The dos and don'ts are part of the IMPRESS full paper Commissioning a community COPD service: Lessons for the NHS based on a case study in Somerset PCT. Click here for the full document.
Commissioners
- Support, if in existence, or establish, a clinical network to guide the development of a needs assessment, service specification and care pathways
- Involve local patients actively and continuously
- Consider if a competitive procurement process is the most cost-effective and sustainable way of improving care or if a continuous improvement programme could be developed
- If it is, consider the readiness of the local NHS to enter a fair competition and discuss locally what support might be available if needed
- Consider the impact on integration and on NHS sustainability if the contract is won by a non-NHS provider
- Ensure you have expert primary and secondary care advice for adjudication of bidders
- Ensure that responsibility for keeping the service up-to-date with best practice is built into the specification
- Consider whether you wish bidders to bid for the provision of audit, research, education and training of primary and community care professionals
- Consider inclusion of incentives to reward best practice
- Have benchmark data for evaluation and some manageable but important evaluation criteria such as continuity of care for patients, equity of access across practices and localities, hospital utilisation, unscheduled care.
- Make it clear to clinicians who the commissioners are – there is potential for confusion if the same people who were employed by the PCT are no longer commissioners but on the PCT provider side, or if GPs who were in one role are now leading practice-based commissioning.
- Consider any unintended consequences such as what happens to the residual costs of providing an acute medicine service and therefore the total costs of the system if investment is removed from a local trust.
NHS clinicians
- Get involved in any local clinical network and actively work together with colleagues across primary and secondary care to consider how care could be improved. Use resources such as the BTS referral criteria to assist in these conversations.
- Plan for how you and your colleagues will listen to patients and engage them in not just self-management but also in service design, information provision and service evaluation
- Campaign for investment in respiratory care, demonstrating how it can meet commissioners’ aims such as reduction in avoidable hospital admissions, and care closer to patients’ homes.
- Maintain relationships with colleagues but be sure you know what their role is now, and who the decision-makers: who is a PCT commissioner, who is in the PCT provider organisation, who is a practice-based commissioner and who is a GP with an interest in providing services (and note that it is possible to be both a practice-based commissioner and a GP provider).
Bidders
- Familiarise yourselves with the process, particularly the scoring system, timelines and adjudication process.
- Get help early from people who have the appropriate skills sets in budgeting, data analysis, scenario planning, social marketing, presentations, and make connections with key stakeholders
- Having read the specification, decide whether it is appropriate to bid – does it fit with your organisation’s strategy? Do you have the resources to bid? What are the risks of not bidding, or not winning? Do you have the resources to deliver the service?
- If you bid, respond to the specification as it is written in the final documents; seek clarification using the formal processes
- Try to start by thinking “out of the box”, without being restricted by knowing how things are done now or the implications for the use of NHS assets.
- Think about not just the written submission but any other adjudication processes such as an interview. Who should attend? For what reason? Imagine what your competitors might do.
25 June 2008
Making the case for a focus on respiratory care
For many clinicians and commissioners, the drive to reduce avoidable emergency admissions has led to a review of care for people with COPD. The NHS Institute’s Opportunity Locator gives SHA and PCT level information about numbers of ambulatory care sensitive condition (ACS) spells and the potential to avoid admission or facilitate earlier discharge. COPD and asthma feature within the ACS list. See here.