A Better Inpatient Service: Introducing a Parkinson’s Disease Virtual Ward Round

Poster ID
1518
Authors' names
Dr Kerri Ramsay
Author's provenances
Department of Geriatrics, King's Mill Hospital

Abstract

Introduction

People with Parkinson’s disease (PwP) are more likely to be admitted to hospital and have longer lengths of stay than those without Parkinson’s disease (PD). Parkinson’s UK and NICE have proposed standards of care for inpatients with PD, including that PD specialists are alerted when PwP are admitted to hospital. 66% of UK hospitals don’t have an alert system in place, including King’s Mill Hospital (KMH).

Audit

Over a 6 month period, referrals to the PD service in KMH were audited. 128 referrals were made; 5 per week on average. Hospital-wide, around 12 PwP are admitted weekly. Therefore under 50% are referred for specialist input. 64% of patients had been in hospital over 24 hours before referral. 16 patients were referred to the PD service more than once during admission, reflecting ongoing management difficulties.

Intervention

The digital transformation team completed software changes to create an electronic alert when PwP are admitted to hospital. The local system for recording admission details and electronic prescribing, NerveCentre, can now generate an electronic list showing all inpatient PwP. A multi-disciplinary virtual PD ward round was introduced. Using NerveCentre, all PwP can be remotely reviewed and triaged. Proactive, positive interventions from the specialist PD team include: constipation management, osteoporosis screening, speech and language therapist review, cognitive assessment, issuing dysphagia cards, and advance care planning. NerveCentre enables remote medication reviews and audit of prescribing, ensuring that any breaches of the ‘Get It On Time’ campaign are reported via Datix, with relevant learning shared. The virtual ward round provides training opportunities for specialist registrars, junior doctors, and newly appointed PD specialist nurses.

Conclusion

The electronic flag permits more comprehensive, proactive and timely inpatient reviews of PwP. The interventions from this project enable the Trust to meet Parkinson’s UK recommendations and hopefully improves the inpatient experience of PwP.

Presentation

Comments

Very comprehensive and thorough QIP in PD. As a trainee, I was wondering did you receive any support in terms of implementing/organising this project? Thank you.

Submitted by Dr Nisha Sunuwar on

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Thank you for your comment. I did receive support - the movement disorders lead offered to support in any way I wanted. For my own benefit, I actually did all of the work myself, including approaching the board/ creating a business case, meeting with the digital transformation unit, auditing referrals to the PD service and helping design what the electronic platform would look like. It wasn't as demanding as it might sound - and my consultant would have supported at every step if I had asked him to. It was ultimately a fairly straightforward intervention, it was just clunky to facilitate with various hoops to jump through.

Submitted by Dr Kerri Ramsay on

In reply to by Dr Nisha Sunuwar

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