The Health Advocate – August 2021

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Patients first

Value-based health care The official magazine of the Australian Healthcare and Hospitals Association

The courage to measure outcomes Transforming the health system for sustainability

ISSUE 64 / August 2021 PRINT POST APPROVED PP :100009739


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Contents Articles 09. The 2021 Value-Based Health Care Conference 12. Transforming the health system for sustainability

ISSUE 64 / August 2021

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14. M anaging the long term health consequences of COVID-19 in Australia 18. Patients First 21. The Courage to Measure Outcomes: A Patient’s Perspective 24. Smile Squad recognised as school dental innovator 28. Leading Better Value Care 32. Beyond COVID-19

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36. V alues aligned organisational culture as the foundation for workforce wellnessIs it a pipe dream? 40. R esuscitating respect—the heartbeat of workplace psychosocial safety 46. B uilding a robotic surgery program at Macquarie University Hospital 50. Cloud-based Technology Reduces COVID-19 Mortality Rates 52. N ew research shows kids’ ear and hearing health is an urgent priority

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56. Small gains translate into big differences

Cover: Photo by Moses Vega on Unsplash

60. Improving the quality of healthcare?

From the AHHA desk 04. Chief Executive update 06. AHHA in the news 62. Become an AHHA member 64. More about the AHHA

Advertorial 30. Low interest rates

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JOHN GREGG Chief Executive AHHA

The value of value-based health care in a post COVID world

Welcome to the value-based health care themed

COVID-19 continues to challenge the healthcare

issue of The Health Advocate. Having recently

sector and also provides opportunities for us

joined the AHHA, I am eager to continue advancing

to reflect on how VBHC principles may assist

value-based health care in Australia.

support services redesign delivery and assistance

Value-based health care is the key to moving

to our consumers. AHHA’s Deeble Institute for

health care investments from volume to value,

Health Policy Research recently published a

focusing on the health outcome for the consumers

brief which examines how value-based health

of healthcare services. Broadly speaking, it is

care offers a path to managing the long-term

about achieving the outcomes that matter to

health consequences of COVID-19 in Australia

health consumers at a cost that is acceptable to

(see page 15).

consumers and the health system. It is a concept

The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the

that has been evolving for many years globally,

importance of health literacy and how our

and we are now seeing some activity and system

health systems need to provide avenues for our

transformation taking place here in Australia as

communities to feel more confident in their own

health services and systems adopt the principles

health decision making, including options and risks

of value-based health care.

with vaccinations. The focus that value-based

In May, AHHA and the Continuous Improvement

health care has brought to understanding the

in Care Cancer Project facilitated the inaugural

outcomes that matter to patients is noteworthy,

Value-Based Health Care Conference. This

but we must also continue to work to support

conference showcased and celebrated national and

improvements in health literacy and provide the

international value-based health care in practice.

opportunity for consumers to take an active role

In this issue you can read a wrap up of the conference as well as several feature articles from

in their own health care. One of the drivers behind uptake of value-

keynote presenters at the Conference, including

based health care concepts is a focus on moving

Elizabeth Teisberg and Julie McCrossin and outlines

the health sector to a more sustainable footing.

of services and projects that were recipients of

Sustainability in this context is often thought of

the inaugural Value-Based Health Care Innovation

in terms of funding, but a recent Deeble health

and Collaboration awards.

policy brief has considered broader environmental

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The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021


GraphicStock

CHIEF EXECUTIVE UPDATE

“Value-based health care is the key to moving health care investments from volume to value, focusing on the health outcome for the consumers of healthcare services.”

sustainability concepts, exploring the opportunity

as we pursue our shared vision of a healthy

for value-based health care transformation to

Australia supported by the best possible

guide consideration of climate change and its

healthcare system.

impacts on health and health care (see page 12). The principles of value-based health care offer the opportunity to reorient our health system to provide all Australians with effective, accessible,

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To learn more about AHHA’s value-based health care work, visit the Australian Centre for ValueBased Health at valuebasedcareaustralia.com.au.

equitable and outcomes-focused health care delivered in a sustainable manner. I look forward to working with AHHA members The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

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FROM THE AHHA DESK

AHHA in the news 17 MAY 2021

26 MAY 2021

Long term health consequences of COVID-19: can value-based health care provide a way forward ‘Australia has succeeded in limiting and largely

New Chief Executive for AHHA

controlling the spread of COVID-19 and we must now shift our focus to responding to the long term health

The Australian Healthcare and Hospitals Association consequences of COVID,’ says Australian Healthcare and Hospitals Association Chief Executive Adj Prof (AHHA) announced today the appointment of Mr John Gregg as Chief Executive, following the retirement of its current Chief Executive, Adjunct Professor Alison Verhoeven in June. ‘On behalf of the Board of AHHA, I would like to thank Alison Verhoeven who is retiring after an outstanding eight years as Chief Executive and welcome John Gregg,’ AHHA Chair, the Hon Jillian Skinner, said today. ‘John comes to AHHA after a distinguished career in the health and community services sectors in Australia and internationally, and most recently as Chief Executive of the North Queensland Primary Health Network. 6

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The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

Alison Verhoeven.

An issues brief, Managing the long term health consequences of COVID-19 in Australia, published today by the Australian Healthcare and Hospital Association’s (AHHA) Deeble Institute for Health Policy Research examines how a value-based health care approach can support Australia’s response to the long term health consequences of COVID-19. Deferral of care, workforce burnout and Long COVID are just some of the long term consequences that present significant challenges for the health system, according to authors A/Prof Martin Hensher et al from the Institute for Health Transformation and Deakin Health Economics, Deakin University.

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HAVE YOUR SAY...

We would like to hear your opinion on these or any other healthcare issues. Send your comments and article pitches to our media inbox: communications@ahha.asn.au

27 MAY 2021

Leadership on environmental issues drives value in healthcare

28 MAY 2021

‘The severe weather events in recent years have

Three Australian health services honoured in the Value-Based Health Care Awards

shown us that health systems are at the forefront

Dental Health Services Victoria (DHSV), Sydney

of responding to the impacts of climate change,

Local Health District and Concord Repatriation

but health systems too have a carbon footprint

General Hospital are the three winners honoured

that contributes to climate change and must

in today’s Value-Based Health Care Awards.

be addressed,’ says Australian Healthcare and

The awards were presented at the inaugural

Hospitals Association Chief Executive Adj Prof

Value-Based Health Care Conference in Perth,

Alison Verhoeven.

co-hosted by the Australian Healthcare and

An issues brief, Transforming the health system

Hospitals Association’s Australian Centre for

for sustainability: environmental leadership

Value-Based Healthcare and the Continuous

through a value-based health care strategy,

Improvement in Care Cancer Project.

published today by the Australian Healthcare and

‘Australian health services are leading the way

Hospital Association’s (AHHA) Deeble Institute

in value-based health care through innovative,

for Health Policy Research examines how a value-

inspiring and collaborative projects that are

based health care approach can support health

improving patient outcomes and reducing

systems to transform for sustainability.

costs,’ said Australian Healthcare and Hospitals

The brief provides recommendations for a value-based strategic framework that supports

Association (AHHA) Chief Executive Adj Prof Alison Verhoeven.

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the transformation to sustainable models of health care.

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The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

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FROM THE AHHA DESK

AHHA in the news 3 JUNE 2021

14 JUNE 2021

COVID-19 and health inequity: latest Australian research The latest issue of the Australian Health Review,

Supporting people with dementia in the community: reablement makes a difference

the academic journal of the Australian Healthcare

‘Most people with dementia live in the community

and Hospitals Association (AHHA), examines

and rely on family to provide care that enables them

the various responses and impacts on health

to live healthy and independent lives,’ says Adj Prof

organisations during the height of the COVID-19

Alison Verhoeven, Australian Healthcare and Hospitals

pandemic in 2020.

Association (AHHA) Chief Executive. ‘Yet despite this,

A perspectives piece from Nigel Lyons, Cathryn Cox and Vanessa Clements from NSW Health provides practical insights into the value of clinical

access to interventions that address the impact of dementia on everyday life is limited.’ An issues brief, Reablement interventions for

leadership and engagement in a time of crisis.

community dwelling people living with dementia,

It describes the role of COVID-19 Communities

published today by the AHHA’s Deeble Institute for

of Practice, what they have achieved and their

Health Policy Research examines how reablement

importance in supporting the ongoing pandemic

interventions in dementia care can be adopted in

response in New South Wales.

Australia to support people with dementia to live

Dr Rachael Smithson, Elisha Roech and Christina Wicker from Gold Coast University Hospital

healthy and independent lives. ‘The 2021 Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality

examined patient and provider experiences of

and Safety identified a failure to meet the needs of

virtual care during COVID-19 to provide a way

those living with dementia. This is partly due to people

forward to further develop models of virtual care.

with dementia and their carers not being provided

The results from their evaluation demonstrated the

with the support they need,’ says report author Dr Miia

value and viability of virtual care.

Rahja, Research Associate, Flinders University and 2021

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Jeff Cheverton Memorial Scholar.

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24 JUNE 2021

Telehealth funding reforms must prioritise value for patients ‘Telehealth should be supported and continued

Research examines how telehealth can be funded to

beyond the immediacy of the pandemic, but

achieve improvements in health outcomes in a cost-

funding reforms are needed to ensure the extension

effective manner.

of telehealth services focuses on delivering

The rapid rollout of the telehealth program

improved health outcomes and value,’ says

during the COVID-19 pandemic resulted in increased

Australian Healthcare and Hospitals Association

spending for new MBS items and ICT infrastructures

(AHHA) Chief Executive John Gregg.

according to the report’s author Michelle Tran, PhD

An issues brief, Towards a sustainable funding model for telehealth in Australia, published today by the AHHA’s Deeble Institute for Health Policy 8

The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

candidate, University of Queensland and 2021 Jeff Cheverton Memorial Scholar.

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The 2021 Value-Based Health Care Conference

In May, the Australian Healthcare and Hospitals Association (AHHA) and the University of Western Australia’s Continuous Improvement in Care Cancer Project partnered to host the inaugural Value-Based Health Care (VBHC) Conference in Perth. The conference aimed to showcase and celebrate VBHC innovation, initiatives, implementation, research, and training from all areas of the health care system.

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“There is not a one-size-fits-all approach to VBHC, and there’s much that can be learned from jurisdictions like NSW and Singapore, both in what they have been able to achieve in a relatively short period of transformation and from the frameworks they have established through which to progress and evaluate their work.”

Patients first

featured Elizabeth Koff, Secretary of NSW Health,

The conference, themed Patients first, started with

and Dr Daphne Khoo, Executive Director of the

a lively keynote session featuring Professor Elizabeth

Agency of Care Effectiveness (ACE), Singapore

Teisberg, Executive Director of the Value Institute

Ministry of Health.

for Health and Care at the Dell Medical School,

This session highlighted that the approach to

University of Texas at Austin, and Julie McCrossin,

VBHC implementation will vary depending on the

a patient advocate.

jurisdiction, based on the capabilities and enablers

Professor Teisberg’s discussion of patient

that are in place, the health outcomes they are

outcomes used the Capability, Comfort and Calm

seeking to optimise, and the priorities for their

framework, describing this approach as consistent

respective governments.

with both patients’ reasons for seeking care and their experience of it, as well as clinicians’ professional identities. Julie McCrossin noted that while her cancer care experience helped restore capability and in the longer term, calm, she had had an adverse

There is not a one-size-fits-all approach to VBHC, and there’s much that can be learned from jurisdictions like NSW and Singapore, both in what they have been able to achieve in a relatively short period of transformation and from the frameworks they have established through which to progress and

experience in relation to comfort and emotional

evaluate their work.

pain, particularly during radiation therapy for a

Social determinants, funding and variation

head and neck cancer. She talked about strategies to ensure patients

The final keynote session examined key themes

were heard and were included in decision-making

including social determinants of health, funding and

about their care. Trust and relationships, choice and

variation. Joseph Conte, Executive Director of the

empowerment to participate in decision-making

Staten Island Performing Provider System (PPS) in

were strong themes throughout these discussions.

New York, spoke about the dramatic improvement

Implementing VBHC in different jurisdictions

in health outcomes across a range of programs

The second keynote session, focused on implementing VBHC in different jurisdictions,

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The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

supporting very vulnerable patients including homeless people, refugees and migrants. The Staten Island PPS is an accountable care organisation, purchasing social care as well as health care,


CAPABILITY measures a patient’s functional status. COMFORT measure relief from physical and emotional pain. CALM measures the extent to which patients can continue to live their life in the way they want.

and working in very close partnership with (and funding) both community services like the justice system, public housing, schools, and employment agencies, as well as with health providers in the primary and acute care sectors. Dr Ross Crawford, an orthopaedic surgeon from Brisbane, was compelling in his arguments that we must address variation in health care, that to do this we needed to leverage big data and AI to best understand where efforts should be directed, and that we need to be more agile in testing, adopting and evaluating new technologies like robotics if we are to provide the best available health care, achieve the best outcomes and pay the best prices. In addition to the keynote presentations, the conference featured over 50 speakers examining topics from measuring what matters to patients, to changing culture, implementation approaches and VBHC enablers. Linking the presentations was a focus on practical examples, lived experience and pragmatic advice. In this special value-based health care themed edition of The Health Advocate, we continue to shine a light of value-based health care, and we feature two special articles from Elizabeth Tesiberg and Julie McCrossin.

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If you’re interested in learning more about AHHA’s VBHC work, visit valuebasedcareaustralia.com.au.

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Transforming the health system for sustainability Environmental leadership through a value-based health care strategy

Figure 1: Simplistic representation of sustainability

Health services primarily focus on economic sustainability, or rather, the proper use of available financial resources.3 However, ‘the assumption that sustainability at the financial and the economic levels is sufficient, on its own, to enhance the effectiveness of the health care system and to overcome the momentous challenges which a ffect the performance of health care organisations neglects the wicked nature of sustainabilityrelated issues’.4 The Sustainable Development Goals represent an agreed global conceptualisation of sustainability signifying the indivisible nature of economic, social

Sustainability is most often described as ‘meeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs’.1 Although commonly depicted as three interconnected circles reflecting environment, economy and society, it is also a complex, multifaceted concept that continually evolves depending on the perspectives of different sectors and professions, and their respective expertise and interests.2

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The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

and environmental dimensions, with sustainability only to be achieved when these areas are pursued collectively.5 Value based Healthcare (VBHC) is a global movement which provides a holistic patient centred way to support sustainable decision making in healthcare. The classic definition of value-based health care is based on work initially led by Professors Michael Porter and Elizabeth Teisberg (2006) who propose that value is the health outcomes that matter to patients, divided by the costs of delivering those outcomes.


Figure 2: Teisberg et al., (2020). Defining and Implementing ValueBased Health Care: A Strategic Framework, Academic Medicine. 95 (5): 682-685 doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000003122

“Currently one of the greatest threats to health care sustainability is climate change with the World Health Organization declaring ‘climate change the greatest threat to global health in the 21st century’.6”

Currently one of the greatest threats to health care sustainability is climate change with the World Health Organization declaring ‘climate

The Australian Healthcare and Hospitals Association’s (AHHA) Deeble Institute for Health Policy Research published a health policy brief

change the greatest threat to global health in the 21st century’.6 The strategic framework for

titled Transforming the health system for sustainability: Environmental leadership through a

VBHC transformation developed by Teisberg et al (2020) (Figure 2) provides a framework structure to support the consideration of climate change and its impacts on health care at the patient level and within each level of the system.

value-based health care strategy which provides an in-depth analysis of the alignment of sustainability and VBHC and provides series of recommendations on how policy makers and health leaders can work together to implement this holistic approach. >

The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

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“The brief also recommends that strong leadership is demonstrated across the health system through a series of actions, including the commitment to achieve net zero emissions.”

The brief recommends that environmental sustainability be encompassed in the national vision and strategy for outcomes-focused, value-based health care in Australia. This requires recognising the significant contribution of health care to Australia’s carbon footprint as a cost within the value equation and focusing on the populations who are most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change. The brief also recommends that strong leadership is demonstrated across the health system through a series of actions, including the commitment to achieve net zero emissions. Data-driven improvements in the health outcomes of individuals and populations should be enabled. However, improved health outcomes should not be achieved through care pathways that create poorer health outcomes from their environmental impacts. Health workforce strategies and plans must recognise the impact climate change will have on exacerbating health workforce shortages, particularly in rural and remote areas and already vulnerable communities. Funding models should be introduced to incentivise environmental sustainability and climate and health research that provides a strong evidence base to support health sector sustainability must be supported.

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The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

Deeble Institute for Health Policy Research

For more information about Transforming the health system for sustainability: Environmental leadership through a value-based health care strategy or to access the full copy, click here. REFERENCES 1. World Commission on Environment and Development. (1987). Our Common Future: Report of the World Commission on Environment and Development. Viewed 11 January 2021: http://www.undocuments.net/our-common-future.pdf 2. Giddings B, Hopwood B and O’Brien G. (2002). Environment, economy and society: fitting them together into sustainable development. Sustainable Development. 10(4): 187-196. https://doi.org/10.1002/sd.199 3. Borgonovi E, Adinolfi P, Palumbo R and Piscopo G. Framing the Shades of Sustainability in Health Care: Pitfalls and Perspectives from Western EU Countries. Sustainability. 2018; 10(12):4439. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10124439 4. Ibid. 5. United Nations. (2015). Transforming our world: the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. Department of Economic and Social Development. Viewed 15 January 2021: https://sdgs.un.org/2030agenda 6. WHO: World Health Organization (2020). Climate Change and Human Health. Viewed 15 January 2021: https://www. who.int/globalchange/global-campaign/cop21/en/ 7. Porter M and Teisberg E. (2006). Redefining health care: Creating value-based competition on results. Boston, Mass: Harvard Business School Press. 8. Teisberg E, Wallace S and O’Hara S. (2020). Defining and Implementing Value-Based Health Care: A Strategic Framework. Academic Medicine: Journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges. 95(5): 682-685. https://doi.org/10.1097/ACM.0000000000003122


Managing the long term health consequences of COVID-19 in Australia Can value-based health care provide a way forward? “The brief focuses on how Australian governments should now consider an effective and proportionate value-based response to COVID-19, Long COVID and its other longer-term consequences, that considers both patient health outcomes and costs.”

Australia is one of a group of countries who has succeeded in limiting and largely controlling the spread of COVID-19 within the national borders. As a result of these effective control measures, Australia has suffered a much lower burden of

reduction in healthcare utilisation and deferral of care. There are also lingering concerns about mental health, well-being and health workforce burn out. As we move toward a post-COVID world, this has the potential to impact negatively on

COVID-19 disease than most other countries; with rates of infections and deaths being an order of magnitude lower than those seen in most other high-income nations.

health outcomes. The Australian Healthcare and Hospitals Association’s (AHHA) Deeble Institute for Health Policy Research recently published a health

However, in those countries which have suffered more severely than Australia, concerns about

policy brief titled Managing the long term health consequences of COVID-19 in Australia. The brief

the long-term consequences of the pandemic are increasingly focused on the long-term clinical sequelae being seen in survivors of COVID-19, including Long COVID and a wide range of other conditions. Additionally, during the COVID-19

focuses on how Australian governments should now consider an effective and proportionate value-based response to COVID-19, Long COVID and its other longer-term consequences, that considers both patient health outcomes and costs. >

pandemic, Australia experienced a large scale

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issues brief

Figure 1. Possible health system impacts of COVID-19 over the short to longer term time horizon.

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The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021


“Although estimated case numbers in Australia are low, the emergence of Long COVID provides an opportunity to implement new approaches to integrated, well-coordinated, multidisciplinary, person centred care.”

A path forward Primary prevention of COVID-19 should be prioritised as the most effective means of mitigating the long-term health consequences of infection at population level, however plans must be put in place to allow rapid scaling-up of longterm care were COVID-19 control measures to fail. Although estimated case numbers in Australia are low, the emergence of Long COVID provides an opportunity to implement new approaches to integrated, well-coordinated, multidisciplinary,

Deeble Institute for Health Policy Research

• the development of regular, updated clinical guidelines that reflect evolving evidence on the long-term management of post-COVID care; and • MBS and PBS benefits that adequately support patients living with Long COVID or other sequelae and other “safety net” measures put in place to mitigate out-of-pocket costs for chronic disease management to support these patients fully. The Australian and state and territory governments should consider the long-term care consequences of COVID and its associated additional cost burden

person centred care. This will require health care professions to be supported to work at the top of their scope of practice and should occur through:

in resource allocation and risk management decision processes in parallel with COVID-19 control strategy policies.

• a national post-COVID Centre of Excellence and state-based care coordination centres; • a nationwide COVID-19 data registry that combines patient-level data on COVID-19 and

Support should also be provided for research that focuses on health policy, health economics, social determinants and more directly on the

subsequent health and healthcare utilisation history; • ommissioned research and modelling on the morbidity burden of Long COVID and post-COVID sequelae in different age and population groups that supplements emerging data on the mortality burden of COVID-19 and associated control measures;

effect of COVID-19 on the structure and function of the health system. Although Long COVID is not yet fully understood, health policy makers should be preparing to address it.

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For more information about Managing the long term health consequences of COVID-19 in Australia or to access the full copy, click here.

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ELIZABETH TEISBERG, PHD Executive Director, Value Institute for Health and Care, Dell Medical School and McCombs School of Business, The University of Texas at Austin

Patients First

What does this mean and what is needed to achieve it?

There are opportunities everywhere to improve

instead, it requires relationship-centred delivery of

health care value by recognising unwarranted

care. The healing relationship matters. We can

differences in health outcomes and closing those

create systems that make respect, empathy, and

gaps. To see the gaps, one starts from the patient

kindness normal in the care processes, rather

perspective: Patients First.

than extra work undertaken by clinicians and

Why patients first? Patients are why health

staff. Health care is full of smart, caring, hard-

care exists: the purpose of health care is to help

working people, working in systems that often

individuals and families with health issues.

don’t make the right things easy or make enough

‘Patients’ include everyone who needs and

time for human interaction. Clinicians then put

wants help, not just those who present for

in extra effort because they care. It is no wonder so

care. This observation has two implications.

many health care professionals feel worn down.

One is that care needs to be designed to include

If systems were redefined to make the right things

people who are underserved or served ineffectively

easy—to truly be relationship centred—there would

now. The other implication is that the highest-value

be support for the patients, the families and the

health care prevents people from becoming

clinicians. The starting point is to be explicit

patients. So, when health care really gets it

that transforming to high-value health

right, the design of care is human centred,

care requires clarity that the purpose is to help

meaning it addresses individuals’ and families’

and to heal, enabling quality of life and dignity of

needs effectively, inclusively, and, when

death. To achieve this purpose, care must focus

possible, proactively.

on achieving the outcomes that matter most to

Patients First does not mean clinicians last;

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The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

individuals and families.


GraphicStock

“Clinicians need to ask each patient: What matters to you? What brings you joy? Asking these questions helps clinicians recognise—and connect with—patients as individuals.”

Of course, what most concerns individuals

patients, yet the ability to do needlework need

depends on the health issues they face and the

not be measured for every patient. Retaining vision

contexts in which they live. So, Patients First

is the outcome to be measured and improved.

means knowing what matters and using that

The dynamic of improvement requires research

knowledge in care delivery, care design, and

with patients and families who have shared

care improvement. Clinicians need to ask each

medical circumstances. The research enables

patient: What matters to you? What brings you

insight on patients’ hopes and fears, the

joy? Asking these questions helps clinicians

outcomes that matter to them, and the obstacles

recognise—and connect with—patients as

and gaps that make those outcomes harder

individuals. It is foundational to high-value,

to achieve. From these insights, health care

relationship-centred care.

improvement can focus on achieving outcomes

Asking what matters to individuals is consistent

beyond current successes, and beyond improving

with, yet different from, developing systems to

the in-clinic experience. Of course, every patient

measure patient-centric outcomes and drive ongoing

should receive safe, respectful, compassionate

improvement. Both are needed. For illustration,

care; the point is simply that kindness and safety >

the shared outcome that matters to patients at

should be the norm, not a stretch goal. Kind,

risk for diabetic retinopathy may be retaining

safe care should focus on helping improve

eyesight; however, individual patient goals may

health outcomes.

be driving, reading, doing needlework, or seeing

The Value Institute for Health and Care uses a

the smile on a grandchild’s face. The specific

qualitative research approach that works with

goals frame the individual discussions with

groups of individuals facing similar medical

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“Patients First can be implemented to achieve both empathic response to patients and professional support for clinicians by accelerating teams’ learning and improvement.”

challenges and life circumstances to gain

transformation that improves outcomes of

insights on what outcomes matter and what gets

relationship-centred, high-value care.

in the way of them achieving what matters.

Please join us! valueinstitute.utexas.edu/

We’ve found that patients often don’t readily

Together we can improve health; we can

articulate these things, even to wonderful, beloved

improve care; we can make kindness and

doctors and nurses. Instead, they say thank you.

respect the norm; and we can reduce health

So, the most caring and respected clinicians

disparities. It all comes back to understanding

may not hear about challenges that they

and addressing unmet needs—even the

could help mitigate or address. With the right

unarticulated needs of the people we serve.

research, clinical teams can anticipate these

This means, of course, the starting place is

unarticulated concerns and use the insights

patients. Patients First.

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gained to improve care delivery, track a few highly meaningful outcomes, and speed learning

Dell Medical School’s Value Institute for Health

for the clinical team. In this way, Patients First

and Care is the global leader in value-based health

can be implemented to achieve both empathic

care and a proud partner of AHHA. The two

response to patients and professional support for

organisations are proud to present the Australian

clinicians by accelerating a team’s learning and

health community with a series of high quality

improvement. That improvement, in turn, enables

workshops and short courses. If you’re interested in

better care and outcomes for future patients.

finding out more about how you can get involved

The Value Institute for Health and Care is a hub of an international community driving 20

The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

contact communications@ahha.asn.au.


JULIE McCROSSIN AM Patient Advocate, Cancer Survivor and Grandmother

“My experience of treatment and recovery from stage four oropharyngeal cancer taught me to focus on the experience of my clinical team.”

The Courage to Measure Outcomes: A Patient’s Perspective

The focus on value-based health care offers a new

My life-saving treatment of 33 sessions of radiation

opportunity to give patients and their families a

therapy, bolted down to the bed of my radiation

voice so we can achieve real-time improvements in

machine by a rigid thermoplastic mask, plus weekly

treatment in partnership with our multidisciplinary

chemotherapy, was brutal. This is not a complaint.

team. At the same time, we can collect large

It is simply a fact. The side effects, short and long

data sets to enable us to do systemic, structural

term, are tough.

improvements to care over time. This approach

I came to understand that members of

gives an active role to patients and their families.

compassionate, multidisciplinary cancer teams are

It is, quite simply, a win-win-win situation.

almost frightened to truly comprehend the impact

It takes courage to measure results, including

on patients and families of the treatment regime

finding out what your patients and families really

because they are not sure they can address the

think. My experience of treatment and recovery

unmet need. Cancer teams are working so hard

from stage four oropharyngeal cancer taught me

to deliver the basic curative care, or care to

to focus on the experience of my clinical team.

prolong life, it would be too overwhelming to

I needed to understand their perspective and

collect and interrogate the nature and scope of

challenges if I were to work with them to improve

our unmet needs.

the experience and results for head and neck cancer patients like myself.

This is especially the case with the impact on families. My cancer treatment was all outpatient >

The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

21


care. My family and friends drove me to and from

had the courage to measure outcomes for patients

the hospital and kept me alive as I progressively

and improve care. The first example gives a voice

lost speech, swallowing, cognitive capacity and

to families as well.

over 20kgs in weight over six weeks. My recovery

My first example is an electronic, web-based

has involved a multitude of appointments with

patient-reported outcome tool called My Health

a variety of doctors, dentists, nurses and allied

My Way from Princess Alexandra Hospital Brisbane.

health professionals over eight years. This continues

It offers two ways to hear the patient and family

today. In the acute phase, it involved the safe

voice during cancer treatment — via a stand-up

administration of a multitude of medications,

podium in the waiting area with a touch screen,

including essential opioids for pain relief, plus the

or by a personalised SMS message to their device.

management of crucial oral care to address what

They can enter data on how the experience

happens inside a mouth and throat subject to

of treatment is going, connect with the team

extensive radiation. Yet, amazingly, the family

and receive automatic referrals based on the

carer receives very little attention.

information provided. It addresses physical,

In my keynote address to the Value-Based

emotional, home, distress and other needs. In the

Healthcare Conference 2021 in Perth, I described

video of my presentation, you can see pictures of

three positive examples of clinical teams who have

this tool and my interview with Dr Bena Brown PhD,

22

The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021


“In my keynote address to the Value-Based Healthcare Conference 2021 in Perth, I described three positive examples of clinical teams who have had the courage to measure outcomes for patients and improve care. The first example gives a voice to families as well.”

Advanced Speech Pathologist and Researcher,

These three examples show us that it is possible

who worked at Princess Alexandra Hospital in

for a caring group of skilled clinicians to really

Brisbane for 15 years in radiation oncology and

listen to patients and families and to make change.

was instrumental in the development of this tool.

I urge you to ask yourselves, ‘What tools can we

She is now at the Menzies School of Health

give patients and families so they can report to us

Research. My Health, My Way is validated for carers.

during treatment, and we can improve their care

Over 7,000 entry points of data have been received.

in real-time?’ Imagine the professional satisfaction

It has led to a 25% drop in outpatient appointments.

you will experience if you could also generate large

Overservicing has been reduced, while

data sets and build the evidence base for structural

underservicing has been addressed. Increasingly,

improvements to your models of care. On top of

the right patient gets the right care, at the right

this, you will give an active voice to patients and

time, from the right professional.

families. When you, or someone you love, is a

The other two examples I outline in my

patient, you don’t want to be a cork bouncing on

presentation are an app at the Peter MacCallum

the ocean of the health care system and subject to

Cancer Centre and the NSW Health Osteoarthritis

tidal forces you can’t influence. You’ll want to help

Chronic Care Program Service.

yourself and others. We’re in this together.

ha

www.juliemccrossin.com The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

23


Winner of the 2021

EMMA WARREN Smile Squad Communications Lead

Smile Squad recognised as school dental innovator Smile Squad means that every Victorian child can have a healthy smile

Parents and students all over Victoria are quickly

The award, sponsored by Queensland Health,

becoming familiar with the bright orange fleet,

recognises projects in their start-up or early phases

smart uniforms, friendly staff, and great customer

of development that are significantly innovative

care the Smile Squad school dental program delivers.

and was presented at the 2021 Value-Based Health

Smile Squad is the Victorian Government’s free school dental program. Smile Squad provides free

Care Conference. DHSV Chief Operating Officer Mark Sullivan

annual oral health examinations and free follow

was delighted by the win and highlighted the

up treatment for all Victorian public primary,

importance of delivering innovative, accessible,

secondary and specialist school students.

high-value dental care to all Victorian public school

In May 2021, extensive planning, collaboration, and testing were rewarded as Dental Health

students. ‘School dental services have existed for a number

Services Victoria (DHSV) was awarded the

of years and we’re excited that Smile Squad has

Innovation Award at the inaugural Value-Based

seen the return of dental vans to our schools,’

Health Care Awards.

said Mr Sullivan.

24

The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021


Value-Based Health Care Innovation Award

Students at Fitzroy North Primary School celebrate the launch of Smile Squad services at their school

‘We have learnt a great deal from previous programs and those learnings have armed us with the knowledge and experience needed to

health, all while saving families time and money,’ said Ms van Altena. ‘Our aim is to add value to the relationships

deliver a truly innovative next generation service,’

we have with all community dental agencies to

he added.

provide support in the provision of Smile Squad

School dental program Director Melanie van Altena reflected on the key aspects of the Smile Squad program that will lead to improving health

oral health services to as many eligible students as possible. ‘Smile Squad provides its patients with excellent

outcomes that matter to patients — students

dental care that is consistent, trusted and held to

attending Victoria’s public schools.

a high standard. That high standard of care comes

‘The Smile Squad value proposition is simple — to

without cost to the student’s family and students

increase access to dental services for public school

enjoy the experience of having a dedicated,

students, reduce preventable hospitalisations due

supportive, and caring oral health team to help

to dental conditions and improve students’ oral

them take control of their own oral health. The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

> 25


The bright orange Smile Squad treatment van fleet

Student receiving a dental check-up at Fitzroy North Primary School

‘When the program reaches full rollout by the end of 2023 ,we will reach approximately 650,000 students attending public primary, secondary and

over four years for the Smile Squad school dental program. Dental vans started visiting a limited number of

specialist schools at more than 1,500 locations

schools in Term 3 2019 as part of a Proof of Concept

across Victoria each year.

and the program progressed to statewide rollout in

‘The reaction to Smile Squad has been overwhelmingly positive. Agencies, schools, teachers, parents and students are all telling us

Term 1 2021 following a lengthy pause in 2020 due to COVID-19 restrictions. The program was inspired by a need and desire

they want and are benefiting from our services.

to improve the oral health of all Victorian young

I’ve heard wonderful reports of students seeing

people. Approximately one quarter of all Australian

an oral health clinician for the first time and

children have untreated tooth decay and in Victoria,

others who are overcoming fears based on

dental conditions are the highest single cause of

previous negative experiences,’ she added.

preventable hospitalisations for children under 10.

In the 2019—20 State Budget, the Victorian Government announced $321.9 million in funding

26

The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

The free program adds value for the government by reducing the number of school aged children


experiencing tooth decay and reducing those preventable hospital admissions. Smile Squad has been planned and implemented in line with the DHSV value-based health care framework. It focuses on ensuring the right

“The free program adds value for the government by reducing the number of school aged children experiencing tooth decay and reducing those preventable hospital admissions.”

services are provided in the right place at the right time and that the clinical workforce is utilised to their full scope of practice. We have

the values of eating well, drinking well and

developed an Oral Health Questionnaire to

cleaning well — for life.

ha

measure what outcomes matter to our patients so their management program can be tailored

Smile Squad is a partnership between Dental

appropriately.

Health Services Victoria, the Department of

Smile Squad considers the needs of all students

Health, Department of Education and Training,

and is firmly patient-centred. The program has a

community dental agencies and public schools.

strong focus on preventive services and promotes

www.smilesquad.vic.gov.au The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

27


DR RICHARD HOLLAND Consultant Rheumatologist

PRIYA GNANAKUMARAN Clinic Co-coordinator

Winner of the 2021

Leading Better Value Care

A patient focused Osteoarthritis Chronic Care Program

Osteoarthritis is a major cause of disability and early retirement in Australia, and it is forecast that by 2030 over three million Australians will be living with osteoarthritis, with treatment costs expected to exceed $2.9 billion. Data obtained by the Agency for Clinical Innovation indicated that few patients had tried conservative management prior to joint replacement surgery. The nonsurgical management of osteoarthritis is frequently fragmented, with most clinicians working in silos. The Concord Hospital osteoarthritis chronic care programme (OACCP) was established in April 2018, and to date has enrolled over 500 patients. The programme is a coordinated, multidisciplinary ambulatory care clinic designed and implemented for patients with knee and hip osteoarthritis as part of the Leading Better Value Care (LBVC) initiative and was established after careful consideration of the needs and challenges of patients with hip and knee osteoarthritis. The objectives were to improve health outcomes (pain, function, mobility and anxiety) and patient experiences in the non-surgical management of osteoarthritis of the knee and hip. To address the biological, social, and psychological impacts of disease, we included a range of clinicians with appropriate skills in managing chronic disease. 28

The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

We recognised that a single physical space, incorporating individual consultation rooms, an open exercise/assessment space and a meeting room would be essential to deliver healthcare in a way that was sensitive to the needs of patients with reduced mobility and function. Following an initial review by the musculoskeletal clinical lead (senior physiotherapist), patients are scheduled to attend a multi-disciplinary (MDT) clinic. The MDT clinic utilises the skills of experienced, motivated clinicians including a physiotherapist, psychologist, podiatrist, dietician, occupational therapist, social worker and rheumatologist. The close collaboration of the clinicians ensures highly coordinated care and facilitates the discussion of barriers to change and challenges faced by each patient. Participants are provided with a comprehensive, evidence-based and individually tailored management plan focused on maximising health outcomes important to the patient. Adjustments to the plan are made following regular followup appointments using both clinical and patient reported outcome measures (PROMs). A robust set of measurable outcomes are used to monitor the effectiveness of the service, with the focus on PROMs.


Pixabay

Value-Based Health Care Collaboration Award

The programme has demonstrated strong results, with a significant reduction in the number of patients proceeding to total joint replacement. Formally-assessed patient outcomes using Promis29 have been excellent, and most overweight patients lost weight by three months, improving with time. Patient feedback has been very positive, and highly complimentary of the service provided. Qualitative patient assessment revealed enhanced confidence and ability to start exercising, and those proceeding to surgery reported rapid recovery, facilitating a reduction in length of stay. Assessment of provider experiences demonstrated high levels of professional satisfaction, achievement and engagement with the multidisciplinary clinic format. A whole of experience review revealed opportunities for increased efficiency such as enhanced psychology and podiatry services, adding value with modest investment. In NSW, LBVC services have successfully demonstrated a move from admitted care to non-admitted care. Specifically, the OACCP has led to a significant 7% reduction in business as usual activity for Sydney Local Health District. The diabetic high risk foot service, osteoporosis

re-fracture prevention programme, and OACCP all contributed to cost savings of approximately $5 million for Sydney Local Health District in the 2018/19 financial year. At inception, only patients on the surgical waiting list for total hip or knee joint surgery were invited to participate in the programme. With the success and positive outcomes of the programme, referral criteria have broadened to allow all patients to attend the clinic following specialist referral. As the service continues to mature, it is forecast that the volume of patients accessing the service will grow, and in turn, increase the volume of patients deferring or cancelling their surgery. The COVID-19 pandemic has been a significant challenge to the service in 2020. We have managed to continue outpatient clinics through the implementation of telehealth, sociallydistanced and COVID-safe face-to-face services, and referral to hospital and community run virtual exercise sessions. The continuity of care, particularly in light of cancelled/deferred surgical procedures due to the pandemic, has been gratefully and positively received by patients. ha

The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

29


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DR INES RIO Chair, North Western Melbourne Primary Health Network

Beyond COVID-19 Australia’s response to the coronavirus pandemic has not always been perfect, but we still have much to be proud of

The human and economic cost has been high, but

progression, more end organ effects from vascular

not nearly as high as it could have been. And it has

diseases and diabetes, and the effects of poor

shown us time and again what we are capable of;

mental health on the wellbeing of individuals,

from the resilience of the millions who endured the

families, and communities. The cost of mental

many effects of lockdown to the tireless efforts of

illness in Australia is $600 million a day, and only

healthcare workers, there are many success stories

likely to grow with the ongoing fallout from the

from 2020.

pandemic and recent drought and bushfires.

However, there is no doubt we will be left with

We also need to consider the effects of long

an ongoing health and economic burden that

COVID in our community, given the majority of

needs acknowledgement and addressing. We have

COVID cases in Australia have come from our

seen cancer diagnoses fall, fewer presentations

region. We need more research and support for

to general practice for cardiovascular events,

people suffering long COVID, and to reinforce the

preventative health screening and chronic disease

importance of anyone diagnosed with COVID to stay

management, and more presentations for distress

in touch with their GP in the long term.

and mental health concerns. All of these can be expected to have flow in effects in the next few years. Cancer stage 32

The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

I have argued previously that the problem in many areas is not so much the lack of services, as the difficulty for patients, families, and GPs in finding a


Photo credit Leigh Henningham

way through the maze of different providers and a

At lower level acuity it may be cognitive

lack of coordination between services. From where

behavioural or talking therapy and mindfulness apps

I sit, a successful system development has been the

and social connection; at low-to medium it may

HeadtoHelp service in Victoria.

be referral to a psychologist or social worker; at

Announced by the Australian Government in

medium it may be referral to dedicated health care

August 2020 as a measure to support Victorians

hubs that have multidisciplinary teams that include

struggling through a protracted lockdown, it is

mental health nurses, psychologists, social workers,

run by Victoria’s six Primary Health Networks. It

alcohol, and other drug workers; and at higher

consists of a state-wide single point intake service

acuity to the regional hospital run mental health

where patients, families or GPs and other health

care service.

professionals can refer all but the most acutely unwell person to. The central service is staffed by experienced

While COVID-19 may have exacerbated it, Australia’s mental health epidemic is far from new, and it has long been acknowledged that we are not

mental health professionals who (along with

dealing with it well. It is beyond time for us to apply

referring GP if a GP has referred) make an initial

the solutions-based thinking we have shown in the

assessment and determine the level of care required

face of COVID-19 to a problem that affects so many

and then access that service for the person.

of us every day. The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

> 33


With a collaborative mindset and a stringent focus

present the connection between inputs and need

on a patient-centred, evidence-based model, we

and outcomes far from clear, we will also need

can seize this moment to deliver the mental health

tools to evaluate the success or failure of what we

system that Australia truly deserves. The recent

are attempting. These measures should be viewed

National Federation Reform Council statement on

through the prism of the quadruple aim of primary

mental health reported that patients are currently

care by measuring outcomes, patient experience,

confronted with a system that is ‘fragmented,

provider experience and cost.

complex to navigate for Australians and their

HeadtoHelp is currently funded as a temporary, pandemic-related measure. It is a missed opportunity to let this crucial part of system

“It is hard to overstate the importance of this. The international evidence tells us the best results come when the patient is surrounded and supported by a team that responds to their individualised care and service needs.”

development fall away. HeadtoHelp should be expanded, with the hubs also having access to psychiatrists and drug and alcohol medical specialists. Better integration between services was a key recommendation of the Royal Commission into Victoria’s Mental Health System and from the hundreds of stakeholders that contributed to our Regional Plan for Mental Health – this is a chance to make that happen. HeadtoHelp should also be extended, so that it is a permanent part of the system and continues

families and carers, and not sufficiently focused

to evolve in response to feedback form patients,

on prevention and early intervention’.

families, GPs and other providers and performance

The same goes for their GP and other care providers. It quotes recent reports, including

indicators. The COVID pandemic is a key moment for

Victoria’s Royal Commission into Mental Health,

Australian health, and an opportunity we must take.

that call for a more compassionate, coordinated

If the past year has taught us anything, it is that

and consumer-centred system. We need to build

when pressed, we can adapt our systems rapidly

on the HeadtoHelp model to reduce fragmentation

and effectively to meet a crisis. Just as Victoria

and build integrated models.

has evolved in leaps and bounds on systems for

It is hard to overstate the importance of this. The

contact tracing in COVID-19 when it was apparent

international evidence tells us the best results come

there was systems failure, we have recognised

when the patient is surrounded and supported by a

failure our mental health care systems and the

team that responds to their individualised care and

embedding and evolution of a HeadtoHelp is a

service needs. And this is nowhere more important

sensible and demonstrated enhancement with

than in the mental health space.

major positive impacts.

This is not to say there is a smooth or easy road ahead. Entrenched divisions and silos will require hard work and good will to break down. With the

34

The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

ha

This article was originally published in North Western Melbourne Primary Health Network’s Primary Pulse (Autumn 2021) magazine.


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The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

ELDAC is funded by the Australian Government Department of Health

35


PROFESSOR SABE SABESAN Senior Medical Oncologist and Clinical Dean at the Townsville Hospital and Health Service and James Cook University

DR CHRISTOPHER STEER Senior Medical Oncologist, Border Medical Oncology, Albury Wodonga Regional Cancer Centre and Senior Lecturer, UNSW Rural Clinical School, Albury Campus

Values aligned organisational culture as the foundation for workforce wellness Is it a pipe dream?

“We feel optimistic that sustainable system solutions can be implemented since many organisations and government departments have chosen their values and purposes and are endeavouring to adhere to them.”

Workforce wellness and engagement have become

Moral injury is increasingly considered to be a

buzzwords in healthcare settings since there is an

central tenent to disrupting workforce wellness.

intimate relationship between staff wellbeing and

Moral injury refers to the psychological, social,

performance of the healthcare system. Wellness

and spiritual impact of events involving betrayal or

initiatives such as wellness champions and wellness

transgression of one’s own deeply held moral beliefs

committees have been set up in response to

and values occurring in high stakes situations. In the

emerging workforce mental health issues. These

context of healthcare, staff may face situations that

are largely reactive rather than being proactive in

do not allow them to deliver care in the way they

addressing or preventing the root cause of mental

have been trained (that is, to help people and do no

health issues.

harm), or staff may observe contradictions between

36

The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021


GraphicStock

organisational values and operational behaviours,

The question then becomes, how can

processes and actions and feel powerless to rectify

health systems and leaders respond with

them. Moral injury in healthcare workers can result

sustainable system solutions to minimise these

in anger, disengagement, and burnout.

‘contradictions’?

Across the country and internationally, moral

Within healthcare teams, the promotion of

injury experienced within the health system

a strong sense of shared purpose along with

occurs mainly as a result of ‘contradictions’

strong leadership has been shown to reduce

between organisational values and operational

rates of mental health problems in staff. Many

behaviours, actions and processes that exist within

authorities believe that organisational values

healthcare organisations. It seems that clinicians

are the foundation of organisational culture, and

and managers around the world waste considerable

alignment of values and purpose across all levels

amounts of time, energy and passion trying to

of organisations may minimise moral injury and

overcome these contradictions, just to get on

promote positive emotions amongst staff.

with delivering the essential components of the universal health systems. Contradictions can be observed at all levels

We feel optimistic that sustainable system solutions can be implemented since many organisations and government departments

of health systems. The idea that the system

have chosen their values and purposes and are

constructs itself is one of the first contradictions.

endeavouring to adhere to them. To start a

Health policy is determined by political agendas,

new narrative, the first step is clarification of

loud advocacy bodies, lobby groups and power

values and purpose. Recognising the importance

brokers rather than driven by evidence-based

of organisational culture as the foundation for

community needs and contemporary health

workforce wellness, solutions that ensure that

management principles. This may be partly

the values are lived should be implemented.

responsible for unstructured spending and wastage

These values should not be confused with

of resources.

personal or human values that we learnt from our

Though teamwork, shared decision-making, and

families, schools, and universities. Organisational

distributed models of leadership are encouraged

values are operational values related to

at clinical levels, in most management settings,

processes, operational behaviours, and actions.

the health system is largely autocratic with

Selected practical examples are listed in

decision-making accountability mostly being

table 1 under commonly used organisational

assigned to an individual. In democratic societies,

values such as excellence, respect, engagement,

autocratic systems and unilateral decision-making

and compassion.

>

are bound to cause moral injury. The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

37


Values

Corresponding actions

Excellence

• Develop and implement action plans to achieve strategic mission and vision of organisations • Regularly identify matters that cause distress to staff and advocate for solutions to reduce workforce distress • Proactively keep the waiting lists down

Compassion

• Provide care closer to home models of care as routine business • Fill vacancies in a timely manner to avoid fatigue for other staff • Set targets related to health outcomes and patients’ outcomes • Develop clinician-enabling processes for recruitment, and research regulatory matters • Respond to email and queries in a timely manner

Respect

• Receive feedback and input from staff before finalising plans • Avoid saying “NO” without evidence of ineffectiveness of an idea and/or input from other team members

Engagement

• Adopt team-based operations and team-based decision making rather than adopting autocratic decision making • Co-design system improvements through clinician, management, and consumer partnership models

Table 1: Examples of organisational values and corresponding actions

Values aligned actions need to be embedded at all

weaknesses’. These collaborative management

layers, including in both the national health policy

models have the potential to involve, engage

and local operational levels.

and empower the workforce, instill a sense of

Examples of these solutions include formal

belonging and ownership and as a result enhance

team-based operations and co-design of system

workforce wellbeing at all levels and layers of the

improvement initiatives through clinician, consumer

health system. This values-aligned culture is ever

and management partnership models at all layers.

so important at the time of impending austerity

Team=based operations would also align with

created by COVID-19 when the workforce needs to

modern management concepts such as ’incomplete

be taken on the journey of creating efficiency with

leader, and complete teams that recognise

psychological and moral safety.

that every leader is incomplete with their own

38

The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

ha


Preparing our future health leaders VALUE-BASED HEALTHCARE STARTS HERE.

CRICOS Provider #00120C

Find out more: health.anu.edu.au

ANU College of Health and Medicine

The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

39


LEANNE DREW-MCKAIN CEO Coach Pty Ltd

Resuscitating respect— the heartbeat of workplace psychosocial safety An interview with Martyn Campbell, Chair of the Heads of Workplace Safety Authorities

Martyn Campbell

40

The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

“I endured condescending behaviours when I started at the hospital. While working at one ward, staff would talk negatively toward me, ignore my questions and leave me to new tasks or areas without any orientation …This led to weeks of bullying behaviour which caused me to eventually leave that ward. I feel the negative behaviours lead to unsafe practices for patient wellbeing and personally I feel unsupported and have lost a lot of confidence. My anxiety has increased to a point where I experience physical symptoms.”


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inside and outside the health sector. It is also

Work SA and Chair of the Heads of Workplace

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Safety—is implementing Australia’s most

established evidence that in health workplaces

pioneering regulatory reforms to understand

‘negative workplace behaviour, especially

and prevent workplace incivility, bullying and

negative communication, is known to … have

harassment, in a determined attempt to turn

a serious impact on workplace performance,

the tide.

productivity and personal wellbeing’.

1

However, after more than a decade of

I recently had the opportunity to interview Martyn for the launch of the Australian

digesting data on the extent and impacts of

Healthcare and Hospitals Association’s (AHHA)

workplace bullying, and declaring stirring

workplace bullying prevention program—Bully

‘zero-tolerance’ pronouncements, the sector’s

Zero Culture of Excellence—to talk solution.

workplace bullying and incivility statistics are

Indeed, as a workforce communication coach,

on the rise. Indeed, across sectors, current

I comment regularly that in our organisations

interventions are failing.

‘the thing we talk about least is how we talk to

2

each other.’ So, let’s start that conversation … >

The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

41


Martyn, in your view, why have we made so little progress on workplace bullying over the years?

• made demeaning or derogatory remarks about you • ignored or excluded you from professional camaraderie

I think there are several reasons. The first is

• addressed you in unprofessional terms either

that we have a very poor understanding of

publicly or privately

what bullying behaviours actually look like.

• doubted your judgement on a matter for

Broad definitions such as ‘aggression, violence,

which you have responsibility.

intimidation, threats, harassment’ don’t offer practical working descriptions, and they also hide a multitude of harmful disrespectful behaviours that are sadly too commonly traded in workplaces. The problem with that is that

Unfortunately, they are weighty. UK health workforce researchers Burnes and Pope tell us

our workers aren’t supported to identify

that negative behaviours deeply affect staff,

these behaviours as unprofessional. They then commonly go unaddressed, leaving the recipient simply feeling vulnerable and inadequate.

citing ‘feelings of isolation, insecurity, fear, worthlessness and lack of value’, and of feeling undermined, powerless and vulnerable. Studies

Research note: Researchers Burnes & Pope

by Riskin (2015) indicate that staff exposed to

assert that ‘concentrating only on bullying and aggression is counterproductive, because it misses out the wider damage done by more prevalent forms of negative behaviours such as incivility’.

3

even mildly rude behaviour ‘perform poorly on cognitive tasks, exhibit reduced creativity and flexibility, and are less helpful and prosocial’.4 Of course, the business costs are immense too.

What are some of these behaviours?

Fiscally, as organisations pour disproportionate

The evidence is strongly pointing our attention

funds every year into costly HR and industrial

to the role of quite subtle behaviours in causing

interventions in response to bullying and team

psychosocial harm. Klingberg suggests that as a

breakdowns, lost time and productivity, stress

health team worker you might experience reduced

leave etc. Then in the health context, soberingly,

wellbeing impacts when for instance a colleague

we have the impacts on patient experience,

on occasions has:

safety and outcomes to consider.

• put you down or was condescending to you

In addition to all these factors, our failure to

• paid little attention to you or showed little

address harmful communication behaviours leads

interest in your opinion

42

What are the impacts of these negative communication behaviours?

The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

over time to more egregious behaviours such


Snapshot

ENDORSED BY THE AUSTRALIAN HEALTHCARE & HOSPITALS ASSOCIATION.

What is it?

What are the benefits?

The Bully Zero Culture of Excellence is a 36-month service partnership that equips hospital and health care providers of all sizes to grow supportive, respectful, positive-behaviour cultures with a zero tolerance for bullying.

The Bully Zero Culture of Excellence will:

• build brand reputation as a zero-tolerance culture Coach Pty Ltd survey data leader suggests that the Top 10 most and assault. Researchers at La Trobe University • safeguard the health, safety, and wellbeing of your people Endorsed by the Australian Healthcare and Hospitals prevalent negative communication Association, the Bully Zero Culture of Excellence recommend that preventing and eliminating • improve workforce performance and patient care comprises five key steps: behaviours reported in the • unite your people together towards your purpose workplace violence requires putting all our 1. REVIEW workplace bullying and behaviour policy workplace are: • drive a capability uplift that generates a sustained and processes way of working efforts into stemming these lower-order 2. ENGAGE staff directly to secure a commitment

as violence, aggression and sexual harassment

• reduce cost of complaints, investigations and lost1. Being persistently negative (80%) time incidents

harmful behaviours.5

and skill improvement in workplace behaviours

3. CREATE a shared workforce-wide communication charter for adoption by the whole organisation

create a sustained culture of mutual respect and

5. PRACTISE the change by supporting measuring

improve employee loyalty

2. Talking negatively about professional courtesy So, let’s talk solution. So many experts 4. ALIGN and integrate the principles into or existing • in create opportunities to positive brand as a leading you others your or their employer of choice such as Klingberg assert that we need organisation antibullying supports absence (65%)

growth to foster a culture of respect and good and reviewing positive culture • embed improved practice and supports across every 3. Making patronising, member of your team. communication. That’s a gargantuan condescending, sarcastic or derisive comments (65%) task. How do we do that? Our partners

Fundamentally, we need to skill and support our

The Heads of Workplace Safety Authorities 4. Commonly adopting negative is made up of representatives from work health and safety regulators across Australia body language or critical and Newfacial Zealand, working together to promote and implement best practice health expressions towards and you or Coach is fixated on one thing: Making the safety. thousands of interactions occurring in the workplace each day safe, productive, positive others (53%)

The Culture of Excellence Program comes with the unique endorsement of the Bully Zero Foundation, the national leaders in bullying prevention, educationand awareness.

workers to call out these types of behaviours. But they can only do that if they: 1. know what behaviours to look for 2. feel supported to address them 3. have the words to use—we can’t ask for

and performance enhancing.

5. Interrupting you or others in

Become part of the AHHA-endorsed Bully Zero Culture of Excellence discussions (51%) community to give your institution a national zero-tolerance brand.

6. Dominating conversations and making it difficult for you or others to speak (49%)

respect if we’re not extending it ourselves. This is why I am putting my full weight behind the AHHA and the Bully Zero Foundation as they launch the Bully Zero Culture of Excellence to the health sector. There isn’t another anti-bullying program in the country that is working solely

8. Ignoring your presence, comments or requests (38%)

to equip organisations to create a culture of prevention and elimination of harmful behaviour. Its very purpose is to give an entire workforce a common awareness of unprofessional behaviours, a common language to discuss them, and a common responsibility for disallowing them.

7. Adopting a consistently negative position in meetings and discussions (48%)

>

9. Implying criticisms or making statements with innuendo to insult or persuade (36%) 10. Commonly speaking to you in a cold or critical tone (35%)

The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

43


“For senior health administrators, it is a comprehensive, measurable, single-source response to meeting its Safe Work obligations. But much more than that, it is the means to lift their people to a culture of respect that in turn unlocks their wellbeing, performance and their patient outcomes.”

How does the Bully Zero Culture of Excellence work?

response to meeting its Safe Work obligations.

The program essentially comprises five steps:

their people to a culture of respect that in turn

1. Auditing of current state—which is essentially

unlocks their wellbeing, performance and their

But much more than that, it is the means to lift

where Bully Zero familiarises itself with the

patient outcomes.

policies and procedures currently in place

Thank you, Martyn, it has been a pleasure.

relevant to workplace psychosocial safety. 2. Engaging the whole workforce in an information, awareness and positive behaviour-change program called Class

ha

For information about the Bully Zero Culture of Excellence program click here.

Act Conduct—to create that shared language and responsibility. 3. Creating an organisational communication charter through a staff-wide survey in the Class Act participation process. 4. Integrating that charter (and the behaviour-change facilitated by the Class Act program) into the organisation’s HR policies and practices. 5. Practising the new behaviours with organisational development support and measuring the growth through pulse surveys over time. The steps are fully led by Bully Zero and paced over three years to keep the load low and feasible for busy CEOs and people-andculture leaders. The health sector at-large has been asking for this type of change support for years, and I sincerely gratulate the AHHA for responding with this solution. For senior health administrators, it is a comprehensive, measurable, single-source

44

The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

REFERENCES 1. Klingberg, K., Gadelhak, K., Jegerlehner, S. Brown, A., Exadaktylos, A. & Srivastava, D., 2018, Bad manners in the Emergency Department: Incivility among doctors. PLoS ONE 13(3): e0194933. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal. pone.0194933 2. Magee, C., Gordon, R., Caputi, P., Oades, L. Reis, S. & Robinson, L, 2014, ‘Workplace Bullying in Australia’, Centre for Health Initiatives, University of Wollongong. 3. Burnes, B. & Pope, R. 2007, ‘Negative behaviours in the workplace: A study of two Primary Care Trusts in the NHS’, International Journal of Public Sector Management, Vol. 20 No. 4, pp. 285-303 q Emerald Group Publishing Limited, 0951-3558 doi 10.1108/09513550710750011 4. Riskin, A., Erez, A., Foull, T., Kugelman, A., Gover, A., Shoris, I., Riskin, K., Bamberger, P., ‘The Impact of Rudeness on Medical Team Performance: A Randomised Trial’, 2015, American Academy of Paediatrics, http:// pediatrics,aappublications.org/content/early/2015/08/05/ peds.2015-1385 5. Bowen, B., Privitera, M. R. & Bowie, V., 2011, ‘Reducing workplace violence by creating healthy workplace environments’, Journal of Aggression, Conflict and Peace Research, Vol. 3. Pp 185-198, doi 10.1108/17596591111187710.


Snapshot

ENDORSEDBYBYTHE THEAUSTRALIAN AUSTRALIANHEALTHCARE HEALTHCARE&&HOSPITALS HOSPITALSASSOCIATION. ASSOCIATION. ENDORSED

Whatisisit? it? What

What are are the the benefits? benefits? What

The Bully Zero Culture of Excellence is a 36-month The Bully Zero Culture of Excellence is a 36-month service partnership that equips hospital and health service partnership that equips hospital and health care providers of all sizes to grow supportive, care providers of all sizes to grow supportive, respectful, positive-behaviour cultures with a zero respectful, positive-behaviour cultures with a zero tolerance for bullying. tolerance for bullying.

The Bully Zero Culture of Excellence will: The Bully Zero Culture of Excellence will:

Endorsed by the Australian Healthcare and Hospitals Endorsed by the Australian Healthcare and Hospitals Association, the Bully Zero Culture of Excellence Association, the Bully Zero Culture of Excellence comprises five key steps: comprises five key steps: 1. REVIEW workplace bullying and behaviour policy 1. REVIEW workplace bullying and behaviour policy and processes and processes 2. ENGAGE staff directly to secure a commitment 2. ENGAGE staff directly to in secure a commitment and skill improvement workplace behaviours and skill improvement in workplace behaviours 3. CREATE a shared workforce-wide communication 3. CREATE shared workforce-wide communication chartera for adoption by the whole organisation charter for adoption by the whole organisation 4. ALIGN and integrate the principles into existing 4. ALIGN and integrate the principles organisation antibullying supportsinto existing organisation antibullying supports 5. PRACTISE the change by supporting measuring 5. PRACTISE the change by supporting measuring and reviewing positive culture growth and reviewing positive culture growth

• • • • • • • • • •

• • • • • • • • • •

build brand reputation as a zero-tolerance culture build brand reputation as a zero-tolerance culture leader leader safeguard the health, safety, and wellbeing of your safeguard the health, safety, and wellbeing of your people people improve workforce performance and patient care improve workforce performance and patient care unite your people together towards your purpose unite your people together towards your purpose drive a capability uplift that generates a sustained drive a capability way of working uplift that generates a sustained way of working reduce cost of complaints, investigations and lostreduce cost of complaints, investigations and losttime incidents time incidents create a sustained culture of mutual respect and create a sustained culture of mutual respect and professional courtesy professional courtesy create opportunities to positive brand as a leading create opportunities employer of choice to positive brand as a leading employer of choice improve employee loyalty improve employee loyalty embed improved practice and supports across every embed improved practice and supports across every member of your team. member of your team.

Our partners Our partners The Culture of Excellence Program comes with the unique endorsement of Program the Bully comes Zero Foundation, The Culture of Excellence with the the national leadersof inthe bullying unique endorsement Bully prevention, Zero Foundation, educationand awareness. the national leaders in bullying prevention, educationand awareness. Coach is fixated on one thing: Making the thousands of interactions occurring the Coach is fixated on one thing: Makinginthe workplace day safe,occurring productive, positive thousands ofeach interactions in the and performance workplace each dayenhancing. safe, productive, positive

The Heads of Workplace Safety Authorities is made upof ofWorkplace representatives work The Heads Safetyfrom Authorities safety regulators across ishealth made and up of representatives from Australia work and New working together to health andZealand, safety regulators across Australia promote and implement best practicetohealth and New Zealand, working together and safety. promote and implement best practice health

and safety.

and performance enhancing.

Become part of the AHHA-endorsed Bully Zero Culture of Excellence community to the giveAHHA-endorsed your institution Bully a national zero-tolerance brand.Advocate • AUGUST 2021 45 Become part of Zero Culture of The Excellence Health community to give your institution a national zero-tolerance brand.


Building a robotic surgery program at Macquarie University Hospital “Internationally, robotic surgery has been used successfully for decades and is unquestionably the future of minimally invasive surgery. So from the beginning, we built robotics into our services strategy. Our success today is a result of that early investment.”

Macquarie University Hospital is the first hospital

‘As part of an academic endeavour, one of the

in Australia to have three robotic surgical

core values of the Hospital is innovation, so it’s

systems. It remains the busiest centre for robotic

imperative that we look at ways to bring advanced

urology in New South Wales and has rapidly

approaches to healthcare in Australia,’ explained

growing programs in other areas. What is behind

Associate Professor Kmet, who has spent more than

the Hospital’s success?

30 years working in human services and health care

Macquarie University Hospital opened its doors in 2010 as Australia’s first private hospital on a university campus. A cornerstone of the academic

management in Australia, South East Asia and the United Kingdom. ‘Internationally, robotic surgery has been used

precinct known as MQ Health, the Hospital supports

successfully for decades and is unquestionably

the larger entity by delivering excellence in patient

the future of minimally invasive surgery. So from

care through clinical care combined with teaching

the beginning, we built robotics into our services

and research.

strategy. Our success today is a result of that early

Conjoint Associate Professor Walter Kmet, CEO of Macquarie University Hospital, says that the story

investment.’ Robotics boosts precision and accuracy and

of robotics at the Hospital is driven by its academic

shines particularly when operating in deep pelvic

health sciences identity.

spaces. The approach is heralded for its benefits to

46

The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021


Conjoint Associate Professor Walter Kmet

patients: less bleeding, shorter hospital stay

in cardiothoracic, gynaecology, colorectal, and

and faster overall recovery.

head and neck surgery. There has also been an

‘It’s about giving surgeons another choice in

investment in an assisted robotic system for knee

delivering the best care,’ said Associate Professor

arthroplasty and the latest generation navigation

Kmet. ‘When a robotic approach could be

system for neurosurgery.

performed for a particular procedure, there

Macquarie University Hospital runs two da

has to be clear patient benefit in selecting it.

Vinci Xi Surgical Systems — still the mainstay for

A well-proven shorter laparoscopic procedure

most urological procedures, including radical

might better serve a patient. The priority is

prostatectomy, simple prostatectomy, partial

always patient benefit.’

cystectomy and bladder diverticulectomy, radical

A diversified approach

nephrectomy, partial nephrectomy, nephro-

Macquarie University Hospital recently acquired its third robot, making it the first private hospital in Australia to have three systems. The busiest robotic urology centre in New South Wales, the Hospital now also has rapidly growing programs

uretetectomy and pyeloplasty. Gynaecology also has a long-established record with the da Vinci — its real advantages apparent when operating on difficult and challenging cases, especially large fibroids, advanced endometriosis >

The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

47


“Last year, the Hospital selected the Versius Surgical Robotic System as it looked to expand, making it the first Australian hospital to invest in the next-generation British system.”

and pelvic floor prolapse. The Hospital also offers

A training and development partner

robotic lung operations, and was the site of the

Macquarie University Hospital has a ten-year history

first robotic kidney transplant in the Southern

of working with Intuitive Surgical to implement,

Hemisphere using the da Vinci.

improve and train other surgeons in robotics. MQ

Last year, the Hospital selected the Versius

Health surgeons have used the da Vinci at the

Surgical Robotic System as it looked to expand,

Hospital to livestream robotic-assisted procedures

making it the first Australian hospital to invest in

as part of discipline-specific international and

the next-generation British system. Professor David

international conferences, reaching thousands

Gillatt — Director of Medical Services at Macquarie

of viewers.

University Hospital — said that the business case

Macquarie University Hospital is currently the

for selecting the versatile and compact Versius

home of Versius training in Australia. CMR Surgical’s

was strong.

structured training course incorporates online and

‘The Versius can be moved easily, is quick to

simulator-based training, followed by experience

set up and can be used in virtually any operating

using cadavers in an operating theatre environment

room, so it provides a different opportunity as

— all of which MQ Health can support as an

far as costs go,’ explained Professor Gillatt, a

academic health sciences precinct.

world-renowned urological surgeon who has been

‘The robotic program is not just about acquiring

instrumental in strengthening the Hospital’s

the technology,’ Associate Professor Kmet said.

robotic program.

‘It’s about the ability of the team to implement the

‘The modular configuration of the system is also

approach in a safe and effective way. This takes an

ideal for developing hybrid procedures where

investment in people — in having a highly skilled

shared access to the operative field means we

team that can not only train the next generation

can start a procedure laparoscopically, and then

of robotic surgeons and nurses but also provide

switch to the Versius for intracorporal suturing,

feedback on clinical experience to companies. In

for example, where the vision and advanced

urology, gynaecology and cardiothoracic, we have

wristed instruments allow us greater surgical

some of the most experienced surgeons in the

access and dexterity.’

country operating at Macquarie University Hospital.

For now, different disciplines at Macquarie

‘If companies produce robots, they are coming

University Hospital — notably general, colorectal

to us for implementation and refining. So there

and cardiothoracic surgery — are finding their

is research and evaluation taking place alongside

niche with the Versius. As the hospital pioneers

clinical work, and as I walk around the Hospital

the use of the system in Australia — without the

it’s fantastic to see medical students and residents

decade-long local knowledge that now exists for

learning and experiencing not only what the

the da Vinci — the highly collaborative and rich

technology can do, but how a hospital system

learning environment of MQ Health’s academic

functions with robotic systems in it. It’s really a

setting is paving the way for its success.

comprehensive approach to adopting and integrating robotics at all levels of our activities.’

48

The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

ha


We help organisations collect, analyse, and act on the outcomes that matter most so they can deliver more personalised and value-based care for all

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Will you lead the transition to ValueBased Health Care, or will you be left behind? Globally, health and social care sectors are being reimagined in the face of ageing populations, increased prevalence of chronic diseases, growth in emerging markets and shifting reimbursement models. This requires funders and providers to restructure how care is organised, measured and reimbursed. At EY, we co-design value-based approaches to reposition and optimise service design, funding models and operational structures. This helps health and social care organisations to adopt evidence-based strategies to deliver outcomes that matter to individuals and society, improve experiences, and achieve sustainability. www.ey.com/en_au/health EY can support your organisation’s value-based health care transformation

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The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

49


ANNA BRENNAN DetectED-X Research Assistant

Cloud-based Technology Reduces COVID-19 Mortality Rates

The number of patients suffering from the life-

founders in 2010 at the University of Sydney and

threatening symptoms of COVID-19 has outpaced

implemented across Australia, Europe, Asia and

the number of skilled staff required to accurately

North America.

diagnose the lung CT scans. Because of this, a

In 2019, the Australian Government commissioned

technological platform assisting in the diagnoses

our team to deliver a similar solution for diagnosing

of incoming cases has been essential.

dust disease using High-Resolution Computed

DetectED-X is a cloud-based technology that

Tomography. The platform then accommodated

presents itself as an educational solution that

a COVID-19 diagnosis tool during 2020. Through

improves radiological detection rates based on

DetectED-X’s free virtual clinical environment,

an intelligent interactive educational platform.

clinicians are able to become better at recognising

The COVID-19 pandemic took over all aspects of

the early CT signs of COVID-19.

life for Australians, illuminating the importance

DetectED-X is a browser-based application

of healthcare and healthcare workers. So as

that allows clinicians to improve their detection

a response to that pandemic, this program

performance on their computer or laptop. In the

was updated to be utilised in a way to assist

clinician’s own reading environment, they view

radiologists dealing with COVID-19.

and judge a set of Lung CT cases via their machine

DetectED-X was founded by a group of Australian-

with connectivity to the internet. They view the

based radiation and imaging experts to help

cases in DICOM format on the computer and mark

doctors and radiologists worldwide to diagnose

the cases using online scoring software via their

cases of breast cancer, lung case and COVID-19

trackpad or mouse.

faster and more accurately. DetectED-X follows on

Once the clinicians have completed the test-

from the highly successful BreastScreen Reader

sets, they are presented with results describing

Assessment Strategy (BREAST) platform, which

their performance metrics including specificity,

was created by a team including DetectED-X

sensitivity, true positive, true negative, false

50

The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021


Pixabay

COVID-19 identification through CT scans is necessary for early patient treatment and isolation

positive and false negative scores. Also, a reader

imaging, but due to the continuous evolution of

specific image file is instantly generated that

technology, this online network allows for the

enables them to review all the images that were

practitioners to become better at diagnosing

within the test-set just completed, as well as

different diseases and conditions.

demonstrating your decisions alongside the expert truth for each image. This platform was created to support clinicians

Additionally, due to this being a cloud-based platform, easy access allows for sustainability and quick diagnosis training. This new form of clinical

through the COVID-19 pandemic but will also

training is revolutionary and will encourage higher

continue to benefit other medical fields through

quality of diagnosing by medical practitioners

the creation of platforms including the BreastED,

which will result in the lower rates of mortality

LungED, ImagED, LinED and UltraED platforms.

across a variety of diseases.

Each platform is for a different category of medical

The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

51


SAM HARKUS Principal Audiologist, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Services, Hearing Australia

New research shows kids’ ear and hearing health is an urgent priority For the majority of Australian children who

type of middle ear condition and will experience

experience it, otitis media or middle ear infection is

middle ear disease over 10 times longer than non-

a painful but relatively short-term condition, happily

Indigenous children.1 More children experience

unlikely to impact children’s long term listening and

the severest forms, at rates the World Health

communication skills development.

Organization call ‘a massive public health problem

However, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander

requiring urgent attention’.2 Persistent otitis media

children have a significantly different experience of

is not confined to remote communities however,

middle ear disease than non-Indigenous Australian

almost half of a group of Aboriginal babies in an

children. They tend to acquire ear disease earlier,

ongoing Perth study had developed middle ear

as young as six weeks old. It’s often without obvious

infection by the age of six months.3

signs. It’s more prevalent and more likely to become

When otitis media presents like this, it impacts

chronic: one in three children will have at least one

development and life trajectories. It often persists

52

The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021


Otoscopy 2 Daynawa

listening and communication skills are learned,

Avoiding long term developmental impacts

important for many reasons including literacy. Three

Hearing Australia’s research division, the National

Australian studies now show a link between chronic

Acoustic Laboratories, recently recommended that,

otitis media in early childhood and delay across a

in order to avoid development impacts, Aboriginal

range of developmental domains at school entry.

and Torres Strait Islander children with significant

throughout the critical years when foundational

4, 5,

6

Many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children

otitis media-related hearing loss should have hearing

are starting their formal education years at a

loss remediated as early as possible before they turn

disadvantage.

one year old, or within three months of diagnosis.

Hearing Australia is committed to reduce the rate

Hearing can be improved through several means:

of hearing loss in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander

through primary health care with guidance from

children by at least half by 2029.

clinical guidelines like the Otitis Media Guidelines >

The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

53


“Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children make up almost ten percent of Australian children with hearing devices and most have hearing loss caused by otitis media.”

for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Children;

What can be done?

through specialist medical or surgical treatment;

So, what can be done to ensure Aboriginal and

and through use of hearing devices to make sound

Torres Strait Islander children get early support

easily audible.

for ear and hearing trouble and the impacts on

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children make

their developing listening and communication skills

up almost ten percent of Australian children with

are minimised?

hearing devices and most have hearing loss caused

1. Make use of the clinical guidelines.

by otitis media. Currently, only around one in four receive their first hearing aid by the age of five years.7 This can be significantly reduced by earlier diagnosis of persistent otitis media and prompt referral for hearing assessment. Unfortunately, many Aboriginal children do not connect with specialist ear health care until around the same age. A recent national survey of hearing health practitioners indicates Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children commonly wait two to four years for surgical care, such as insertion of grommets). Ear disease hospitalisation data also suggests young Aboriginal children are underrepresented in in-patient pathways: hospitalisation rates for non-Indigenous Australian children aged 0-4 years are almost double those for Aboriginal children aged 0–4 years, while for Aboriginal children aged 10–14 years, the rate is almost three times higher.8

The 2020 Otitis Media Guidelines for Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Children guide practitioners through diagnosis, management and referral, and are now an App! www.otitismediaguidelines.com 2. Look in ears regularly. The signs of otitis media can be subtle and easily missed. Don’t wait for family to raise concerns: look in Aboriginal children’s ears regularly, from as early as age as possible. If you need a refresher, primary health practitioners can register for free on-demand training through TAFE NSW’s new Ear Train program: www.tafensw.edu.au/eartrain 3. Pair otoscopy with tympanometry. Working out what’s happening in a child’s middle ear is challenging by visual inspection alone, even for audiologists. A tympanometer, which measures middle ear movement, boosts the chance of a correct diagnosis. To refresh tympanometry knowledge, use online resources like Ear Train or this one from Hearing Australia: www.hearing. com.au/Resources-for-health-professionals/ General-Practitioners/Tympanometry-trainingfor-primary-health-services

54

The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021


4. Take a listening skills approach. Listening is the first literacy skill to develop. Listening skills develop in an ordered way and are a reliable indicator of hearing status. New checklists help primary health staff evaluate listening skills, work out whether children are on track and guide referrals: www.plumandhats.nal.gov.au 5. Refer early for hearing assessment. HAPEE hearing assessments for all Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander children not yet attending full time school are available for primary health to

“Currently, only around one in four receive their first hearing aid by the age of five years.7 This can be significantly reduced by earlier diagnosis of persistent otitis media and prompt referral for hearing assessment.”

refer to in many community locations and at Hearing Australia centres. These assessments are free* for families: www.hearing.com.au/ Hearing-loss/HAPEE 6. Build listening and communication skills. All children with ear and hearing trouble will benefit enormously from plenty of daily opportunities to practice their listening and communication skills. Yarning at Home provides families with a starting point on how to do this. https://plumandhats.nal.gov.au/listening-yarningskills/

ha

Disclaimer* The Hearing Assessment Program is an initiative of the Commonwealth Department of Health. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children not yet attending full time school are eligible to be seen. All services provided under this program are free of charge. A hearing check includes a number of age appropriate tests of hearing and middle ear function. REFERENCES 1. Kong, K., & Coates, H. (2009). Natural history, definitions, risk factors and burden of otitis media. Medical Journal of Australia, 191(9), 39–43. 2. Acuin, J. (2004). Chronic Suppurative Otitis Media. Burden of Illness and Management Options. World Health Organisation. Geneva, Switzerland. https://doi. org/10.1007/978-94-011-6663-8_3

3. Swift, V. M., Doyle, J. E., Richmond, H. J., Morrison, N. R., Weeks, S. A., Richmond, P. C., & Brennan-Jones, C. G. (2020). Djaalinj Waakinj (listening talking): Rationale, cultural governance, methods, population characteristics–an urban Aboriginal birth cohort study of otitis media. Deafness and Education International, 22(4), 255–274. https://doi.org/10.108 0/14643154.2020.1826101 4. Bell, M. F., Bayliss, D. M., Glauert, R., Harrison, A., & Ohan, J. L. (2016). Chronic illness and developmental vulnerability at school entry. Pediatrics, 137(5). https://doi. org/10.1542/peds.2015-2475 5. Simpson, A., Šarkić, B., Enticott, J. C., Richardson, Z., & Buck, K. (2020). Developmental vulnerability of Australian school-entry children with hearing loss. Australian Journal of Primary Health, 26(1), 70–75. https://doi.org/10.1071/PY18162 6. Su, J. Y., Guthridge, S., He, V. Y., Howard, D., & Leach, A. J. (2020). Impact of hearing impairment on early childhood development in Australian Aboriginal children: A data linkage study. Journal of Paediatrics and Child Health, 1–10. https:// doi.org/10.1111/jpc.15044 7. Hearing Australia. (2020). Demographic details of young Australians aged less than 26 years with a hearing loss, who have been fitted with a hearing aid or cochlear implant at 31 December 2019. 8. Australian Institute of Health and Welfare. (2018). Australia’s health 2018. 16, 1–11.

The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

55


DR MARTIN KLUCKOW Professor of Neonatology, University of Sydney; Senior Staff Specialist Neonatology, Royal North Shore Hospital; Humpty board member and Medical Subcommittee Chair

KERREN HOSKING Director Medical Programs, Humpty Dumpty Foundation

Small gains translate into big differences How one charity helps public hospitals improve health equity for kids

In 2019, the Federal Government launched the

complex and often compounded, and as health

National Action Plan for the Health of Children and

care professionals we are exposed to this daily,

Young People: 2020—2030, outlining the ‘national

regardless of where we practise. Our goal is to treat

approach to improving health outcomes for all

and meet the individual needs of each patient,

children and young people, particularly those at

but there is often huge variation in the tools and

greatest risk of poor health’.

resources we have available to help us do this.

Priority area one of the national action plan

The crux of national plans like this is the need

highlights the importance of addressing health

for collective and collaborative efforts at all levels

inequity for children and young people — the social

of society. This is not easy to coordinate and

and other determinants that contribute to this are

operationalise, especially when trying to bring

56

The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021


Paediatrician Dr Louise Woodward and baby Davey who was the first child transported in the neonatal transport incubator donated to Royal Darwin Public Hospital.

together both public and private sectors.

have. Some of our larger centres and regions

But there are ways to genuinely and effectively

are lucky enough to have their own fundraising

work in partnership to achieve even small gains

foundations, but these are few and far between.

in health equity. All public hospitals and health services, from

Understanding the avenues of non-government support available to public health services is an

remote clinics to major tertiary centres, are

important first step, and the charitable sector is

subject to fiscal constraints. This is a reality of

an increasingly important partner for our public

public funding. In the absence of budget, public

health system when it comes to supplementing and

health services either need to look elsewhere for

enhancing the services we provide to our patients.

support or continue to make do with what they

It is reassuring to know there are organisations >

The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

57


“ It shouldn’t matter where you live, but all too often the geography lottery means children in rural and remote Australia are unable to access the same level of care as children in metropolitan areas.”

able to support and work collectively with us

Approved Wish List requests are promoted to

towards improving health outcomes for children.

Humpty’s donor base and beyond in the hope of

For 30 years the Humpty Dumpty Foundation has worked to help bridge the gap that often

finding a donor. And find donors they do. In the past six months

exists between available resources and actual

alone Humpty has donated around $3 million in

needs through the donation of paediatric medical

paediatric equipment to over 100 hospitals and

equipment. Humpty, like many other charitable

health services right across the country — from

initiatives, began with a humble goal. Its Founder

remote health clinics to major children’s hospitals.

and Executive Chairman, Paul Francis OAM,

The equipment provided ranges from intravenous

together with Patron Ray Martin AM, set out

access devices such as EZ-IO drills right through to

to raise some money to paint the walls of the

sophisticated neonatal transport incubators and

Children’s Ward at Royal North Shore Hospital.

ventilation devices.

Three decades later Humpty is the largest

Against the backdrop of tight health budgets,

provider of children’s medical equipment to public

the work of foundations like Humpty brings much

hospitals and health services in Australia behind

needed private investment into the public health

governments, supported by a very generous

system to address key areas of need and improve

private and corporate donor base.

health equity. It shouldn’t matter where you live,

To date more than 440 hospitals and health

but all too often the geography lottery means

services have shared in over $85 million of

children in rural and remote Australia are unable

essential and lifesaving medical equipment for

to access the same level of care as children in

sick and injured paediatric patients. The concept

metropolitan areas.

is pretty simple—individual health services

While equipment alone doesn’t solve this

identify a specific, unmet equipment need where

problem, it can make a tangible difference at

government funding is not available and apply

the coal face and help to save lives. For health

for this to be included on Humpty’s Wish List.

care professionals it provides some confidence

Applications are reviewed by a committee of

they have the right tools on hand to effectively

medical and policy experts to ensure the need

stabilise, monitor and treat small patients until

is clear and justified, and the equipment is fit-

retrieval teams arrive. For families it might mean

for-purpose for the level of service provided.

the difference between receiving treatment close

58

The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021


to home or being forced to relocate away from their support systems.

Humpty’s work is evolving, creating exciting opportunities for health services, local hospital

Mid North Coast Local Health District Corporate

districts, governments and service providers to

Relations Manager Sharon Fuller said the support of

work collaboratively, address areas of genuine

Humpty Dumpty Foundation and its donors means

need and make a real difference. Recent initiatives

nursing and medical staff can access the specific

include large scale rollouts of equipment to

equipment they need.

support screening and early detection programs

‘Our Paediatric, Midwifery and Emergency teams

for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children,

know exactly the equipment they need to make

building regional capability for transfer and

a difference in the lives of their young patients,’

retrieval services, and equipping smaller hospitals

Mrs Fuller said.

to better manage critically ill neonates while

‘The Foundation and its supporters help transform those wish lists into real medical equipment, from items that monitor jaundice to life-saving paediatric laryngoscopes in ED. ‘The difference this equipment makes can’t be measured in dollars alone. It saves lives, it reunites families and it boosts staff morale… our doctors

awaiting transfer to a higher level unit.

ha

Hospitals wishing to make equipment requests can visit the website www.humpty.com.au. If you are interested in a discussion with Humpty about ways to work together, please email medical@humpty.com.au or call (02) 9419 2410.

and nurses know they have the community’s support for the very important work they do every day of the year.’

Queensland Health

Clinical Excellence

Queensland

Creating solutions for better healthcare. Clinical Excellence Queensland is a leading clinical innovation agency supporting safety and quality improvements in the Queensland health system. We bring together decision makers, clinicians and consumers to improve healthcare.

clinicalexcellence.qld.gov.au

The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

59


KASIA BAIL Associate Professor in Nursing University of Canberra

LINDSAY BEVEGE Chief Executive, Humanetix Pty Ltd

DIANE GIBSON Distinguished Professor (Health and Ageing), Health Research Institute, University of Canberra

Improving the quality of healthcare? Not wasting clinicians’ time would help

Most submissions to government in health call for increased funding to improve outcomes for

applied in a variety of clinical environments. The evaluation by the University of Canberra was

patients and other consumers. But putting more

funded by the Australian Government. It found

funds into a wasteful system can exacerbate,

that ACE reduced staff time on ‘waste’ activities.

rather than solve, problems.

Nurses spent 6% less time searching for information

Studies from Australia and around the world show

and took 25% less steps per shift. Nurse time on

that nurses spend about 30% of their time on paper-

documentation fell from 20.4% to 6.4%, bringing

based and electronic records. There are roughly

total time saved by nurses to 20%.

1

280,000 FTE nurses in Australia, so maintaining

The overall quality of resident care increased:

these systems costs about $7.5 billion per year.

staff spent more time with residents; responded

Wasting nurse time in this way distracts from care. It is well established that more nurse time with patients means faster patient recovery, fewer readmissions and reduced lengths of hospital stays.2 A 2-year independent evaluation by the University

better to resident needs; and managed the ‘delicacies of dignity’ better. Quality of documentation improved, including legibility, completeness and data accessibility. Resident-focused goal setting rose from 56% to

of Canberra of a deployment of Humanetix ‘ACE’

88% and completed nursing evaluations rose from

in Jindalee Aged Care in the ACT found that ACE

31% to 88%. Completion of resident assessments

improved the quality of care while increasing

increased from 68% to 96%. Documentation of the

efficiency and saving employee time.

nursing process increased from a median score of

ACE is a point-of-care documentation, decisionsupport and clinical workflow system. It can be 60

The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

10 pre-implementation to a median score of 17, out of a possible score of 18.


Ismael Nieto

“The overall quality of resident care increased: staff spent more time with residents; responded better to resident needs; and managed the ‘delicacies of dignity’ better.”

The improved quality and completeness of

comprehensive data at the point-of-care also

documentation is an important advance on earlier

assists clinical decision-making and further

forms of electronic-based health records. Previous

improves care.

research found that while electronic health records

Technological solutions like ACE are resources

reported better process and documentation

we can invest in now. These investments in health

structure, with no illegible handwriting, paper-

deliver strong returns by improving employee

based records provided more complete and

satisfaction and patient health outcomes and

accurate documentation. By contrast, ACE has

ensuring resources are used as best as possible. ha

shown to improve both the quality, accuracy and the completeness of records. These improvements came despite the deployment being during COVID-19 pandemic, when staff and residents reported significant stress and behavioural issues. The results show major improvements from streamlining the administration load on nurses. Ensuring nurses can spend more time with residents means that resources are effectively deployed. This improves health outcomes and employee satisfaction.3 High quality,

Learn more about the University of Canberra’s study of ACE in this short video. References 1. Aiken, L.H. et al, 2018. Nurses’ and patients’ appraisals show patient safety in hospitals remains a concern. Health affairs, 37(11), pp.1744-1751. 2. Needleman et al,2002. Nurse-Staffing Levels and the Quality of Care in Hospitals, New England Journal of Medicine,346, pp.1715-1722. 3. Ludlow, K. et al, 2021. Unfinished Care in Residential Aged Care Facilities: An Integrative Review, The Gerontologist, 61(3), pp.61-74 https://doi.org/10.1093/geront/gnz145.

The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

61


Become an AHHA member Help make a difference on health policy, share innovative ideas and get support on issues that matter to you – join the AHHA.

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FROM THE AHHA DESK

More about the AHHA AHHA Board

AHHA National Council

AHHA sponsors

The AHHA Board has overall responsibility for governance including the strategic direction and operational efficiency of the organisation.

The AHHA National Council oversees our policy development program. The full list of Council members can be found at: ahha.asn.au/governance

The AHHA is grateful for the support of HESTA Super Fund.

Hon. Jillian Skinner Chair

Secretariat

Dr Michael Brydon University of Notre Dame Ms Lynelle Hales Sydney North Primary Health Network Ms Chris Kane Western Australia Primary Health Alliance Ms Yasmin King SkillsIQ Prof. Wendy Moyle Griffith University Dr Keith McDonald South West Sydney Primary Health Network Ms Susan McKee Dental Health Services Victoria Ms Joy Savage Cairns Health and Hospital Service

and program support.

Mr John Gregg Chief Executive

Contact details

Mr Murray Mansell Chief Operating Officer Dr Rahul Bhoyroo Executive Director, Australian Centre for Value-Based Health Care Dr Rebecca Haddock Deeble Institute Director Ms Lisa Robey Engagement and Business Director Dr Linc Thurecht Senior Research Director Ms Kylie Woolcock Policy Director Ms Emma Hoban Policy Analyst Ms Renée Lans Secretariat Officer Mr Lachlan Puzey Policy Officer Ms Malahat Rastar Communications Manager Ms Annie Ryan Administration Officer Ms Naomi Sheridan Policy Officer

Other organisations support the AHHA with Corporate, Academic, and Associate Membership and via project

AHHA Office Unit 8, 2 Phipps Close Deakin ACT 2600 Postal address PO Box 78 Deakin West ACT 2600 Membership enquiries T: 02 6162 0780 F: 02 6162 0779 E: admin@ahha.asn.au W: www.ahha.asn.au The Health Advocate, general media and advertising enquiries Malahat Rastar T: 02 6162 0780 E: communications@ahha.asn.au The views expressed in The Health Advocate are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Australian Healthcare and Hospitals Association. ISSN 2200-8632

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The Health Advocate • AUGUST 2021

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Articles inside

Improving the quality of healthcare?

2min
pages 60-61

Small gains translate into big differences

4min
pages 56-59

New research shows kids’ ear and hearing health is an urgent priority

5min
pages 52-55

Cloud-based Technology Reduces COVID-19 Mortality Rates

2min
pages 50-51

Resuscitating respect—the heartbeat of workplace psychosocial safety

6min
pages 40-45

Building a robotic surgery program at Macquarie University Hospital

4min
pages 46-49

Values aligned organisational culture as the foundation for workforce wellness Is it a pipe dream?

3min
pages 36-39

Beyond COVID-19

5min
pages 32-35

Low interest rates

2min
pages 30-31

Leading Better Value Care

3min
pages 28-29

Smile Squad recognised as school dental innovator

3min
pages 24-27

The Courage to Measure Outcomes: A Patient’s Perspective

4min
pages 21-23

Managing the long term health consequences of COVID-19 in Australia

2min
pages 15-17

Transforming the health system for sustainability

3min
pages 12-14

Patients First

4min
pages 18-20

Chief Executive update

2min
pages 4-5

AHHA in the news

5min
pages 6-8
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