary and secondary care
• Curriculum developed in partnership with Royal College of Physicians, Royal College of General Practitioners and Skills for Health.
National Practitioner Programme
MCP Priorities
• Consultation complete
• Analyse results
• Wider stakeholder links
• Monitor potential and outcomes
• Identify training centres
• Mainstream
National Practitioner Programme
Emergency Care Practitioners
• Nurses & Paramedics
• Road side → A & E
• Reduced transfers to A & E
• Meeting 4 hour trolley waits
• Assistant Practitioner Roles ?
National Practitioner Programme
ECPs Priorities
•Monitor consistency of delivery •National curriculum framework• Mainstream
National Practitioner Programme
National Practitioner Programme
• Holds the ring:• NWL / SASHA / SWL / SfH / RCN & others• Links to other stakeholders and SHAs• NPP implementation group • Common practical issues• Regulation• Communications Strategy
National Practitioner Programme
Regulation Issues
• ? Significantly different (SCP & AP)• ? Patient safety issues (ECP)• ? Direct entrants (MCP & AP)• Distributed regulation• Papers sent into the Foster review• Recommendations made to Ministers• Their views awaited• Then consultation
National Practitioner Programme
Wider Issues
• Local delivery plans – Workforce response• MMC• WTD• Changes to HAs and PCTs• Better healthcare closer to home• There is room for all practitioners
National Practitioner Programme
Jackie YoungerNational Practitioner Programme Lead
07789 653360