MIG data in Connecting Care supports better, safer care across the Bristol Area

Connecting care in Bristol.

MIG data in Connecting Care supports better, safer care across the Bristol Area

Access to vital GP and community care patient data via the Medical Interoperability Gateway (MIG) is increasing healthcare efficiency and improving care quality for over a million people in Bristol and its surrounding area.

Starting in 2013, the Connecting Care Partnership has brought together a shared care record from across Bristol, North Somerset and South Gloucestershire. Today, it supports 85 GP practices, three community providers, three acute hospitals, a mental health trust and three councils. Connecting Care brings together 20 clinical and social care systems allowing 24 health and care organisations to view the data.

The MIG, from Healthcare Gateway, is a core element of Connecting Care, giving over 6,000 health and care professionals role-based access to primary care and community health records, End of Life Care Plans, clinical letters and correspondence from the three acute hospitals in the region. Presenting information such as patient demographics, medications, diagnoses, prescriptions, warnings and alerts, the MIG’s easily-accessible summary views support faster, more informed care decisions that reduce duplication and mistakes, prevent unnecessary hospital admissions and increase delivery efficiency.

“Our colleagues in health and the councils now release time to care because they don’t have to search around for information anymore.

Pre-operative assessment used to take around 2.5 hours per person. Now it takes under a minute. Bristol City Council safeguarding team now spend 15% less time dealing with telephone calls from health colleagues with safeguarding concerns about their patients. It also helps reduce hospital admissions if clinical staff can see that there is alternative care in place and unnecessary home visits if staff can see that someone has already been admitted.

The GP and community care data that the MIG supplies is the bedrock of Connecting Care. Over the last six years, we have gradually expanded the number of MIG views and the amount of data we present.

The MIG allows us to display information across health and care settings. GPs and Social Workers can see clinical letters and correspondence including hospital discharge summaries while hospital doctors and consultants can check GP medical histories when caring for new patients. Many GPs like the MIG’s summary view because it is so clear and information is easy to find.”

Out-of-hours GPs were one of the first groups to benefit when Connecting Care went live in 2013. Before that, endless phone calls and letters were the only way to find missing information.

“We had no idea about past prescribing, recent GP visits, safeguarding, no documents, no results, nothing. Without that patient history, extra risk is unavoidable. When Connecting Care became available, it was like the lights going on – it was a massive step forward. You could see that patients had consulted their doctor or that a care plan was in place.”

There is now no need to retake patient histories. Any new information is merged with the existing record. Instant access to GP information, End of Life Care plans and clinical documents reduces out-of-hours workload and enables better quality care.

“During out of hours care in the past, if we couldn’t get through to a patient on the phone, we had to ask the police or fire brigade to knock the door down and make sure patients hadn’t collapsed. Now we can see if they were admitted to hospital and can contact the consultant or GP. Connecting Care has saved me a tremendous amount of time and spared a lot of Bristol’s front doors!”

Since 2016, Connecting Care has been using a Restful FHIR API to transform structured data into messages that display controlled drug and Opioid Substitution Therapy information to substance misuse workers, GPs and other clinical users.

This plugs a gap and helps prevent duplicate prescribing of opiate substitutes like methadone and subutex – avoiding substance misuse, reducing costs and supporting clinical efficiency. Adopting FHIR messaging represents significant progress in Connecting Care’s journey towards open standards.

“Along with allergies, mental health issues and other health conditions, we can see which medication their GP has prescribed which is really effective in avoiding duplicate prescribing. Before, we would be calling the GPs right, left and centre so it’s definitely saved us a lot of time. We help people who haven’t got a GP so MIG data is very useful to find out if they are already registered or not.”

Role-based access to Connecting Care data reveals upcoming outpatient and community appointments. Instant record checking out of hours and at weekends now enables the NHS Blood and Transplant team to safely carry out their important work. At North Bristol Trust, two pharmacy staff who used to spend every day telephoning GPs for medication information have more time to spend on core work.

Connecting Care has more partners contributing and viewing MIG data than any other UK interoperability programme, hitting a new peak of 37,500 user views in May 2019. MIG is supporting Connecting Care’s use of national interoperability standards, structured data and bidirectional data flows. The latter will help support initiatives like personal health records and future care plans where individuals and healthcare users alike can check and update vital data contemporaneously from any setting.

“One of our most valuable additions via MIG has been the GP journal view, which displays consultation notes. The End of Life summary view was the first time that we used structured data from MIG. It’s a great first step to achieving the holy grail of a real-time read / write shared care plan. We and our partners have come a long way together, but there’s still a lot more work to do.”

Offering sophisticated and flexible “integration technology”, the MIG currently connects over 4000 health and social care providers within the UK, sharing a total of 30 million patient records. More are being added all the time.

Find out more

To arrange an online demonstration or to find out how the MIG is being used in your area, please get in touch here.

IKR

North Cumbria University Hospitals NHS Trust – Delivering better care through digital record sharing

NHS North Cumbria University Hospitals logo

North Cumbria University Hospitals NHS Trust – Delivering better care through digital record sharing

North Cumbria University Hospitals NHS Trust are using the Medical Interoperability Gateway (MIG) to view GP data and send electronic documents via their InfoFlex clinical portal system.

Background

North Cumbria University Hospitals NHS Trust has been using the MIG’s Detailed Care Record (DCR) service since 2016 to provide consultants, doctors, nurses and all other qualified medical staff with access to GP data at the point of care.  Historically, this was accessed via the MIG’s Shared Record Viewer (SRV). The challenge was clinical staff had to log into separate systems to view data associated with the patient which was not as efficient as using the same system given the limited window of time to assess the patient. The desired solution was to provide clinical staff with access to patient records as an embedded view, so the user experience would be streamlined as possible, native from the InfoFlex clinical portal.

What did they do?

The Trust worked with system providers to integrate patient information within the InfoFlex clinical portal. This enabled a simple and efficient process for accessing real time feeds of patient data such as their demographics, medication, risks and warnings, procedures, investigations, encounters, admissions and referrals.

In September 2018 the Trust went live with Document Services, which has allowed them to send more than 14,000 InfoFlex eDischarge documents from two hospital sites since this date. The system is now live in over 15 wards including in patient units including medical and surgical, ambulatory care, the Heart Centre and Children’s Wards sending completed discharge summaries and medications to GP practices across Cumbria.

How have they benefited?

The MIG feeds all the available information about a patient into a single system, which helps clinicians to make faster and more informed decisions at the point of care.

“The InfoFlex clinical portal provides clinicians with single sign on and a context sensitive view of data pulled from various systems. It brings together data from various departments including radiology and imaging, document store and pathology results, which can now be accessed in one place alongside the MIG’s DCR. The versatility of the MIG  and InfoFlex has suited the complex architecture of systems in Cumbria. With multiple organisations involved, the project was completed successfully, delivering benefits for health professionals; saving time and improving early diagnosis seamlessly.”

From July 2018 to January 2019 there has been a 75% increase in the number of requests to view a patient’s GP record through the InfoFlex clinical portal, helping to give the most complete view of a patient’s medical history.

Document Services is now live across 85% of the Trust, which is helping to reduce paperwork and the time taken to deliver a document into the GP practice workload.

“More than 14,000 eDischarge summaries have been sent and this is growing month on month. The Trust is well on its way to meeting national targets; ensuring eDischarge summaries are with the patient’s GP within 24 hours of discharge.  The aim of the project is to complete the roll out by early 2019, improving patient safety and accessibility to patient records.”

The benefit for adopting digital is not just about the Trust though.  GPs are getting consistent data sent at the point of discharge and also when patients are seen in clinics.  This is a major change in process and welcomed by GPs and the staff in the surgeries.

“Now as most of our clinical letters, outpatient letters and discharge summaries come electronically life is so much easier.”

Find out more

To arrange an online demonstration or to find out how the MIG is being used in your area, please get in touch here.

For more information about the InfoFlex clinical portal please call 01923 896939 or find out more here.

IKR

Connecting Care – Delivering digital documents across the BNSSG STP

Connecting Care – Delivering digital documents across the BNSSG STP

Connecting Care are using the Medical Interoperability Gateway (MIG) to share electronic health record documentation with 85 GP practices across Bristol, North Somerset and South Gloucestershire (BNSSG).

Background

Connecting Care is a digital care record system, which contains information held at GP practices, hospital departments, community services, mental health trusts, out of hours services and local authorities across BNSSG. It combines information into a single, shared record, which reduces the time spent by professionals checking details from different health and social care organisations.

The Connecting Care system uses our Detailed Care Record service to consume patient information from the GP practices, which also includes end of life care data.

To fulfill their commitment to the NHS ‘paperless by 2020’ strategy, Connecting Care are using Document Services to share electronic health record documentation across the region.

What did they do?

The aim of the Connecting Care Document Sharing project was to enable Connecting Care partner organisations to share any type of document with each other. The work was based on the use of generic document sharing functions that utilise both national and international technical standards.

The nine month project was completed in two phases:

Phase one focused on implementing cross-enterprise document sharing (XDS) standards to enable documents from acute trusts to be shared within the integrated digital care record in the Connecting Care portal.

Phase two focused on the implementation of Interoperability Toolkit (ITK) standards and the deployment of Document Services as the vehicle for sharing clinical documentation electronically from the local acute trusts with GPs.

Send any type of document electronically

The roll out of the Document Services across BNSSG has benefited GP practices, who now receive hundreds of documents each week. Secondary care teams can instantly send any type of electronic document, which has helped to improve transfers of care when a patient transitions from one care organisation to another.

“The MIG Document Services has been technically easy to deploy, which has created a more timely delivery of clinical correspondence into a clinical setting. It has supported our local Trusts contributing to their paperless vision and the timely delivery of discharge summaries.”

Faster admin for GPs

Electronic documents are seamlessly delivered into the EMIS Web GP workflow and the Trust receives an immediate acknowledgement when the document is delivered, actioned or rejected by the practice. This has streamlined the admin process for GPs and ensures electronic documentation can be retrieved and tracked at the point of care.

“Having documents from University Hospitals Bristol (UHB) coming straight into the system has made the whole process so much easier/quicker.” GP administrative assistant.

“Receiving documents electronically from UHB has saved my team so much time, it couldn’t have come sooner. We hope that soon we will receive all documents from every trust this way as standard.”

Find out more

To arrange an online demonstration or to find out how the MIG is being used in your area, please get in touch here.

IKR

LPRES – Enhancing care through electronic documents

LPRES – Enhancing care through electronic documents

The Lancashire Person Record Exchange Service (LPRES) are using the Medical Interoperability Gateway (MIG) to send clinical documents to over 300 GP practices.

LPRES is a comprehensive Shared Care Record, which integrates health and social care organisations across Cumbria and Lancashire.

Background

LPRES wanted to make it easier for Trusts to share crucial information such as test results and discharge summaries with GPs. They felt that sharing documents electronically would increase data security and improve communication across the region.

Document Services was identified as the perfect solution and they went live with the service in November 2017.  This service allows health and care organisations to send and receive any type of electronic correspondence. The documents are seamlessly delivered into the GP workflow and the sender receives an immediate acknowledgement when the item has been delivered, actioned or rejected by a practice

How have they benefited from Document Services?

Practices across Cumbria and Lancashire now receive discharge summaries within six hours, which has reduced clinical risk and improved continuity of care. They have also benefited from instant notifications, which has helped practices to meet their target to contact and review discharged patients within 48 hours.

Feedback from clinicians

Practices across East Lancashire and Blackburn with Darwen Clinical Commissioning Groups, have benefited from the introduction of Document Services.

“After the recent launch for the documents dropping through workflow I can confirm we have been receiving 100% when checked against the duplicate hard copy. Early days but I believe we are enjoying the benefit of receiving clinic letters sooner, and without the waiting time of awaiting daily post-delivery, opening, stamping and scanning. I do believe this will be of huge benefit for each GP surgery to absorb into the workload in a more cost effective way and saving some trees in the process.”

“The new electronic clinic letters have been very beneficial to our practice in many ways. This includes, timely delivery of letters, no batch arrival of letters requiring clinician approval (arrive each day rather than 1-2 weeks), no paper letters left on desks waiting to be signed, all tasks are sent for actions from letters now with audit trail and there has been a reduction in admin time.  We can also read code appropriate information and make medication changes in a time efficient manner.”

What’s next?

“The LPRES team has a very productive relationship with Healthcare Gateway. They understand where we are trying to get to, ensuring the right information, in the right location at the right time.”

The LPRES platform is at the heart of the Lancashire and South Cumbria STP’s digital strategy. Over the next three years they will provide patients with instant access to their health care record, support image sharing and include diagnostic results reporting.

The MIG will be central to this project and LPRES plan to deploy the Detailed Care Record service later this year. This will be used alongside Document Services to provide healthcare professionals with 24/7 access the patient’s GP record.

Find out more

To arrange an online demonstration or to find out how the MIG is being used in your area, please get in touch here.

IKR