WelcomeNIHR CLAHRC East Midlands Annual Meeting
Growing Momentum – Sharing and Learning
A partnership between
Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust
and the Universities of Nottingham and Leicester
24 March 2015, Eastwood Hall Hotel, Nottingham
East Midlands
Prevalance of Long Term Conditions • 15 million with LTC
• 70% NHS Budget
NHS Outcomes Framework 5 Domains
Public Health England Priorities
Department of Health Priorities for the East Midlands (Set out in the East Midlands Health Strategy 2009)
“The priorities for the East Midlands are to address health inequalities, levels of tobacco use, harmful alcohol use, obesity, physical activity, avoidable injury and death, affordable warmth and the health of children and young people.”
Key National and Local Priorities
Contributions from Matched Funding
NIHR CLAHRC East Midlands
Structure
• Improve patient outcomes
• Bring together health stakeholders to support the NHS to meet locally identified priorities
• Bridge the second gap in translation
• Implement partnership model for (a) research in public (b) uptake of research evidence into practice
• Increase capacity in the East Midlands
• Understanding conditions for the uptake of research
CLAHRC EM Objectives
“Improve patient outcomes through the conduct and
application of research evidence of local relevance and international quality”
Applied Health Research
Year One
• 18 Phase One and Two projects are up and running across the East Midlands.
• 10 Projects provisionally selected for Phase Three from an rigorous approach involving Partners and Public
Bringing People Together
Year One
• Received £591k cash matched funding
• On track to receive £18m overall
• Set up the East Midlands CLAHRC faculty. We currently have 90 members.
• PARADES Event in December 2014 with the EM AHSN #StephenFryLiked
• Developed an Industry Strategy which has been distributed by the NIHR to all other CLAHRCs
“Build on the achievements of the LNR and NDL CLAHRCs in
bringing together stake holders to support the NHS to meet locally identified priorities”
“Bring about a further step change in the quality and
quantity of activity taking place to bridge the second gap in
translation”
Implementing Evidence
Year One
• EM AHSN have pledged funding of £525,000 to support the implementation of CLAHRC EM projects.
• Appointed 34 knowledge
brokers who are playing a key
role in developing research
interest and capability
“Implement and evaluate a partnership model for (a) co-producing research in public
health and chronic disease, and (b) co-producing the rapid
uptake of research evidence into widespread practice”
Our Partnership Model
Year One
• Knowledge Translation strategy has been developed and disseminated amongst project teams and successful Phase 3 applicants
• All research theme staff have attended implementation workshops
“Increase capacity in the EM to conduct high quality health
research and to apply research evidence”
Capacity Development
Year One
• We have appointed seven PhD students and three more planned in September
• Commenced our training programme presenting short courses for NHS staff in 2015. Courses were put forward after consultation with NHS partners.
“Develop a greater understanding of the necessary and desirable conditions for the uptake of research findings and
spread of evidence-based practices”
Capacity Development
Year One
• Researchers in the IEI Theme have commenced 3 studies which covers PPI, use of technology in implementation and analysis in the CLAHRC
• All research teams complete Quarterly Reports creating a log of implementation activities and approaches. This will provide a valuable resource.
Year One
• PPI strategy completed and being implemented.
• Partners Council set up and meeting regularly.
• Set up the Centre for BME Health. The Centre has already delivered 11 community health information events to raise awareness of diabetes and safer fasting during Ramadan to more than 250 individuals from 13 different ethnic groups.
Public Involvement
“Provide opportunities for stakeholder engagement and across
all of its structures, themes and projects so that intended end-users
of research can help to shape its selection, design, delivery,
dissemination and implementation”
• Overview of our progress including
achievements
• Give a wider perspective on the
relationship between our partners
• Outline our challenges
• Encourage networking
• To thank you for all that you have done
in the last year.
• We could not have achieved this
without your support!
Aims and Objectives of Today
Mission Statement
Thank you for listening and
Enjoy the Day
www.clahrc-em.nihr.ac.uk
@kamleshkhunti
@CLAHRC_EM
This research was funded by the National Institute for Health Research Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care East Midlands (NIHR CLAHRC EM). The views expressed in this presentation are those of
the speaker(s) and not necessarily those of the NHS, the NIHR or the Department of Health.
NIHR CLAHRC East Midlands - Embedding a
Mature CLAHRC
Chair – Professor Kamlesh Khunti, Director
A partnership between
Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust
and the Universities of Nottingham and Leicester
‘Building Partnerships’
Karen Glover
Director of Partner Relations and Operations,
NIHR CLAHRC EM
Head of Clinical Programmes EM AHSN
A partnership between
Nottinghamshire Healthcare and the
Universities of Nottingham and Leicester
• NHS, Industry, Academia
• Voluntary Sector and Local Authorities
• Patients/Public
• Region-wide: BRU, CRN, SCN, Clinical Senate,
HEEM, EMLA, AHSN
• National NIHR CLAHRC
Who are our Partners?
• Improve Population Health
• Increase Capacity and Capability for Research
and Innovation
• Shared Understanding and Ownership
• Translation of Research into Practice
Why Collaborate?
• Communications
• Networks
• Events
• Organisational Presentations - NHS, Academia
• Industry
How Do We Engage?
• Governance Arrangements
• Project Selection
• CLAHRC Faculty
• Networks of Practice
• Knowledge Brokers
How Do We Engage?
Thank you for listening
www.clahrc-em.nihr.ac.uk
@CLAHRC_EM
This research was funded by the National Institute for Health Research Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care East Midlands (NIHR CLAHRC EM). The views expressed in this presentation are those of
the speaker(s) and not necessarily those of the NHS, the NIHR or the Department of Health.
NIHR CLAHRC East Midlands Annual Meeting
Growing Momentum – Sharing and Learning
A partnership between
Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust
and the Universities of Nottingham and Leicester
Co-Production & Translation
Justin Waring,
IEI Theme Lead, CLAHRC East Midlands
A partnership between
Nottinghamshire Healthcare and the
Universities of Nottingham and Leicester
Getting evidence into practice
The Translation Gap!
Research evidence takes a long time
make an impact on clinical practice
and service delivery
The problem
Closing the Gap
Implementation research offers a
range of ideas and techniques to help
get knowledge into practice
Understanding the gap
• Clinical Research and Clinical Practice operated in different ways:– Separated by a common language
– Characterised by different cultures
– Measured and assessed in terms of different performance
– Driven by different pressures and priorities
• Clinical research is often done ‘on’ clinical practice, not ‘with’ clinical practice
– Research questions reflect the interests of researchers, not needs of practitioners
– Research design does not take into account local operational issues
– Research activities can treat practitioners as ‘subjects’
– Research findings are not valued or recognised by practitioners
– Research does not make a meaningful or lasting impact on practice
Mode 1 or Mode 2 Research
CLAHRCs are designed to close this gap between research and practice
through acting as the collaborative bridge...Mode 2 Research
NIHR CLAHRC-EM undertakes world-class applied health research that aims to close the gap between research and practice!
• Applied research – research that tests ‘proven interventions’ in the context of local care services and needs
• Closing the gap – research that is ‘co-produced’ by research and practice communities so that it fits with the context of local care services and needs
• Co-production – where research teams and practitioners work together to design and ‘implement’ applied research
• Implementation research – research that aims to understand how best to co-produce and implement research
The CLAHRC Approach
We have learnt a lot about what works in closing the gap…
• Communication & Translation
• Engagement
• Teamwork
• Dealing with ‘push-back’
• Timing & Pace
The benefits of a mature CLAHRC
Mapping out the journey
Getting Research Into Practice (GRIP)
• Develop and conduct applied research that is relevant to our NHS partners, and to
translate the research findings into improvement outcomes for patients
• Create a distributed model of implementation and translation that links those who
conduct applied research with those who will use it
• Create and embed approaches to applied research that takes into account the way
care is organised and delivered across our region and aligns with AHSN
• Increase capacity for applied health research and translation
Our approach
• NHS partners should be involved in the initial stages of problem definition and project specification and all stages of research activity – after all our partners will use the findings
• Project teams (of researchers and practitioners) need to build implementation and translation into their research activities – it cannot be ‘done’ by someone else or after the research findings have been collected (this would recreate the gap)
• By understanding the wider environment research can make a sustained impact and ideally be spread at scale and pace with relevant partners
• By building capacity within both clinical and practice communities, we can ensure the long term and sustained generation and use of evidence and its translation into practice
What does this mean?
Knowledge brokers help ‘get the right information, to the right people, at the right time’
• They are intermediaries or go-betweens who work between research and practice
partners
• They identify insight or information that might be of use to other partners
• They translate insight and information so it is in an appropriate format and language
• They communicate insight between partners
• The can champion change and support the use of insight between communities
Knowledge Brokers
Co-production and translation is based upon the formation of new teams, communities or
networks between research and practice partnership
• Networks help bring together diverse partners around a shared purpose
• Networks coordinate activities and foster cooperation
• Networks help build a critical mass of energy, expertise and experience
• Networks support knowledge sharing and learning
• Networks can become self-sustaining
Networks
1. CLAHRC projects are based on co-production and partnership between research
(knowledge producers) and practice communities (problem owners)
2. Project teams are responsible for developing their own co-production and translation
activities to reflect their specific challenges, but with the support of the CLAHRC team
3. Project teams should look to use knowledge brokers and/or networks as a way of co-
producing and translating research into sustained service improvement
Key points
Thank you for listening
www.clahrc-em.nihr.ac.uk
@CLAHRC_EM
This research was funded by the National Institute for Health Research Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care East Midlands (NIHR CLAHRC EM). The views expressed in this presentation are those of
the speaker(s) and not necessarily those of the NHS, the NIHR or the Department of Health.
NIHR CLAHRC East Midlands Annual Meeting
Growing Momentum – Sharing and Learning
A partnership between
Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust
and the Universities of Nottingham and Leicester
CLAHRC EM Annual Meeting 24th
March 2015
Growing momentum:
Sharing & Learning
Working with the EM AHSN
Professor Rachel Munton
Managing Director, EMAHSN
EM CLAHRC/AHSN have clear and complementary aims and related clinical foci
Both shaped to ensure the two organisations work together effectively to deliver signification improvements
Agreed approach that differentiates between the academic discipline of implementation/improvement science and the change activity of evidence-informed practice improvement
East Midland’s approach
“There is a clear relationship between the
EM CLAHRC and EM AHSN, with the
CLAHRC resources supporting the
generation of high quality and locally
relevant evidence and developing the
science of implementation and the AHSN
supporting the practicalities of “putting
evidence into practice” at a suitable
stage of development.”
INVENTION EVALUATION ADOPTION DIFFUSION
NIHR
Infrastructure
BRCs , BRUs etc
NIHR
Infrastructure
CLAHRCs
AHSCs AHSNs
NHS
Patient Care
NHS
Patient Care
NIHR
Infrastructure
Clinical Research Network
NIHR
Programmes
MRC
Programmes “improving patient outcomes through the conduct and
application of applied healthresearch”
Research and Innovation Landscape
INVENTION EVALUATION ADOPTION DIFFUSION
NIHR
Infrastructure
BRCs , BRUs etc
NIHR
Infrastructure
CLAHRCs
AHSCs AHSNs
NHS
Patient Care
NHS
Patient Care
NIHR
Infrastructure
Clinical Research Network
NIHR
Programmes
MRC
Programmes“AHSNs have a complementary role in the translation process by focusing on the adoption and spread of innovative clinical practice that are of proven cost-effectiveness, across whole
healthcare systems, linking back with the research and development community.”
Research and Innovation Landscape
INVENTION EVALUATION ADOPTION DIFFUSION
NIHR
Infrastructure
BRCs, BRUs, CRFs
NIHR
Infrastructure
CLAHRCs
AHSCs AHSNs
NHS
Patient Care
NHS
Patient Care
NIHR
Infrastructure
Clinical Research Network
NIHR
Programmes
MRC
Programmes
Research and Innovation Landscape
Specific research related activity
–from NHS England AHSN
licence measurements
Measurement 5: summary of research
evidence that has successfully been
implemented and translated into practice, and
provide evidence of working with NIHR
CLAHRCS
Measurement 12:work with their Clinical
Research Networks and demonstrate how they
have supported delivery of their metrics
Specific research related activity –
from NHS England AHSN licence
measurements
Measurement 13: demonstrate how the AHSN has supported the delivery of NIHRS objectives. AHSNs may seek to engage in additional research activities beyond those agreed within NIHR objectives –in this case the AHSN must demonstrate how the research aligns with the AHSNs clinical or service priorities, expenditure, clinical and ROI activities
Measurement 14: reflect the breadth and depth of the AHSNs academic partnerships ensuring that academic collaboration is not fixed around a single institution
NIHR CLAHRC East Midlands Annual Meeting
Growing Momentum – Sharing and Learning
A partnership between
Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust
and the Universities of Nottingham and Leicester
Overview of the NIHR Infrastructure:
providing the facilities and people for a thriving
research environment
Dr Tony Soteriou, Acting Deputy Director
Head of NHS Research Infrastructure and Growth
Research and Development Directorate
CLAHRC East Midlands
24 March 2015
• improve health outcomes through
advances in research
• improve quality of care by NHS
participation in the research process
• strengthen International competitive
position in science
• drive economic growth through
investment by life science industries
Why is the Government committed to Research in the NHS?
Patients
NHS
Universities
Health Research Challenges, 2005
NHS R&D funding
was allocated on
a historical basis
NHS Trust
management
was seen as the
bureaucratic
block to clinical
research
Few effective
incentives for
research in the
NHS
Dramatic fall in
numbers of
clinical
academics
40% of clinical
academics
funded by NHS
Difficulty in
developing
sustainable
capacity
Problems with
career paths for
all professions in
research
Low “applied”
evidence base
Perception that
NHS research
funding was
second class
Perception that
applied health
research was
second class
Vision
“To improve the health and wealth of the nation through research.”
January 2006
Infrastructure
Clinical Research
Facilities, Centres
& Units
Clinical Research
Networks
Research
Research Projects
& Programmes
Research
Management
Systems
Research
Information
Systems
Systems
Patients
&
Public
Universities
Investigators &
Senior
Investigators
Associates
Faculty
Trainees
Research Schools
NHS Trusts
NIHR Health Research System
National Institute for Health Research
• Between Government, Charity and Industry
• Between NHS and University
• Between research leaders and research facilitators
• Between different health care professions
• Between different research disciplines
• Between researchers and patients
An Integrated Health Research System
Partnership
Biomedical Research Centres
Basic Research
National Institutefor Health Research
This pathway covers the full range of
interventions - pharmaceuticals,
biologicals, biotechnologies, procedures,
therapies and practices - for the full range
of health and health care delivery -
prevention, detection, diagnosis,
prognosis, treatment, care.
Patient Safety Translational Research Centres
Research for Patient Benefit
Programme Grants for Applied Research
Health Technology Assessment
Invention for Innovation
Collaborations for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care
Centre for Reviews & Dissemination, Cochrane, TARs
Development Pathway Funding
Public Health Research
Health Services and Delivery Research
INVENTION EVALUATION ADOPTION DIFFUSION
NHS England Commissioning
National Institute for Health & Care Excellence Guidance on Health & Healthcare
NHS Supply Chain Support for Procurement
NHS Evidence Access to Evidence
InnovationAcademic Health Science Networks
Patient CareProviders of NHS Services
Clinical Research Facilities
Experimental Cancer Medicine Centres
Horizon Scanning Centre
Centre for Surgical Reconstruction & Microbiology
Biomedical Research Units
MedicalResearch Council
The central role of NIHR research in the innovation pathway
Healthcare Technology
Co-operatives
Research Schools
Efficacy Mechanism and Evaluation
Diagnostic Evidence
Co-operatives
Infrastructure
Clinical Research Networks
Clinical Research Facilities, Centres &
Units
Aim
Harness the research potential of the NHS to improve health and deliver competitive advantage for increased economic growth
“… the support and facilities the NHS needs for first class research…”
Infrastructure
Clinical Research Networks
Clinical Research Facilities, Centres &
Units
• Clinical Research Networks
• Biomedical Research Centres
• Biomedical Research Units
• Translational Research Partnerships
• Translational Research Collaborations in
Rare Diseases and Dementia
• Clinical Research Facilities
• Experimental Cancer Medicine Centres
• Patient Safety Translational Research
Centres
• Collaborations for Leadership in Applied
Health Research and Care
• Healthcare Technology Cooperatives
• Diagnostic Evidence Cooperatives
NIHR Clinical Research Infrastructure
Biomedical Research Centres
Biomedical Research Units
Clinical Research Facilities
Experimental Cancer Medicine Centres
Clinical Research Networks
Invention Evaluation Adoption
Healthcare Technology
Co-operatives
Diagnostic Evidence
Co-operatives
Patient Safety Translational
Research Centres
Collaborations for Leadership in
Applied Health Research and Care
Translational Research
Partnerships and
Collaborations
NIHR Biomedical Research CentresNewcastleOxfordCambridgeSouthamptonImperialUCLHGreat Ormond StMoorfieldsGuy’s and St ThomasRoyal MarsdenSouth London and Maudsley
NIHR Healthcare Technology Co-operativesBirminghamBradfordLeedsNottinghamSheffieldBartsCambridgeGuy’s & St Thomas’
NIHR Biomedical Research UnitsNewcastle – dementiaLeeds – musculoskeletalCentral Manchester – musculoskeletalLiverpool – gastrointestinalNottingham – hearing/respiratory/gastrointestinalLeicester – cardiovascular/respiratory/nutritionBirmingham – gastrointestinalBristol – cardiovascular/nutritionOxford – musculoskeletalSouthampton – respiratoryLondon Imperial – cardiovascular/respiratoryBarts – cardiovascular UCL – dementiaSouth London and Maudsley - dementia
NIHR-supported Clinical Research FacilitiesAlder HeyBirminghamBrighton and SussexCambridgeThe ChristieExeterGuy’s and St ThomasImperialLeedsManchesterMaudsleyMoorfieldsNewcastleOxford cognitive health SheffieldSouthamptonSouth Manchester respiratory and allergyRoyal MarsdenUCLH
NIHR-Supported Facilities
Newcastle
Leeds
Sheffield
Leicester
Oxford
Bristol
Brighton
Peninsula
London
Bradford
NIHR Diagnostic Evidence Co-operativesImperialLeeds NewcastleOxford
Manchester
NIHR/CR-UK Experimental Cancer
Medicine CentresBirminghamCambridgeLeedsLeicesterBarts/ BrightonICRImperialKing’s College LondonUCLManchesterNewcastleOxfordSheffieldSouthampton
Liverpool
Exeter
Southampton
NIHR Collaborations for Leadership inApplied Health Research and Care
East of EnglandEast Midlands
Greater ManchesterNorth Thames
North West CoastNorth West London
OxfordSouth London
South West PeninsulaWest
West MidlandsWessex
Yorkshire and Humber
Cambridge
Nottingham
Birmingham
NIHR Collaborations for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care
• 9 Pilot CLAHRCs created in 2008 for 5 years
• £50m funding awarded (rising to £88m over course of award)
• Second competition: 13 CLAHRCs funded for 5 years from January 2014
• Funding increased to £124 million
• Address the “second translational gap”
Aims of the CLAHRCs
• to develop and conduct applied health research relevant across the NHS, and to translate research findings into improved outcomes for patients;
• to create a distributed model for the conduct and application of applied health research that links those who conduct applied health research with all those who use it in practice across the health community;
• to create and embed approaches to research and its dissemination that are specifically designed to take account of the way that health care is delivered across the local AHSN;
• to increase the country’s capacity to conduct high quality applied health research focused on the needs of patients, and particularly research targeted at chronic disease and public health interventions;
• to improve patient outcomes locally and across the wider NHS; and
• to contribute to the country’s growth by working with the life sciences industry.
North West London
Greater
Manchester
West Midlands
South WestPeninsula
Yorkshire & Humber
13 NEW Collaborations from January 2014
East of England
NIHR Centres for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care (CLAHRCs)
East Midlands
South London
North West Coast
North Thames
Oxford
West Country
Wessex
Pilot scheme to 2014
CLAHRC Themes, 2014
Overall NIHR CLAHRC programme outputs: 2008 - 2013
Research projects
Implementation Projects
Publications
1,012
575
1,485
Subjects recruited
3,194,423
External income Generated
£74,707,024
Higher degrees
1,494
£0
£2
£4
£6
£8
£10
£12
£14
£16
2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 2013/14
Mill
ion
s
DH/NIHR
Research council
Research Charity
Other non-commerical
Industry Funding
Pilot CLAHRC types of external funding
Pilot CLAHRC types of external funding(5-year Total )
CLAHRC Impacts – East Midlands
• IMPAKT (IMProving Patient Care and Awareness of Kidney disease progression Together) software tool can identify Practice patients at risk from CKD:
- being implemented across the country in a number of CCGs and AHSNs including the whole of Wales.
- adopted by Manchester’s AHSN and the East Midlands Strategic Clinical Network.
- used by HQIP to describe QI requirements for the national CKD audit.
The tool continues to identify patients at risk from CKD enabling early intervention and potentially saving the NHS £millions.
CLAHRC Impacts – East Midlands
• Diabetes education and Self-Management for Ongoing and Newly Diagnosed (DESMOND) programme:
- Offered by more than 60% of providers within the UK
- Significant increase in the number of people with type 2 diabetes using DESMOND as a consequence of the programme acquiring QOF points in March 2013.
- Utilised in a number of international settings
CLAHRC Impacts – East Midlands
• Walking Away from Diabetes - a structured education programme encouraging and supporting physical activity in those at risk from diabetes:
- recommended for use in the NICE Guidelines for Early Intervention and Prevention of Diabetes.
- commissioned by 9 CCGs in England as well being used in health services in Ireland, Gibraltar and Western Australia.
CLAHRC Impacts - East Midlands
• The Individual Placement and Support (IPS) which aims to help people with mental health problems achieve paid employment:
- Study led to 34% of participants finding employment within a year of undertaking the programme.
- A further 26% went into education, training or voluntary work.
- When comparing the results with the Department of Work and Pension’s own Work Programme using the DWP’s own outcome measure, IPS programme was 9% more effective.
CLAHRC Impacts - East Midlands
• Return to Work After Strokestudy aims to address the problems of getting stroke survivors back to work and to design a vocational rehabilitation (VR) service for people who have had a stroke:
- Stroke survivors were twice as likely to be in work compared to usual care at 12 months after stroke
- Intervention found to be cost effective, saving £3,000 per case (total of health and social costs).
CLAHRC - Impacts
Capacity Development
3,100 trainees were supported in the NIHR infrastructure between April 2013 and March 2014.
INVENTION EVALUATION ADOPTION DIFFUSION
NIHR
Infrastructure
BRCs, BRUs, CRFs
NIHR
Infrastructure
CLAHRCs
AHSCs AHSNs
NHS
Patient Care
NHS
Patient Care
NIHR
Infrastructure
Clinical Research Network
NIHR
Programmes
MRC
Programmes
NIHR and the Research and Innovation
Landscape
CLAHRC East Midlands:Contribution to Growth
Case Example: Supporting efficient use of NHS resources
The NIHR’s Key Contributions to Growth
• Supporting collaborations and contract research with the life sciences industry
• Creating the research environment that supports the nation’s international competitiveness
• Attracting, developing and retaining a highly skilled health research workforce
• Providing the clinical evidence to help the NHS and public sector to make efficient use of resources
• Providing the research evidence that contributes to establishing a healthier workforce and wider population
Major focus on Life Sciences
• Establish Health Research Authority
• NIHR funding conditional on 70 day
benchmark for trial start-up
• More information about clinical trials to
enable greater public involvement
• Build consensus on using e-health
record data
• Establish Translational Research
Partnerships
• Encourage innovation in NHS
procurement
• NHS Chief Executive to report on
accelerating adoption and diffusion of
innovation in the NHS
Research and the NHS:
Plan for Growth
BIS & DH Prime Minister
Strategy for UK Life Sciences
“Life science - and the UK’s role
in it - is at a crossroads.
Behind us lies a great history of
discovery, from the unravelling
of DNA to MRI scanning and
genetic sequencing.
We can be proud of our past,
but this government is acutely
aware that we cannot be
complacent about the future.”
David Cameron
December 2011
Research and Growth:
Strategy for UK Life Sciences
Summary
• NIHR is a health research system in the NHS
• Health and Wealth of the nation through health research
• NIHR CLAHRCs an important part of NIHR Research Infrastructure – focussed on closing the gap between evidence and practice
• CLAHRC impacts have led to increased funding
• New NIHR CLAHRC East Midlands
• CLAHRCs contribute to NIHR’s mission to improve the health and wealth of the nation through research.
The NIHR in numbers
Overview of the NIHR Infrastructure:
providing the facilities and people for a thriving
research environment
Dr Tony Soteriou, Acting Deputy Director
Head of NHS Research Infrastructure and Growth
Research and Development Directorate
CLAHRC East Midlands
24 March 2015
NIHR CLAHRC East Midlands Annual Meeting
Growing Momentum – Sharing and Learning
A partnership between
Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust
and the Universities of Nottingham and Leicester
Join the conversation
If you hear something you like, or want to
challenge, or simply want to share an
observation, join the Twitter conversation using
@CLAHRC_EM and #clahrc in your tweet.
#clahrc@CLAHRC_EM
NIHR CLAHRC East Midlands related Twitter accounts
@EMRAN_ageingEast Midlands Research into Ageing Network
@EMCBMEHEast Midlands Centre for Black and Minority Ethnic Health
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Password:
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What Success Looks Like: Reflecting from
CLAHRC
Chair – Beth Allen, Infrastructure Manager, Department of
Health
A partnership between
Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust
and the Universities of Nottingham and Leicester
CLAHRC EM Scientific Committee
Richard MorrissDirector of Research CLAHRC EM
A partnership between
Nottinghamshire Healthcare and the
Universities of Nottingham and Leicester
• To ensure that all CLAHRC funded research projects above £50,000 are of high scientific quality compatible with world class applied healthcare research
• Fit with the overall principles of CLAHRC EM –
– Active PPI involvement
– Implementation plan in East Midlands
– value for money
• Assurance of money well spent to partners, including NIHR, through CLAHRC Board
Purpose
1. External peer review (3 subject reviewers), PPI review, AHSN review, methods review (statistics, health services research, qualitative/organisation science) 1 month before Scientific Committee
2. Scientific Committee, externally chaired, and all voting members independent but familiar with CLAHRC:
primary care chairstatisticianhealth services researchPPIsociologist
Stages
1. Scientific Committee meets when required according to anticipated submission of projects (chief investigator, CLAHRC and theme managers)
2. Considers all reviews, discusses, makes recommendations to CLAHRC EM Director and CLAHRC EM Board
3. 4 decisions:
Pass - no further recommendations, consider reviewer’s comments
Minor amendment - project can start, expect reply, SC and reviewer comments optional to address
Major amendment - project cannot start until SC and reviewer comments are addressed
Reject and resubmit
Process
1. Chief investigator and theme manager
2. Summary reported as standing item to CLAHRC EM Executive and CLAHRC EM Board
Reporting
1. Quarterly reports from each project to Director of Performance
2. Annual review of all projects based on reports to Director of Performance as chosen by Chair of Scientific Committee
3. Formative suggestions to improve performance of underperforming or delayed projects
4. Summative recommendations to CLAHRC EM Director and CLAHRC EM Board if project is failing to deliver
Ongoing Monitoring of Projects
19 projects have been reviewed:
1 passed
4 minor amendment
10 major amendment - 9 then passed,
- 1 redesigned & passed.
4 rejected - 3 redesigned & passed
1 to be redesigned
Results
Weakness:
Delay in starting project
Benefits:
Increased PPI, implementation, better quality design, meets ethics peer and statistics review, value for money,
assurance for partners with receipt of matched funding
Benefits and Weaknesses
NIHR CLAHRC East Midlands Annual Meeting
Growing Momentum – Sharing and Learning
A partnership between
Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust
and the Universities of Nottingham and Leicester
Individual Placement & Support
Eric Wodke
IPS Development Manager
The Positive Impact of Individual Placement and Support (IPS) on People with Severe Mental Health Problems in Nottingham: An
Implementation ApproachAIMS
1. Implement IPS into secondary mental health service in Nottingham
2. Support service users into work and related vocational activities
3. Compare IPS alone with IPS work focused psychological support
Results
• 74 people recruited into study
• 59% of sample attained paid work and related opportunities
• Colocation of employment specialist into clinical teams – key to implementation
• Establish Steering group to drive change management process – key to implementation
Evidence base• Vocational rehabilitation for people with severe mental illness, Cochrane
database of systematic reviews (Marshall et al 2001):
• An update on randomised controlled trials of evidence based supported employment – IPS. Psychiatric Rehabilitation Journal 31, 280-290 (Bond et al 2008):
• The IPS approach to vocational rehabilitation for young people with first episode psychosis in the UK. Journal of Mental Health 19(6): 483-491 naturalistic evaluation
• First episode psychosis and employment. International Review Of Psychiatry Literature review, April 2010:22(2): 148-162 (Rinaldi et al 2010)
Evidence base• Client characteristics little impact on vocational outcomes• (Bond et al, 1995, 1997, 2001; Grove, 2000; Meuser et 2004, Catty et al,
2007)• • No relationship between psychiatric symptomatology /• disability outcomes of vocational rehabilitation (Anthony, 1984,• 1995)• • Most studies show no relationship between employment• outcomes and diagnosis, severity of impairment and social• skills (Drake et al, 1994, 1996, 1999; Bond et al, 1995, 1997, 1999, 2001;• Meuser et al, 2004; Latimer et al, 2006; Burns et al, 2007)• • Employment history is a robust predictor of work outcomes,
but motivation and self-efficacy appear to be more important (Tsang et al, 2000; McDonald-Wilson et al, 2001)
IPS Principles• Eligibility is based on Individual choice – no exclusion
criteria
• Supported employment is integrated in clinical teams
• Competitive employment is primary goal
• Job search is rapid (within 4 weeks)
• Job finding & all assistance is individualised
• Employers are approached with needs of individual in mind
• Follow along supports are continuous
• Financial planning is provided
Measuring adherence
Effects of intervention depend on how it is delivered
Adherence to fidelity is key
• • Programmes that faithfully implement the key elements of an IPS service have better outcomes
• • For supported employment, this means higher
competitive employment rates (see Becker et al. 01, 06; McGrewet al. 05; Burns et al. 07)
Integrating clinical and vocationalServices (co-location)What are the benefits?
• Clinically sensitive
• Addresses concerns that:
– Employment serves as a stressor
– Will interfere with stability of client
• More effective engagement and retention
• Better communication
• Incorporation of vocational information into care plans
• Observation can convert sceptical or disinterested clinicians
• Better outcomes – clinicians carry responsibility of
coordination, consistency and coherence
IPS STEEERING GROUP
• Build consensus
• Plan and monitor IPS implementation
• Track and process outcomes
Facilitative Change Model
IPS Fidelity Review
High Fidelity IPS Implementation
Plan
IPS Employment Specialist Training
Embed Fidelity Reviews in internal
processes
Embedding what works
The East Midlands Academic Health Science Network (EM-AHSN) is further supporting the implementation of IPS within Nottinghamshire, Northamptonshire and
Derbyshire NHS Trusts
For more information and to access the advice and support available please contact:
NIHR CLAHRC East Midlands Annual Meeting
Growing Momentum – Sharing and Learning
A partnership between
Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust
and the Universities of Nottingham and Leicester
The Leicester Diabetes
Risk ScoresShaun Barber
PhD student
University of Leicester
A partnership between
Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust
and the Universities of Nottingham and Leicester
Title Arial
NICE algorithmPreventing type 2 diabetes: risk
identification and interventions for individuals at high risk
Methods of identification
One stage - Invasive Two stage - Non invasive
• Cheaper – saving £350 per case
• Engages people with their risk factors
Risk Scores
• Self-assessment
• Applicable to an individual
• Opportunistic screening
• Automated
• Applicable to GP database
• Targeted mass invitation to screening
Leicester Self Assessment Score
Leicester Self Assessment Score
Leicester Self Assessment Score
Text here
Title Arial
Automated score for GP databases
Risk Score = 0.0408359 x age
+ 0.1839942 (if male, no change in
female)
+ 0.7565977 (if BME)
+ 0.0820698 x BMI
+ 0.4770517 (if family history of
T2DM, no change otherwise)
+ 0.5498978 (if on
antihypertensive medication, no
change otherwise
• Developed software which integrates the risk score and electronic medical records
• Calculates score everyone 40-75 years excluding– Known Diabetes– Terminally ill– Coded Gestational diabetes
• Also analyses existing OGTT/glucose/HbA1c data– Identifies ‘missed’ diabetes– Gives precedence to fasting over random results (if unclear random assumed)– 2 glucose results on same day - assumes OGTT– Random blood glucose can only rule in diabetes if only result or latest data– HbA1c ≥6.5% T2DM, 6.0%-6.4% IGR, <6.0% normal
Primary Care Software
• Target screening
– Choosing a specific level of
risk (e.g. top 10%)
– Choosing a specific level of
sensitivity (e.g. 80%)
• First risk score to include
HbA1c in outcome
Primary Care Software
– http://www.leicesterdiabetescentre.org.uk/Leicest
er_Practice_Risk_Score-5905.html
Primary Care Software
http://www.leicesterdiabetescentre.org.uk/Leicester_Practice_Risk_Score-5905.html
Gray LJ et al. (2012) Diabetologia 55(4):959-66
• GPs and other primary healthcare
professionals should use a validated
computer-based risk-assessment tool
to identify people on their practice
register who may be at high risk of type
2 diabetes. The tool should use routinely
available data from patients' electronic
health records. If a computer-based risk-
assessment tool is not available, they
should provide a validated self-
assessment questionnaire, for example,
the Diabetes Risk Score assessment
tool. This is available to health
professionals on request from Diabetes
UK.
NICE - Identification of those at risk
Leicester Practice Risk Score
Leicester Self Assessment Score
NICE. Preventing type 2 diabetes: risk identification and interventions for individuals at high risk.
PHG38. 2012. http://guidance.nice.org.uk/PH38
Thank you for listening
www.clahrc-em.nihr.ac.uk
@CLAHRC_EM
This research was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care East Midlands (CLAHRC EM). The views expressed in this presentation are those
of the speaker(s) and not necessarily those of the NHS, the NIHR or the Department of Health.
NIHR CLAHRC East Midlands Annual Meeting
Growing Momentum – Sharing and Learning
A partnership between
Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust
and the Universities of Nottingham and Leicester
Naina Patel- Research AssociateDiabetes Research Centre, Leicester
A partnership between
Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust
and the Universities of Nottingham and Leicester
Outline
• East Midlands Centre for BME health
• Vision and strategic objectives
• Achievements and future plans
• Leicester Self-Assessment Score (LSA)
• Translation Journey
Vision:
An organisation that is committed to actively inspiring and developing
dynamic, collaborative partnerships between patients, public, community and voluntary sectors, researchers,
health and social care organisations and others, to help address and reduce
ethnic health disparities in the East Midlands.
East Midlands Centre for Black and Minority Ethnic Health
• Develop and implement capacity building programmes for researchers and staff from healthcare organisations
• Actively influence a culture of practice in which BME PPI informs and supports research, service planning and commissioning
• Undertake community engagement strategies that foster the trust and buy-in of BME communities to take part in joint working in health and research
• To develop and provide a centralised repository of resources and information for organisations and individuals to share and disseminate
Strategic objectives
• Over 310 people have attended our events
• Conceptualising ethnicity in health and research workshop
• Collaboration with researchers
• 2 Current CLAHRC projects engaged with the Centre.
• Full facilitation and support to one project
• 7 prospective CLAHRC Phase 3 sought and named involvement of the Centre
• Website development –content and marketing strategy currently being developed
Key Achievements
Achievements and Future Plans
• A research project on raising awareness and prevention of type 2 diabetes in BME communities in Leicester to inform a social marketing campaign
• Systematic Review of insulin management and interventions
• Scoping of need for support during insulin treatment for patient and staff
• Develop plans for implementation of existing intervention where appropriate.
• A scoping review of existing services including those involved in the risk identification pathway.
• The journey:
• LSA developed by Dr Gray, University of Leicester, funded by Diabetes UK
• Currently accessed by over 750,000 people on DUK for risk assessment
• In 201O the LSA was translated into four South Asian languages: Gujarati, Urdu, Bengali and Punjabi
• In 2011, 2 focus groups with Punjabi and Gujarati participants were convened to assess the translation
• Key findings:
• lack of conceptual equivalence (intended comparable meaning) • pitched at too high a level in terms of language used:
LSA (1)
Dr R – question on ethnicity ..number 3 how did you find it ? easy or difficult?
AK – ‘Nasel ‘ the word used is a rude word….
RSF- it’s like what breed are you (laughs)…….nasel is the wrong word…..
DN- (..).when you first read the question what was the first thing that came into your head?
RSF – Alsatian (all laugh)
CS – surely, the person who translated this must have read it and realised what it means……
Qualitative findings from focus groups
• In 2012, grant from DUK to translate the LSA into Gujarati
• Key outcomes:
• Improved the LSA English and refined the risk score categories
• We have produced a conceptually equivalent and accurately translated Gujarati version of the LSA
LSA (2)
• Concept of risk and future risk and its translation was easily understood:
“ risk is you know jokem which I think any Gujarati people can understand. It could happen to them or they are already having that illness.”
• The LSA helps by personalising risk:
“I was shocked, I was shocked with the results..”(…….) Mainly for myself by working out the tables that makes that me feel that I should do something for myself so its that per..personal risk yeah.”
Findings from the qualitative stage of the LSA translation
• Future plans:
• Translate the LSA for Bengali and Punjabi in 2015
• To develop a mobile phone app of an audio version of the Gujarati LSA
LSA (3)
Joint event with RNIB on BME eye health and diabetes on 19/03/15
Thank you for [email protected]
N
This research was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care East Midlands (CLAHRC EM). The views expressed in this presentation are those
of the speaker(s) and not necessarily those of the NHS, the NIHR or the Department of Health.
NIHR CLAHRC East Midlands Annual Meeting
Growing Momentum – Sharing and Learning
A partnership between
Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust
and the Universities of Nottingham and Leicester
PARADES Mental Capacity Act Booklet.
Richard MorrissEnhancing Mental Health Theme CLAHRC EM
A partnership between
Nottinghamshire Healthcare and the
Universities of Nottingham and Leicester
• Mental Capacity Act 2005 allows people who temporarily or permanently lose their ability to understand or communicate decisions about their personal affairs including health in advance
Advanced Directive to Refuse Treatment (legally binding)Advanced Statement of Wishes and Feelings (treatment, personal and financial affairs)Lasting Power of Attorney (who will act for you)
• Not restricted to mental health
• House of Lords Select Committee 2013 evidence that the MCA has been poorly implemented in England
Background
• Serious mental illness with periods of mania – excitement, elation, over-activity, lack of sleep, disinhibited, reckless behaviour, excessive confidence; periods of depression
• 1.4% lifelong prevalence, onset 13-30 yrs
• Suicide rate 20x SMR general population
• Lose capacity in mania and depression for days to months, then regain capacity fully
Bipolar Disorder
Link with creativity• Mark Twain, Edgar Allen Poe, Walt Whitman, Sylvia Plath,
Tennessee Williams, Ernest Hemingway, Virginia Woolf, Ezra Pound, Charles Mingus, Gustav Mahler, Paul Gauguin, Georgia O'Keeffe, Jackson Pollack, Vincent van Gogh.
• Ozzy Osbourne, Jean-Claude Van Damme, Axl Rose, SinéadO'Conner, Peter Gabriel, Kurt Cobain, Stephen Fry, Russell Brand, Catherine Zeta Jones, John Cleese, Spike Milligan etc.
Years lived lost due to disability in the world in 2010Vos T et al Lancet 2012
Rank order
1. Low back pain 11. Osteoarthrosis
2. Major depressive disorder 12. Drug use disorders
3. Iron deficiency anaemia 13. Hearing loss
4. Neck pain 14. Asthma
5. COPD 15. Alcohol use disorders
6. Other musculoskeletal 16. Schizophrenia
7. Anxiety 17. Road injury
8. Migraine 18. Bipolar disorder
9. Diabetes mellitus 19. Dysthymia
10.Falls 20. Epilepsy
• Part of NIHR PARADES Programme Grant (leads for stream: Peter Bartlett, Richard Morriss, UoN)
• Aim to review uptake and use by service users with bipolar disorder and training of psychiatrists
• National survey of 549 service users, 650 psychiatrists, qualitative interviews
PARADES MCA study
• 94% service users thought making plans for welfare in this way was important or very important
• 36% service users heard of the MCA before the study
• 10% made ADRT, 11% ASWF, 5% LPOA. Psychiatrists confirmed very low take up
• Websites, documentation and accounts by service users and psychiatrists:
– Documentation when available not legally accurate
– No clear procedure to access MCA documents for service users or staff
– Psychiatrists and other NHS staff rarely discuss unless service user or carer raises it
Results
1. Chief investigator and theme manager
2. Summary reported as standing item to CLAHRC EM Executive and CLAHRC EM Board
Reporting
• Service users liked the written content – legally accurate
• Service users did not like images and layout so work with CLAHRC EM PPI to improve it
• CLAHRC EM PPI - MCA cards to let staff know of presence of MCA documents
• No plan to disseminate booklet beyond participants in survey
• Devised dissemination and implementation plan:– Dissemination events and publicity campaign – Bipolar UK, celebrity, political endorsement, social
media– Print run of paper copies and distribute to NHS organisations, bipolar UK, recovery college– Downloadable booklet, card and now survey from AHSN EM website.
CLAHRC and AHSN EM role
• 19, 800 downloads over 4 months
• 8,000 paper copies of booklet disseminated
• First course on MCA based on booklet and PARADES in Nottingham Recovery College
• Plans to disseminate via network of Recovery Colleges (2/3 Mental Health Trusts nationally) and Bipolar UK
• Adopted by SCIE
• Consider adaptation for other mental health and non-mental health conditions where capacity is temporarily lost
CLAHRC/AHSN EM dissemination
NIHR CLAHRC East Midlands Annual Meeting
Growing Momentum – Sharing and Learning
A partnership between
Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust
and the Universities of Nottingham and Leicester
The IMPAKT Programme
IMproving Patient care and Awareness of Kidney disease progression Together
Research, Implementation, QI, and Commissioning
• Rare to common
• Complex to routine
• Secondary to primary care
A Paradigm Shift in Thinking About Kidney Care
Big changes in kidney medicine since 2006
- new nomenclature - CKD
- a new way of measuring kidney function
- a new way of grading severity
11th May 2006
• A primary-secondary care partnership to prevent adverse outcomes in CKD
• Nigel Brunskill Principal Investigator
CKD
“Intensive CKD disease management in primary care, supported by secondary care, will improve outcomes”
Hypothesis
• take a number of general practices
• identify all CKD patients
• divide practices into 2 groups
• 1 group continues to provide ‘normal’ CKD care
• 1 group provides nurse led ‘intensified’ CKD care
• team of CKD nurses supported by secondary care
• compare CKD outcomes after an appropriate time period
How to test the hypothesis:
A robust data extraction tool applicableto all GP computer systems
What do we need to do this?
www.impakt.org.uk
What the tool does:
Register– Accuracy of existing coding of CKD
– Identifies uncoded patients
Risk– Identifies high risk of progression and CVD
– Medicines management
Audit– Against NICE standards
– Benchmarking
Manage– Advice on BP, proteinuria, ACE/ARB
– Referral
– Medicines management – NSAIDs, metformin etcwww.impakt.org.uk
MANAGE 2: Proteinuria testing and BP control Practice Name
Managing blood pressure in my CKD patients 20/11/2012 P12345
Proteinuria testing Total % Blood pressure management
BP
recorded
in last
year
BP
treated to
target
% treatedTotal left
to treat
% left to
treat
CKD patients tested for proteinuria 326 83 Of those with proteinuria status recorded:
CKD patients not tested for proteinuria 65 17 BP 140/90 (CKD without proteinuria) 259 180 69 79 31
Of those tested: BP 130/80 (CKD with proteinuria) 42 11 26 31 74
CKD patients with proteinuria 43 0 Patients treated to appropriate BP target 301 191 63 110 37
CKD patients tested but not coded 17
%
35
\
NICE sets two different blood pressure recommendations for patients with CKD, based on the presence of proteinuria. Therefore it is important to test all of your CKD
patients for proteinuria (QOF suggests that this is done at least every 15 months) so that you can define which of the two targets you should use for your patients. NICE
recommendations are that patients with proteinuria are controlled to 130/80, and those without proteinuria to 140/90.
CKD patients without proteinuria 266 3Please select or input a target % of patients treated to appropriate BP target from the drop down
menu below. Your selected % will be converted to a number of patients to find on the graph below.
Controlling blood pressure - what do I need to know?
You have chosen to find 75% of your total patients treated
326
65
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
ACR testing
% Tested % Not Tested
43
266
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
3.0
3.5
Number of patients tested for proteinuria
With proteinuria
Without proteinuria
11
180
191
13
213
226
42
259
301
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
BP 130/80 (CKD with
proteinuria)
BP 140/90 (CKD without
proteinuria)
Patients treated toappropriate BP target
% of patients treated
Blood pressure management
75% Target
% missing
75
MANAGE 1: Stratifying risk of progressive CKD Practice Name
Controlling risk factors for my CKD patients
Albuminura stages, description and range (mg/mmol) Risk factor stratification
A1 A2 A3 Score
10 or more 0
9 0
<10 10-29 30-299 300-2000 >2000 8 0
7 1
6 4
5 9
4 29
CKD3a Mild-moderate 204 15 13 1 3 68
CKD3b Moderate-severe 64 4 6 2 2 120
CKD4 Severe 12 1 2 1 160
CKD5 Kidney failure 1 1 391
Some medication
Proteinuria heat map - what does it mean?
IMPAKT reads how many of your CKD patients have been
tested for proteinuria and plots them on the above heat
map. The more severe grouping represents a higher risk of
the patient suffering from progressive CKD. Use IMPAKT to
find the patients at highest risk so that you can control
their risk factors.
Low risk
Mild risk
Moderate risk
Severe risk
Very severe risk
Total patients
Risk groups
Use this page to stratify risk factors for your CKD patients and make adjustments
to how they are managed to reduce the risk of progressive CKD. This report
contains details on what risk each of your patients' readings for proteinuria
represents against their latest eGFR evidence, a breakdown of the number of risk
factors per CKD patient on your register, CKD patients that are prescribed
nephrotoxic drugs, and CKD patients that may meet the criteria for referral to
secondary care specialists.You can find each category of patient within IMPAKT on
your practice system.
How do I use the information on this page?
IMPAKT analyses 12 unweighted risk factors for
progressive CKD and calculates how many risk factor
categories each of your CKD patients fall into. Use
IMPAKT to investigate those patients appearing most
frequently to manage their risk factors.
No. of patients with referral advice markersIMPAKT has identified this as the number of your CKD patients that may meet NICE CKD guidelines (2008) criteria
for referral to specialist renal services.20
0
233
76
15
2
326
Total patients
Stratifying risk factors
GFR stages,
description and
range
(ml/min/1.73m2)
CKD1
CKD2
Optimal
Low-normal
30-44
15-29
<15
Total patients
>105
90-104
75-89
60-74
45-59
20/11/2012 P12345
Composite ranking for relative risks by GFR and
albuminuria (KDIGO 2009)Optimal to high-
normal
High Very high to
nephrotic
No. of
patients
Ranked by combined
risk score
150
0 50 100 150 200
Patients with advice markers for prescribed drugs
Number of patientscoded with CKD
IMPAKT PSP CKD Database
• 48 practices in Northants• >30,000 patients with CKD• 6 years data• Detailed data:
- demographics- co-morbidity- prescribed medications- lab results
• Millions of data points
• Rich resource for further study
IMPAKT Implementation:
- EM AHSN- Greater Manchester AHSN- West Yorks- North Wales- West Midlands
IMPAKT Pilot Implementation by West Leics CCG2014/15
• supported by Baxter Healthcare• 77% of practices reported improved CKD prevalence• 77% of practices reported increased % CKD patients at BP target• 55% of practices reported improved prescriptions of ACEi/ARBs
Now a commissioned service for 2015/16
IMPAKTNIHR new media competition winner 2013
Ongoing IMPAKT developmentEValuating CKD and Other Long term condition data
in primary care to predict and preVEnt
Acute Kidney Injury and unscheduled care
IMPAKT-EVOLVE-AKI
IMPAKT-EVOLVE-AKI
• Combines practice data and hospital lab data• First informatics solution to study community AKI• Data on associated causal AKI risk factors• Provides ability to measure efficacy of AKI interventions
IMPAKT provides comprehensive suite of tools for management of both acute and chronic kidney
disease
NIHR CLAHRC East Midlands Annual Meeting
Growing Momentum – Sharing and Learning
A partnership between
Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust
and the Universities of Nottingham and Leicester
BITEsBrokering Innovation Through Evidence
Kamlesh Khunti, Director, CLAHRC East Midlands
A partnership between
Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust
and the Universities of Nottingham and Leicester
BITEs & Evidence summaries
• Previous NIHR CLAHRCs for NDL and LNR (2008-14) produced around
50 BITEs.
CLAHRC East Midlands BITEs
• CLAHRC East Midlands has produced 18 BITEs since January
2015.
• BITEs from all previous and current NIHR CLAHRCs can be found
on the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE)
website.
Mental Health BITEs
Chronic Disease BITEs
Primary Care BITEs
Older People and Stroke BITEs
Implementation and PPI BITEs
• CLAHRC EM is committed to
producing at least 30 BITEs and
we expect to produce a BITE for
every significant publication,
finding or activity
• We are committed to publicising
our achievements and the
impacts our work can have on
health to all relevant people and
bodies.
BITEs Future
Thank you for listening
www.clahrc-em.nihr.ac.uk
@CLAHRC_EM
@kamleshkhunti
This research was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care East Midlands (CLAHRC EM). The views expressed in this presentation are those
of the speaker(s) and not necessarily those of the NHS, the NIHR or the Department of Health.
NIHR CLAHRC East Midlands Annual Meeting
Growing Momentum – Sharing and Learning
A partnership between
Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust
and the Universities of Nottingham and Leicester
Join the conversation
If you hear something you like, or want to
challenge, or simply want to share an
observation, join the Twitter conversation using
@CLAHRC_EM and #clahrc in your tweet.
#clahrc@CLAHRC_EM
NIHR CLAHRC East Midlands related Twitter accounts
@EMRAN_ageingEast Midlands Research into Ageing Network
@EMCBMEHEast Midlands Centre for Black and Minority Ethnic Health
Connecting to venue WiFi
• Load web browser
• Click “conference” on homepage
• Enter Username diabetes1, Password diabetes1
Username:
diabetes1
Password:
diabetes1
NIHR CLAHRC East Midlands Showcase
Chair – Professor John Gladman, Theme Lead, Caring for
Older People and Stroke Survivors
A partnership between
Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust
and the Universities of Nottingham and Leicester
Charlotte Hall Shireen PatelEnhancing Mental Health Theme
Co-production in the Enhancing Mental
Health Theme
What Works?
AQUA -Trial Helping Urgent Care Users Cope
with Distress about Physical
Complaints Study
A partnership between
Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust
and the Universities of Nottingham and Leicester
Projects
Urgent Care Users StudyAQUA-Trial
RCT: National
3 years, matched industry
CAMHS & Community Paediatrics
178-234 participants
6-17 years, referred for ADHD assessment
RCT: East Midlands
4 years, matched NHS
Primary & Secondary Care (ED)
144 participants
18 years and over, ≥ 2 unscheduled/urgent care attendances in last 12 months
Progress to date
AQUA = Ethical approval, CRN adopted, 8 NHS Trust (9 sites) = 141 participantsUrgent Care = Ethical approval, CRN adopted, 1 ED & 4 GP Practices = 16 participants
Network of Practice
Brings together research partners, patients, service commissioners and service providers to maintain strong links with those who can benefit from the study
Who?
AQUA-Trial
- Site PIs - Supporting clinicians / admin
staff- QbTech- Academic team- Knowledge Brokers- PPI
We are widening this to include service providers/managers & commissioners
Urgent Care Users Study
- Local collaborators - Supporting clinicians/admin
staff- CBT therapists- Academic team- Knowledge Brokers- CCGs- PPI
Attended by anyone who is interested in the study/how Networks of Practice operate
How?
Urgent Care Users Study
- Weekly email contact with local collaborators
- Telephone or face to face contact
- Network of Practice meetings (every 3/4 months)
AQUA-Trial
- Weekly contact with Site PIs
- Monthly newsletters- Monthly dial-in
sessions- AQUA-Forums (approx
3/4mths)
PPI
Urgent Care Users Study
- Fred Higton & David Waldram
AQUA-Trial
- ADHD Solutions, Nikki Brown, David Waldram
Thank you for listening
www.clahrc-em.nihr.ac.uk
@CLAHRC_EM
This research was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care East Midlands (CLAHRC EM). The views expressed in this presentation are those
of the speaker(s) and not necessarily those of the NHS, the NIHR or the Department of Health.
NIHR CLAHRC East Midlands Annual Meeting
Growing Momentum – Sharing and Learning
A partnership between
Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust
and the Universities of Nottingham and Leicester
The Prevention Theme
Kamlesh Khunti, Theme Lead
Carol Akroyd, Theme Manager
A partnership between
Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS
Foundation Trust
and the Universities of Nottingham and
Leicester
EM CLAHRC ThemesThe Research
Implementation of a diabetes prevention pathway in a multi-ethnic population
Let’s Prevent Diabetes is evidence-based and soon to be made available nationally to commissioners.
This project aims to develop a model of implementation to meet the needs of local communities
Nicotine Replacement Therapy
• To develop and evaluate evidence-based, smoking cessation behaviour change techniques (BCTs) which are specifically tailored for use in pregnancy.
• As appropriate, to embed newly-developed BCTs, into routine NHS care using the National Centre for Smoking Cessation Training’s online learning environment and face-to-face training courses.
CVD PREVENTION
A randomised controlled trial to investigate the effect of structured education on preventing heart disease and other vascular conditions in people at high risk
Move to Teach: Move to Learn
• Young children today are increasingly driven to school and learning means sitting at a desk.
• Children engage in considerable sitting time in the school classroom and thus the potential for reducing this holds promise.
• However, few interventions have focused on reducing or breaking up sitting in the primary school classroom.
Move to Teach: Move to Learn
The project will be delivered over 4 phases
1. Development of an intervention ‘toolbox’
2. Implementation of ‘toolbox’ & short term evaluation
3. Evaluation of sustained ‘toolbox’ use
4. Dissemination
The ‘toolbox’ will be delivered in a total of 6 schools for (up to) one academic year, to Year 5 pupils (9-10 years)
Move to Teach: Move to Learn
• Ash Routen, Research Associate, Move to teach: Move to learn, Loughborough University
• A collaborative project to develop and implement an intervention ‘toolbox’ to reduce sitting in the primary school classroom
NIHR CLAHRC East Midlands Annual Meeting
Growing Momentum – Sharing and Learning
A partnership between
Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust
and the Universities of Nottingham and Leicester
Caring for Older People and Stroke
Survivors
Yvonne R Simpson
COPSS Theme Manager
A partnership between
Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust
and the Universities of Nottingham and Leicester
The COPSS Theme Envelope
EMRAN
PhD Students
KnowledgeBrokers
Links to Research Networks
Stakeholder /Partner Engagement
Public Engagement
Capacity Development
Applied Health and Implementation Research – links to IEI Theme
Links to Industry
SOPRANO Phase 1 Study
REVIHR Phase 1 Study
Ambulance Hypo Phase 2 Study
Phase 3 Projects
SOPRANO (Phase 1 Study)
Study Lead – Professor John Gladman
Supporting Older People’s Resilience through Assessing Needs and Outcomes
REVIHR (Phase 1 Study)
Study Lead – Professor Marion Walker MBE
Evidence based in-hospital stroke rehabilitation
Ambulance Hypo Study (Phase 2 Study)
Study Lead – Professor Kamlesh Khunti
Enhanced care pathway for people receiving an ambulance call out for hypoglycaemia
COPSS Theme Studies
• Monthly Theme Meetings – well attended
• Draw on wider CLAHRC EM expertise
• Building strong links with the IEI Theme for Study
evaluation
• Active engagement with our PhD students
• Support existing and potential projects
• Proactively engage with public and patient involvement,
knowledge brokers and networks
The COPSS way of working
• Challenges within studies have been met and overcome
• Draw on resources within CLAHRC EM
• Committed Researchers
• Focussed COPSS team with positive ethos to get things done
• Structured ways of working – supporting one another
• EMRAN
Being positive – credit to the team
Filling the gap in the East Midlands
EMRAN
the story so far ….
Title Arial
NIHR CLAHRC East Midlands Annual Meeting
Growing Momentum – Sharing and Learning
A partnership between
Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust
and the Universities of Nottingham and Leicester
Implementing Evidence &
ImprovementsProfessor Justin Waring
IEI Theme Lead, NIHR CLAHRC East Midlands
A partnership between
Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust
and the Universities of Nottingham and Leicester
NIHR CLAHRC-EM undertakes world-class applied health research that aims to close the gap between research and practice!
• Applied research – research that tests ‘proven interventions’ in the context of local care services and needs
• Closing the gap – research that is ‘co-produced’ by research and practice communities so that it fits with the context of local care services and needs
• Co-production – where research teams and practitioners work together to design and ‘implement’ applied research
• Implementation research – research that aims to understand how best to co-produce and implement research
The CLAHRC Approach
• What is our purpose?
– To understand about how world-class applied health research can be co-produced
by researchers, commissioners, care providers and public stakeholders
– To appraise the specific co-production approaches developed and used by
CLAHRC-EM, especially PPI, networks and knowledge brokers
– To advance knowledge about co-production and implementation of service
improvements
• What is our Philosophy
– To co-produce research on co-produced research – working in partnership with
study teams and communities
– To provide formative learning and feedback on the learning process
The IEI Theme
EMH COPSS
IEI
MCDPCD
Partners
/ AHSN
Investigate different implementation activities
from across projects to develop formative &
comparative learning
Provide
formative
learning to
projects &
partners
Managing and
conducting applied
research
Putting the Implementing
Evidence & Improvement
Theme in Context
• Public Involvement
• Knowledge Brokers
• Networks of Practice
• Dissemination
• Capacity Building
The CLAHRC Approach
1. Thematic Review of the CLAHRC-EM portfolio
2. A Stronger Voice: the role of PPI in the commissioning and
provision of evidence-based interventions
3. Clinical Interventions as Networks: the role of social interaction
within networks of practice
4. Practices of Knowledge Brokering in the co-production and
translation process
Our Projects
• Why was this research is needed?
– CLAHRC-EM is organised around 4 clinic themes, but the individual projects
reflect a diverse range of interventions, co-production techniques, research
methods and patient groups
– A new way of analysing the CLAHRC was needed to better understand how it
worked to co-produce world-class applied research
• What did the research involve?
– Desk-based review of all CLAHRC projects to identify different approaches to
co-production
• Who led this research?
– Lewis Hyland & Jenelle Clarke, University of Nottingham
Thematic Review of CLAHRC
Why is this research needed?
Project Theme PI Aims Implementation
Strategy
Implementation
partners
Implementation process
measures
REVIHR Networking,
Education,
Assessment
PI- Marion
Walker
1) Use current stroke audit
data (SSNAP) to identify
high/low scores in achieving
highest standards of stroke
care
2) Develop theory of change
model to inform intervention
3) behavioural and
qualitative mapping of
delivery, identify key issues
as to whether delivery is
evidence based
4) Identify
barriers/facilitators of
delivering evidence based
care
Early PPI,
ongoing
integration of
change
programme.
Pilot change
programme run in
collaboration with
EMAHSN and
Strategic Clinical
Network. PPI
involvement
through the
Nottingham Stroke
Research
Consumer Group.
This is accounted for through
the use of behavioural
mapping in Phase 2 of the
process
HYPOGL Education,
Evaluation,
Brokering
PI - Kamlesh
Khunti
Adjust prescribed diabetes
medication through nurse
referral after ambulance call
out.
Implement/evaluate an
hypoglycaemia pathway for
patients receiving
ambulance call out.
PPI involvement
has been
extensive at the
Leicester site
with further
discussion
planned in
setting up the
pathway at tow
further sites.
Integrated Care
Diabetes Service
(ICDS) Leicester.
DSNs (Diabetes
Specialist Nurses)
in the delivery of
the care pathway.
EMAS (East
Midlands
Ambulance
Service) are
closely involved.
A number of DSN's were
involved in the design and
delivery process. Meetings
will be organised with primary
care practitioners and
individuals in the field of
hypoglycaemia. Knowledge
brokers are connected to
Leicester City CCG and the
further two sites. Routes of
information dissemination
include Pre-Hospital
Emergency Services Cuttent
Awareness Update,
Association of Ambulance
Chief Executives, and to the
National Ambulance Service
Medical Directors group.
• Why this research is needed?
– PPI can help services to efficiently and effectively meet the needs of stakeholders,
but, it can be time consuming and seen as ‘tokenistic’!
– Evidence is needed on how best PPI can ensure patient and public voices influence
decision-making in the commissioning and provision of evidence-based interventions
• What does the research involve?
– Confidential interviews with key decision-making agencies to understand their views
about and approaches for PPI, including the role of PPI in applied research
– Observations and documentary analysis of key decision-making processes to
understand the role and influence of PPI
• Who is leading the research?
– Pam Carter & Graham Martin, University of Leicester
A Stronger Voice!
• Why this research is needed?– CLAHRC-EM projects bring together different people in the form of a new
‘community’ or ‘network’ to co-produce and implement research
– Evidence is needed on how these ‘networks’ can create a shared sense of purpose, vision and energy to co-produce research
• What does the research involve?– Observations of 6 different CLAHRC project networks (e.g. meetings, training
etc) to understand how a shared purpose can emerge
– Interviews with study teams and network members to understand the extent of shared purpose
• Who is leading the research?– Jenelle Clarke, Stephen Timmons & Justin Waring, University of Nottingham
Clinical Interventions as Networks
• Why this research is needed?– EM-CLAHRC projects use a variety of ‘knowledge brokers’ to ensure research
reflects the local experiences and needs of service providers
– Evidence is needed on the activities or ‘practices’ that facilitate the translation of knowledge between research and practice groups
• What does the research involve?– Observations of 6 different CLAHRC project teams to understand the roles
played by different knowledge brokers
– Interviews with study teams and brokers to understand how knowledge is translated and share
• Who is leading the research?– Lewis Hyland, Justin Waring & Stephen Timmons, University of Nottingham
The Practices of Knowledge Brokering
• Identifying key strategic needs for Phase 3 studies:
– The implementation and adoption of national guidelines
– Working collaboratively with business and industry
• Evaluating and appraising our CLAHRC approach
– How do our different co-production and translation approaches compare?
– What types of evidence and co-production to commissioners value?
– To what extent has change been sustained in practice?
Future Plans
Thank you for listening
www.clahrc-em.nihr.ac.uk
@CLAHRC_EM
This research was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care East Midlands (CLAHRC EM). The views expressed in this presentation are those
of the speaker(s) and not necessarily those of the NHS, the NIHR or the Department of Health.
NIHR CLAHRC East Midlands Annual Meeting
Growing Momentum – Sharing and Learning
A partnership between
Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust
and the Universities of Nottingham and Leicester
Open Space: NIHR CLAHRC East Midlands
Sharing Best Practice
A partnership between
Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust
and the Universities of Nottingham and Leicester
Thank you for attending
www.clahrc-em.nihr.ac.uk
@CLAHRC_EM
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