Palliative patient data that improves care across the Fylde coast

Community nurse speaking to elderly patients

Palliative patient data that improves care across the Fylde coast

Blackpool Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust are using the Medical Interoperability Gateway (MIG) to share patient Electronic Palliative Care Coordination System Records (EPaCCs) across a variety of different health and care organisations.

Background

Blackpool Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust provides a range of acute services to the 330,000 population on the Fylde coast as well as a range of community health services to the 445,000 residents of Blackpool, Fylde, Wyre and North Lancashire.

Previously, healthcare staff had no consistent way of recording and sharing an individuals end of life preferences electronically and relied on a paper-based system. With limited information about care planning, there was an increased risk of unnecessary admission and delays in discharge.

To provide continuity of care to patients, the Trust looked to make it easier for health care professionals to access a patient EPaCCs record electronically. With access to an EPaCCs record, a patient’s preferences and key details about their end of life care could be shared across organisations to improve coordination of care, planning care and anticipation of crisis.

What did they do?

In 2016 the Trust implemented the MIG’s Detailed Care Record (DCR) and EPaCCs Dataset.  They began by accrediting their in-house system ‘Nexus’ to allow integration with the MIG. This was followed by integrating Adastra used by the Out of Hours services (OOH). With the MIG successfully integrated, the EPaCCs dataset was then available to healthcare professionals as an embedded view in the system they used day to day, by clinicians in accident and emergency (A&E), acute medical unit (AMU), frailty wards and community nurses.

Today, using the MIG the OOH service views vital EPaCCs information as an embedded view in Adastra. On accessing patient records, clinicians are notified by an alert if an EPaCCs record exists and are prompted to view at the point of care.

Reducing unnecessary admissions

This information is also being used to inform The North West Ambulance Service (NWAS) in particular, paramedics.

When a patient or relative calls the 111 service, call handlers can respond efficiently by accessing EPaCCs information. An alert notifies the call handler the patient is under the care of the care coordination service and that an EPaCCs is in place. The patient is then directed to the care coordination team in OOH to receive direct access to a GP.

The benefits of accessing an EPaCCs record

The Trust has found the MIG invaluable. Instant access to real-time patient information supports medical decisions in line with patient wishes.

“EPaCCs has provided a platform for end of life decisions and conversations to be documented and shared in such a way that clinicians in both the community and acute settings can access it. This has meant that patients who might otherwise have faced either a lengthy hospital stay or death in a hospital bed are now much more likely to be cared for and die in their preferred place.”

A holistic view of a patient’s medical record and end of life desires is presented in one view, including background information about medications, end of life care status and any prior discussions about the preferences and treatment decisions of the patient, which is crucial to the coordination and delivery of palliative care. This ensures everyone involved in a patients care plan can see their wishes and any care they receive is in line with what they have decided.

In Blackpool the MIG has allowed a patient’s care plan to be followed:

“A patient presented at the Emergency Department (ED) who was in the last days of his life, all the appropriate arrangements were in place to care for him at home and he had an EPaCCS record. Upon arrival in ED the patient was not able to communicate and his wife was too upset to communicate effectively. We were able to access his EPaCCS record and establish that his GP had spoken to him about his preferred place of death and that he wanted to be at home. As a result of this the patient was taken home where he died peacefully in-line with his wishes. Without having access to the MIG, the patient would undoubtedly have been admitted.”

The creation and accessing the EPaCCs record allowed the patient’s wishes to be fulfilled and enabled the best outcome for both the patient and family.

From a clinician’s point of view, being able to access the EPaCCs record enables clinical staff to make more informed decisions around care and treatment, whilst recognising the patient’s wishes and preferences.

Find out more

To find out how your organisation can access the MIG EPaCCs dataset or to arrange an online demonstration, get in touch here.

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Merseyside sign MIG contract

Liverpool, Sefton and Southport and Formby Clinical Commissioning Groups

Merseyside sign MIG contract

Liverpool, Sefton and Southport and Formby Clinical Commissioning Groups (CCGs) have signed a contract to utilise the Medical Interoperability Gateway (MIG) to share real time patient data.

The contract includes the Detailed Care Record (DCR) service, which provides clinicians with ten categories of information from a patient GP record and the EPaCCs (Electronic Palliative Care Co-ordination Summary) Dataset which supports the coordination of a patient’s end of life care plan.

The CCGs will use the MIG to provide real time feeds of patient data from GP clinical systems into the e-Xchange solution which will be used across Cheshire and Merseyside Health and Care Partnership (HCP). The contract also includes a feed of GP data into Liquidlogic to support adult social care services at Liverpool City Council and Sefton Council.

Access to Primary care information across providers of health and care in Cheshire and Merseyside will support the direct care given to individuals across the region.

“Building on our recent contract wins across the North of England, Healthcare Gateway are delighted to be involved in this fantastic programme of work. Using the MIG, Merseyside will be able to access health and social care data in real time today. This demonstrates the value of the MIG for clinicians to support patient care in the region. We are looking forward to the partnership, and to begin identifying the benefits.”

Implementation of the service has already started and data feeds will be live in six to eight weeks. For more information and book a product demonstration please get in touch here.

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MIG powers many of the leading HIE solutions

MIG powers many of the leading HIE solutions

We partner with the top five HIE solutions listed in the 2018 NHS interoperability report.

The NHS Interoperability 2018 report from US-based healthcare market research firm KLAS has revealed the leading HIE suppliers, which are supporting healthcare interoperability. Six of the eight suppliers referenced in the report have already partnered with Healthcare Gateway and its data sharing technology, the Medical Interoperability Gateway (MIG).

“Effective interoperability is crucial to supporting sustainability within the NHS and the MIG is a solution of choice for leading healthcare software providers. More than 60 vendors are using the MIG as a real time engine for data sharing and we have a great track record in helping them overcome the associated challenges, existing across health and care. We look forward to studying the full report and will use the findings to inform future conversations with our sector partners.”

KLAS interviewed 141 people from 124 NHS organisations in England, including CIOs, CCIOs, CIOS, executives, consultants, IT directors and GP practice managers. Intersystems were named as the leading HIE with Cerner, Tiani, Orion, Graphnet, Docman, Microtest and Sunquest also named in the list.

The report also identified three major shortcomings in the England:

  1. Exchanged data is unstructured (25%)
  2. Cumbersome formatting (20%)
  3. Key data is missing (17%).

Structured or unstructured

The MIG has the ability to integrate systems using structured or unstructured patient data. Structured data is provided in an xml format, providing flexibility for the host application. To find more, please get in touch here.

The findings from the report were shared at a techUK event in London on Monday 25 June.

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Connecting care in the community

Connecting care in the community

Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust are using the Medical Interoperability Gateway (MIG) to view a subset of GP data within Carenotes (mental health and community health) and Adastra (out of hours).

Background

Before implementation of the MIG, there was absence of seamless access to primary care information across both Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire. The Oxfordshire Care Summary was frustrating for clinicians, as they had to log into a separate system each time they wanted to access patient information. The MIG Detailed Care Record (DCR) service was implemented to address these challenges.

What did they do?

Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust went live with DCR in December 2017. Clinicians can now access ten categories of GP data through their Adastra and Carenotes  applications. This means all the required patient information can be viewed in the same system.

By having the correct sharing agreements, Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust have also enabled cross border data sharing with the Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) and Adult and Older Adult Mental Health Services across Buckinghamshire.

How they have benefited from the MIG?

Uptake of the MIG has been very positive with over 600 clinicians using the MIG via Carenotes (over 2000 views) and 25 clinicians using Adastra (over 100 views), since the service went live.

Clinicians are now operating more efficiently. Previously it could take up to 30 minutes for an administrator to gather the required patient information from the GP. The MIG allows clinicians to instantly call GP data at the point of care, which has reduced the waiting time to a matter of seconds. This has helped to create more time for patient contact.

“The MIG has had a positive impact on how clinicians work. They now have an easy method of accessing patient records and the MIG has enabled this slick sharing of data, it’s seamless. The physical wellbeing of patients is important and accessing information is now straight forward via Carenotes.”

Improved continuation of care

Dr Ian Neale is using the MIG in the primary care out of hours (OOH) service and explains how it has been invaluable to his role.

“A patient who had previously visited the GP came to the OOH service as a patient. Symptoms included slight backache and a high fever. I was able to view the GP patient record and see in the Detailed Care Record a diagnoses of an asymptomatic urine infection based on a urinary dipstick, which was then treated with an antibiotic.

On return to the OOH service, the patient didn’t know the medication name they were taking and upon consultation it appeared the patient had clinical pyelonephritis. Again, by pulling the live data from the MIG I could see the urinary dipstick had not been sent for culture, what medication had been prescribed previously, what their renal function was and the patient’s allergies.

These pieces of information permitted the start of treatment in the community, safely, straight away and without any admission. Time was saved by not chasing a non-existent urine culture.”

What’s next?

Rachel Valentine, Project Manager from Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust explained that they are looking to enhance their MIG connectivity in the future. This includes new acute and social care end points and additional Specialist Datasets.

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.

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South West London CCGs sign MIG contract

South West London CCGs sign MIG contract

The South West London Collaborative Commissioning (SWLCC) has signed a two year contract for the Medical Interoperability Gateway (MIG).

The SWLCC includes the six South West London CCGs, Wandsworth, Richmond, Croydon, Sutton, Kingston and Merton, who are working together to deliver the five-year strategy for the local NHS.

The contract includes the Detailed Care Record (DCR) service, which provides clinicians with ten categories of information from a patients GP record. The contract also includes Shared Record Viewer (SRV), an independent web portal, which provides instant access to the DCR.

The MIG will stream data into four instances of the Cerner Health Information Exchange (HIE), which is used in acute settings across South West London. The SRV will be used by clinicians in the out of hours services.

Healthcare Gateway are the preferred provider of interoperability solution across South West London and implementation of MIG services will begin soon.

Find out more

For more information about the MIG services, please get in touch here.  

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NHS Calderdale and NHS Greater Huddersfield CCG have procured the Medical Interoperability Gateway (MIG)

NHS Calderdale and NHS Greater Huddersfield CCG have procured the Medical Interoperability Gateway (MIG)

NHS Calderdale CCG and NHS Greater Huddersfield CCG have signed a one year contract for MIG services.

The contract includes the Detailed Care Record service, which will be used by Calderdale and Huddersfield NHS Foundation Trust. They also use the MIG to provide real time feeds from GP clinical systems into Cerner Health Information Exchange (HIE), which is their acute system.

This increases the MIG’s footprint in the Yorkshire region with ten CCGs now signed up to the MIG. This includes, Sheffield CCG, Doncaster CCG, Rotherham CCG, Barnsley CCG, Leeds North CCG, Leeds West CCG, Leeds South and East CCG, Hambleton, Richmond and Whitby CCG along with Calderdale CCG and Greater Huddersfield CCG.

Making the most of the MIG

The trust has contracted the MIG awareness sessions, which will provide users with the knowledge they need to get the most out of the MIG.

Implementation is due to begin shortly and will go live in six to eight weeks.

Find out more

For more information about the MIG services, please get in touch here. 

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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.

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ReStart Viper360 – Integrating care across Nottinghamshire

ReStart Viper360 – Integrating care across Nottinghamshire

ReStart has been a MIG partner since 2014 and its Viper360® platform is accredited for the Detailed Care Record service. This has enabled users to access GP patient data from EMIS Web and TPP SystmOne practices.

How Viper360 is used across Nottinghamshire

Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust provides a range of integrated healthcare services including mental health, substance misuse, intellectual and developmental disability, community healthcare and healthcare in prisons. Many of the Trust’s patients and service users have physical and mental health issues, which require the support of several services.

The Trust is using Viper360 to draw patient data from a variety of Trust sources including the EPR and IAPT systems. The MIG provides the GP data to Viper360, allowing users to view all of the available information about a patient within a single application. This enables clinicians at the point of care to save time and make informed decisions.

“Clinicians did not have to waste critical time double entering data. Time was saved not searching for information and decisions about patients were made with all the relevant facts available."

How have ReStart benefited from MIG accreditation?

Viper360 is one of 50 applications which have integrated with the MIG. Having completed the MIG accreditation process, ReStart can provide users with an enhanced application which:

  • automatically locates all the available information about a patient
  • consumes multiple feeds of GP data
  • provides additional information such as care plans and ongoing treatments to support decision making.

What’s next?

ReStart are looking to enhance its Detailed Care Record service by enabling the journal Dataset. This will provide users with a timeline view of all coded and texted entries made by the GP in the past year.

Find out more

Take a look at our animation, for more information about becoming a MIG partner.

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Barnsley CCG wins national award for paperless records

Barnsley CCG wins national award for paperless records

The Medical Interoperability Gateway (MIG) has helped Barnsley Clinical Commissioning Group and Barnsley Healthcare Federation CIC to win a national award for improved data sharing.

Background

In July 2017, NHS Barnsley CCG and Barnsley Healthcare Federation won the ‘Management and Culture Project of the Year’ category of the Public Sector Paperless Awards.

They have been using the MIG since early 2016 to share GP records electronically. This has helped to provide clinicians with instant access to patient information and has reduced the need for letters and other paper-based correspondence.

The MIG was initially used by iHeart Barnsley and they coordinated the award submission on behalf of the CCG and CIC. Both organisations played a key role in persuading GPs and end user organisations to invest in the MIG and felt that the awards would provide a good opportunity to showcase this project.

What did they do?

Barnsley CCG have used the MIG to connect different IT systems across the region including EMIS Web, SystmOne and Adastra.

This means that the 33 GPs across the borough can now share patient information with iHeart Barnsley, South West Yorkshire Partnership NHS Foundation Trust, Barnsley Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, Yorkshire Ambulance Service and Barnsley Hospice.

They have deployed the Detailed Care Record and the Shared Record Viewer to provide primary, secondary and community care staff with access to live patient data 24 hours a day. This has led to more efficient care and a better experience for patients.

How have they benefited from the MIG?

Efficient working

Clinicians can work more efficiently, as they no longer need to contact GP surgeries for patient information.

Secure data sharing

GPs have complete control of how much patient information is shared. The MIG consent model gives explicit consent at the point care and patients can opt-out if they don’t want to share their record.

Improved patient care

The MIG provides clinicians with additional information about a patient. This helps them to make informed decisions faster and benefits the patient, as they don’t need to repeat their medical information to different healthcare staff.

Real-time data

The MIG doesn’t use a data repository, which means clinicians will always have access to most up-to-date information about a patient.

What next?

The CCG is planning to work with Barnsley Metropolitan Borough Council later this year to share patient data with social care organisations.

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.

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Hillingdon NHS Foundation Trust – Using the MIG to support mobile working

Hillingdon NHS Foundation Trust – Using the MIG to support mobile working

The Hillingdon Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust has become the first in the UK to use a new mobile app, which allows clinical staff to access the GP record via the Medical Interoperability Gateway.

iPad minis are being used by some clinicians across the hospital departments including, A&E, paediatrics, elderly care, diabeticare and outpatients.

Background

Development of the app began in January 2015 with the first version available in May 2015. Work on MIG element of the application started in October and was up and running within five weeks.

The app is the first in the UK to allow access to the GP Record via a mobile application using MIG web services.

“We are pleased to be recognised as the first organisation in the UK to access the GP record via a mobile application using MIG web services. We developed our Digital Care Record 'The Hillingdon Care Record (HCR)' in-house, which clinicians can access via iPad devices. This makes the GP record even more accessible in secondary care, 24 hours a day and in any setting in the trust without the need to find a desktop machine or login to a separate application.”

How is the app used?

The app is now being used by junior doctors, consultants, allied health care professionals and nurses to pull in data from MIG, PAS and other systems to give them a real- time view of patient records.

Clinicians can set preferences within the HCR app to view lists based on ward, location, specialty, clinic and consultant. For example, if a clinician is working in A&E they will be presented with the A&E patient visit list.  They can then use that list to access the details they need.

''Clinicians were excited to be able to view the patients GP record out of hours which was not possible before. Point of care access to valuable information such as diagnosis, medications, adverse reactions and allergies via the MIG, allows clinicians to make better informed decisions, particularly when presented with an emergency patient."

The app has been particularly useful to emergency care and pharmacists.  The users have access to drugs and allergies which has proved extremely useful in improving patient safety and patient care.

“The MIG has helped with acute care by providing more comprehensive medical histories for our patients, ensuring we have a complete knowledge of what medicines a patient is already taking when they are admitted to the hospital and Improving safety by speeding up identification and treatment of patients.''

What next?

The trust hopes to develop their app by digitalising forms so that as well as being able to view data. Clinicians can also add data into the system, which will mean even better, safer care for patients.

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