operational plan summary 2012/13. contents forward by carl ellson, south worcestershire ccg chair
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Operational Plan Summary 2012/13
Contents
Forward by Carl Ellson, South Worcestershire CCG Chair............................................................................
Section 1 Introduction to South Worcestershire ..........................................................................
Section 2 Our vision, values, objectives and priorities .................................................................
Section 3 2011/12 Achievements.................................................................................................
Section 4 2012/13 Corporate objectives.......................................................................................Section 5 2012/13 Commissioning priorities.................................................................................
Section 6 Our priorities in more detail..........................................................................................
- authorisation..............................................................................................................
- engagement..............................................................................................................
- local service priorities...............................................................................................
- joint service review .................................................................................................
- finance and quality, innovation, productivity and prevention (QIPP) .........................
Section 7 Contact us .................................................................................................................
Glossary ....................................................................................................................
3
4
6
8
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14
20
21
22
27
28
Forward by Carl Ellson, CCG Chair
The NHS reforms have placed clinicians absolutely at the forefront of improving healthcare commissioning and in South Worcestershire we are determined to grasp this challenge and to improve services and outcomes for our population. Now that the Health and Care Bill has been passed, we will be concentrating this year on our application to be authorised as a statutory organisation which will provide us with the responsibilities and freedoms we require to commission the best care possible within the resources available to us.
This Operational Plan Summary reviews our achievements in 2011/12 and sets out our overall vision and priorities and importantly how we will deliver these during 2012/13. A full version of our plan is also available.
We are undoubtedly in a period of great change, with the health care reforms and the country’s wider financial challenge greatly influencing how we approach 2012/13. We will be working collaboratively with patients and the public, our NHS providers, other CCGs, the Local Authority and the voluntary sector to deliver much of the work outlined in our plan. The Joint Services Review of Worcestershire health services is a major component of this collaborative work across the county and I am committed to us playing a major role in shaping the outcome of that work.
Dr Carl Ellson
Clinical Executive Lead and Accountable Officer
South Worcestershire CCG
Area Practices Population
Droitwich and Ombersley
5 37,768
Evesham, Bredon & Broadway
6 49’873
Malvern Hills & Pershore
11 87,557
Worcester City 10 117,235
Total 32 292,433
Introduction to South Worcestershire
South Worcestershire CCG will be the biggest of the three CCGs in Worcestershire, accommodating approximately half of the health budget being delegated in the County. We are a collection of 32 General Practices serving a population of 292,000 people.
The age and demographic profile for South Worcestershire is similar to that of the county as a whole. However, there is a slightly greater proportion of people aged 65 or more. Despite what appears to be a typical population profile, there are challenges that we will need to address. For example:
•The significant proportion of the elderly population at risk due to rural isolation.
•There are significant areas of social deprivation in urban parts of South Worcestershire’s area.
• Across South Worcestershire there are significant variations in the appearance of chronic long term conditions.
• Mental health is the single largest area of long term disease related spend.
Our BoardName Role
GP Representatives Portfolio
Dr Anthony Kelly Chair, Clinical Lead for Droitwich Joint commissioned services
Dr Carl Ellson Clinical Lead for SWCCG and Accountable Officer
Overall strategic development
Dr David Farmer Clinical Lead for Evesham, Bredon and Broadway
Medicines Management, primary care & innovation
Dr Jonathan Thorn Joint Clinical Lead for Malvern Hills and Pershore
Community services
Dr George Henry Joint Clinical Lead for Malvern Hills and Pershore
Quality
Dr Felix Blaine Joint Clinical Lead for Worcester City Long term conditions
Dr Nikki Burger Joint Clinical Lead for Worcester City Urgent care, planned care & acute services
Secondary Care Representatives
TBC Secondary Care Clinician
Lay Representatives
Rob Parker Vice Chair, Lay Member & Non Executive representative for West Mercia Cluster Board
Margaret Jackson Lay member
Stuart Bourne Co-opted member
Management Team Representatives
Simon Trickett Chief Operating Officer
Mary Walters Interim Chief Finance Officer
Jo Galloway Interim Executive Nurse
Dr Anthony Kelly
Dr Carl Ellson
Dr David Farmer
Dr Jonathan Thorn
Dr George Henry
Dr Felix Blaine
Dr Nikki Burger
Our vision and purpose
We exist to ensure that the population of South Worcestershire enjoy lives which are as healthy as possible. To achieve this we will aim for the following:
South Worcestershire Clinical Commissioning Group will be recognised as a model organisation for providing innovative and creative healthcare services for its patients. Our Practices will work together to achieve goals and maximise primary care efficiency. We will use scarce resources wisely and our community will understand that unpopular decisions are taken in the interests of the community as a whole. Ten years from now the delivery of healthcare for residents of South Worcestershire will have improved significantly and NHS care provided will guarantee clinical quality for our patients.
Our core purpose as an organisation is to:
•Improve the health of our patients by commissioning high quality, value for money healthcare services.•Listen to and gains the respect of the community•Work in partnership with statutory, voluntary and private sector organisations for the betterment of the population we serve•Invigorate healthcare delivery by creating value based competition founded on improved patient outcomes.•Pioneer new and innovative ways to provide healthcare.
Throughout this Operational Plan we will outline how we plan to meet this purpose and ultimately deliver our Vision. Whilst our vision will take a number of years to deliver, this plan outlines the steps that we plan to take over the coming 12 months.
Our values
To deliver our vision for South Worcestershire we need to build and develop a successful organisation that is clear in what it is trying to achieve.
Successful organisations have clear values; values which everyone who works in the organisation share. Last year, our Board took time to develop and share these values and they continue to drive our work. We recognise that for values to be more than “nice words” we need to act upon what we say.
Our Organisational Development Plan (a separate document which underpins our Operational Plan, outlines in far more detail how we plan to embed these cultural values in everything we do.
Organisational Values
(1)Be clinically effective, quality focused and patient centred.(2)Secure value for money in everything we do.(3)Be an organisation that values its staff.(4)Not tolerate mediocrity – to have “why not”, rather than “cannot” embedded in our vernacular.(5)Be nimble, decisive, proactive and dynamic(6)Challenge bureaucratic NHS behaviour.(7)To demand of each other what is right, even if our actions and decisions impact on our popularity.
2011/12 AchievementsIn our 2011/12 Business Plan, we set out 6 priorities areas for the financial year. Below is a summary of the progress that we have made against each priority
Priority Progress
1.`Financial stability and Quality, Innovation, Productivity and Prevention (QIPP)
We used the national QIPP framework throughout the year to help us to deliver more services within the same resources and with the use of our risk reserve, remained in financial balance. Worcestershire as a whole health economy delivered a £3m surplus which will be added to our budgets for 2012/13 and help us to deliver the required QIPP saving (see page 22)
2. Organisational Development This has been a major area of work for us throughout the year in preparation for our application to be a statutory organisation. Key achievements have been:•The size and geographical footprint of the CCG has been approved by the Strategic Health Authority•In December 2011, we held elections for Board members and have implemented a new Board and supporting committees•We have agreed the functions that we will discharge as a CCG and the functions that we will buy in from a support organisation•We have developed an organisational structure for our CCG and completed a process of staff consultation•We have developed and started to implement a development programme for Board members and other clinicians and staff in the CCG
2011/12 Achievements continuedIn our 2011/12 Business Plan, we set out 6 priorities areas for the financial year. Below is a summary of the progress that we have made against each priority
Priority Progress
3. Engagement Engagement with our practices: We have continued to work closely with all our practices to ensure that they are true members of the CCG. Practices receive a weekly briefing on national & local development, they attend monthly locality meetings and each practice was visited from Dec – March by a clinician and manager from the CCG Board. SWCCG has a website which includes a members section.Engagement with the community: we have developed a draft engagement strategy which we have consulted on at 2 public meetings and have begun to implement. We have 2 lay members on the CCG Board. Engagement with the Local Authority: Worcestershire has established a Health and Well Being Board which brings together the Worcestershire CCGs, Local Authority and health providers to agree overall priorities and ensure that all partners work to improve health outcomes for the community. We have fully participated in this important forum and Dr Carl Ellson has been elected as Vice Chair.
4. Working in partnership with our providers We have established monthly Liaison Boards with Worcestershire Acute Trust and the Health and Care Trust which have enabled consultants and GPs to directly review clinical pathways. Dr Anthony Kelly is acting as Clinical Lead for the on-going Joint Strategic Review (JSR) of health services within Worcestershire.
2011/12 Achievements continuedIn our 2011/12 Business Plan, we set out 6 priorities areas for the financial year. Below is a summary of the progress that we have made against each priority
Priority Progress
5. Urgent Care We are developing an overall urgent care strategy and progressed a number of elements of that strategy:•GPs have worked in A&E throughout the winter to explore ways in which primary care can contribute to patients seeking urgent care•8 practices have piloted a system of GPs offering patients telephone appointments as a means of increasing capacity for patients seeking urgent appointments with their GP•Risk stratification tools have been piloted by 2 practices to identify patients at risk of hospital admission•Aconbury wards at Worcestershire Royal Hospital have been closed and rehabilitation services have been re-provided in the community at Timberdine together with a hospital at home service and enhanced intermediate care services
6. Community Services We have developed a service specification for integrated community teams following extensive consultation with our practices. We will be working with the Health & Care Trust to implement during 2012/13.
We have developed a model for enhancing care to patients in nursing and residential homes which will again be implemented during 2012/13.
Our corporate objectivesWe have defined these objectives for 2012/13
Area Baseline Our aspiration for one year ahead
CCG Development
A newly formed organisation on a journey towards authorisation.
An authorised CCG that is competent to take on full responsibility from 1 April 2013
Delivering QIPP 2011/12 plan delivered with a £1.2m surplus £5.7m QIPP savings delivered for 2012/13 with clear plans and milestones already established for 2013/14 and 2014/15
Managing the health economy
Scope of the review just being established, with clear SWCCG involvement approved.
Clear decisions made and agreed that are in the best interest of our community.
Improving access to A&E
WAHT has fallen short of the 95% target for every month of 2011/12.
WAHT regularly achieves the target, where non achievement is the exception.
Improving stoke services
WAHT consistently fell short of both key targets for time spend on a specialist bed and rapid access to services during 2011/12.
WAHT regularly achieves these targets, where non achievement is the exception.
Improving Primary Care
All practice performance benchmarked against indicators – cross reference to quadrant for methodology and areas for improvement identified
Priorities for 2012\13 will continue to focus on Access, Screening, Prevention and practice specific improvements
Improving patient safety
There were two “Never Events” reported up to February 2012 at WAHT
No Never Events reported and other patient safety risks thoroughly investigated
Health visitors Health visitor numbers in Worcestershire fell from 102 in June 2011 to 96 in February 2012 – when they should have been increasing.
Health Visitor numbers meet the Strategic Health Authority’s approved Health Visiting Implementation Plan.
Areas of highest need
6 practices in high deprivation areas showing increased mortality risks.
To have made significant inroads in addressing these inequalities and to have developed a clear plan for tackling them.
2012 /13 Commissioning Priorities
SWCCG is committed to working with partner organisations in order to achieve the best health outcomes for the people of Worcestershire.
For 2012/13 priorities have been shaped by the constituent practices with checks back to our partners and the NHS Operating Plan to assess alignment. During 2012/13, we will develop ever closer dialogue with partners to ensure a more integrated approach and evidence based commissioning. The steps that we are taking are:
•Sharing and analysing the data from the Joint Strategic Needs Assessment (JSNA) through the locality groups.
•Building a culture that uses evidence and data to shape decision making. Business Intelligence reports will be used as a key data source.
•Consulting on and implementation of a public engagement plan to understand the priorities of patients.
•Continuing as a key player of the Health & Well Being Board with Dr Carl Ellson as vice-chair.
•Fully participating in the Joint Service Review of hospital and community services in Worcestershire
•Developing a partnership model of commissioning which demands quality services but which seeks to understand and resolve challenges faced by providers.
Our partnership model in action:We are working closely with Worcestershire Health & Care Trust & with Worcestershire Local Authority to develop integrated community teams , so that district nurses, care managers , occupational therapists, physiotherapists, social workers and others all work closely together within multi-professional teams to deliver seamless care to patients , improving communication & avoiding duplication.
Our priorities in more detail
AuthorisationBy April 2013, the government aims for all Clinical Commissioning Group to be authorised as statutory organisations and to take over full commissioning responsibilities . Primary Care Trusts and Strategic Health Authorities will be abolished on 31st March 2013.
All CCGs are required to submit an application to the National Commissioning Board to be authorised as statutory bodies. Applications will be made in 4 ‘waves’. South Worcestershire CCG, together with the other 2 Worcestershire CCGs has elected to submit an application in Wave 2 on 1st September 2012. The application process has a number of phases:•Preparation – over the spring and summer, we will be gathering evidence to demonstrate our capacity and capability to commissioning services for our local population•Stakeholder survey-in July, the National Commissioning Board will send a survey to all our constituent practices and a range of other stakeholders to seek their views on the CCGs capability•Application- the formal application will be submitted on 1st September•Site Visit – During October, 6 members of the National Commissioning Board will visit us to discuss our application•Outcome – During November, we can expect to hear whether our application has been successful. The National Commissioning Board has the powers to authorise CCGs in full, to authorise with conditions with a development plan to be followed before full authorisation or to reject the application.
For any CCG which fails to achieve authorisation by April 2013, the National Commissioning Board will manage commissioning for that population until such time as the application is successful.
Our priorities in more detail
EngagementWe recognise the role that engagement has in identifying the opportunity to improve services – both through proactive involvement in planning and through responding to patient and community views following their involvement with our services. We also recognise that it is important to engage with a wide range of individuals and groups, not just those that are active and easy to access.
Our intentions for engagement are to:
•Make sure engagement is absolutely integral to how we work and to build communications and engagement into the commissioning process to ensure that all commissioned schemes have been developed considering patient and stakeholder feedback.
•Understand our communities and their needs and develop a culture that involves patients and the public at all levels of decision making.
•Develop methods of communicating with and engaging South Worcestershire residents to assist the organisation to develop a real understanding of the local population and significant ideas and opinions amongst communities.
•Ensure people are fully informed and that we are open and honest about what is possible and create flexible opportunities for people to be involved
•Establish excellent relationships with stakeholders and inside and outside of the health economy to achieve joined up engagement, messages and campaigns.
•Develop processes, infrastructure and capacity to deliver effective engagement
•Ensure that all engagement is accessible and takes into account the varying needs of different groups of the local population.
•Support the planning and delivery of campaigns and initiatives.
•Contribute to the development of an operating model for Healthwatch and raise awareness of Healthwatch among local Public Patient Participation Groups and other patient fora.
Our Engagement Plan
The key aspects of our engagement plan are to provide the right opportunities for engagement. This includes:
•Participation in decision making from a relatively small group of those who wish to be actively involved.
•Informed contribution through a range of participative bodies that contribute to the wider debate
•Providing information of interest to the public on ideas, innovations and major decisions.
Engagement
In implementing this plan to date, we have:
• Set up public meetings to consult on our draft plan.
• Commissioned a project to help us work with the people of the 6 most deprived wards in Worcester City to help us work in partnership with the community to commission services which better meet the needs of local people.
This year, we will:
• Develop our processes to ensure that we build engagement into our routine business, including collecting and acting on patient feedback.
• Seek feedback on our own performance as an organisation.
• Establish a patient, public and stakeholder committee to advise SWCCG Board.
• Consult on establishing SWCCG as a ‘membership’ organization.
• Develop a strong partnership with LINk (Healthwatch from 2013).
• Jointly train commissioning professionals & our members to carry out quality monitoring visits at our provider organisations.
Local response to our draft engagement plan
What we asked you…Does the Levels of Engagement Diagram (below) make sense and is it easy to understand?
What you told us…
Levels of engagement
Our priorities in more detail
Priorities for local service development
At a development day held in October 2011,SWCCG priorities for local improvement in 2012/13 were defined as:
•The development and implementation of a new service model for integrated community services which maximises value, enhances the patient experiences and keeps patients at home wherever clinically appropriate.
•The development and implementation of enhanced support for patients in care homes drawing on the evaluation of the 2 year pilot in Malvern Hills & Pershore Locality.
•Enhancement to primary care mental health services which meets NICE guidance, delivers value for money and frees capacity in secondary care mental health services.
Three development priorities for 2012/13:
(1)A new service model for integrated community services.
(2)Enhanced support for patientsin care homes.
(3)Enhanced primary care mentalhealth services
Our priorities in more detailManaging our local health economy – Joint Services ReviewA strategic system wide approach is being taken to fundamentally review the options for securing a high quality financially sustainable providers. We are actively involved in this process and will participate fully. The review is chaired by Bryan Smith, Non-Executive Director for West Mercia, with Dr Anthony Kelly, SWCCG Board member acting as Clinical Lead.
SWCCG has representatives on the 4 work streams of the review as follows:
The results of the Joint Services Review will not be known until later in the year and therefore our focus in the coming year is on participating in the review to the fullest extent and we will outline our response to the major issues in next year’s operational plan. However, right now we have a clear understanding of what we want the JSR to achieve for our community and patients. Our ambitions include to achieve sustainable high quality services that are as close to, if not in, people’s own homes. This will needs to come through enhancing quality, capacity and capability in the role of primary care and community teams, investment in enabling technology, a stronger focus on preventing illness and the virtual elimination of urgent care admissions for known high risk groups. As well as delivering transformational change, this also means addressing the core weaknesses in our current system around access to services such as A&E and Stroke. These are bold ambitions, but by engaging in the process, working with our stakeholder, partners and community we are confident that we can make significant strides in this very positive direction.
Emergency Care Dr Nikki Burger, SWCCG Urgent Care LeadDr Carl Ellson, SWCCG Clinical Lead
Planned Care Dr John O’Driscoll, Member of SWCCG Health & Care Trust Liaison Board
Women & Children’s Services Dr Anthony Kelly, SWCCG Board Chair
Elderly Care Dr Felix Blaine, SWCCG Board Member.
Delivering Quality, Innovation, Productivity and Prevention (QIPP)
QIPP (quality, innovation, productivity and prevention) is the government’s approach to health services achieving more from the resources available to enable us to manage the growing needs of an aging population.
Across Worcestershire the QIPP challenge for 2012/13 is £11.4m. The estimated share of South Worcestershire’s contribution to this total is £5.7m. Further work is being undertaken to establish the exact value but for the purposes of this plan we are aiming for the £5.7m.
The following pages provide an overview of the QIPP programme along with a summary of actions around what SWCCG will do specifically to support delivery of these targets.
SWCCG recognises the importance of owning and delivering the QIPP agenda, not just because of the contribution it makes to the financial health of the CCG, but also because of the opportunity it provides to significantly improve quality and genuinely transform the way in which some services are delivered.
Our priorities in more detail - Financial plan and QIPP
The annual budget of £310,452,038 for South Worcestershire
CCG represents the projected spending requirement for
2012/13.
This sum includes an agreed transfer of £2m from Wyre
Forest CCG and this enables South Worcestershire to start
the year with an operational risk reserve of £2.95m, which
equates to 1% of the overall CCG budget.
The budget requirement is dependent on the CCG delivering
the commissioner QIPP schemes of £5.7m. This is a risk that
can be managed through robust project management of the
QIPP programme.
Service Budget £m
Secondary Healthcare (including Worcestershire Acute Trust £119.5m and Worcestershire Health & Care Trust £35.7m)
192.0
CCG Schemes 2.2
NICE / PbR Exclusions 1.7
Partnership & Non NHS Agreements 7.0
Mental Health Placements 3.1
Continuing Healthcare 10.6
Pooled Budgets/Joint Commissioning 35.7
GP Prescribing & Dispensing 47.3
APMS Contracts (Walk in Centre & Out of Hours) 4.1
Earmarked Reserves 2.3
CCG Running Costs 1.0
Operational Risk Reserve 3.0
Other 0.5
Total Budget Available 310.5
Delivering QIPP – our urgent care projectsVision Values Strategic
ObjectivesGoals Prioritised Initiatives
To be recognised as a model organisatio
n for providing
innovative & creative healthcare services for its patients
To be clinically effective, quality
based and patient centred
To secure value for money in everything
we doTo be an organisation
that values its staffWe will not tolerate mediocrity. “why not” rather than “cannot” will be
embedded in our vernacular
We will be nimble, decisive, proactive
andDynamic
We will challenge NHS bureaucratic
behaviourWe will demand of
each other to do what is right even though our actions
and ultimate decisions may impact upon our popularity
To help patients understand urgent care
servicesTo help patients access services appropriately
To ensure patients are assessed and
treated promptly and the right
placeTo only admit
people to hospital when
necessaryTo facilitate
improvement of hospital systems, reduce delays & facilitate early
dischargeTo provide care at home or as
close to home as possible
Managing urgent and emergency care differently at the front door
To implement recommendation from the Joint Service ReviewTo explore new models of care for acute hospital “front end” services
Primary Care Access To improve access to primary care through introduction and roll out of Patient First initiative
Long Term Conditions Management
To implement integrated community teamsTo use the risk stratification tool to better target health resources
To embed self managementTo implement tele-health Care
High Performing providers
Lead Joint Strategic ReviewEstablish & develop liaison boards
Build confidence in providersImprove quality in primary care
Robust alternatives to admissionCommission comprehensive community IV service
Expand Hospital at Home
Support for patients in Care HomesTo commission a network of clinical support for patients in care homes (including those with nursing)To commission enhanced medical support for patients in care homes (including those with nursing)
End of Life CareTo give everyone, regardless of diagnosis, the opportunity to make a choice about their preferred place of care and death in the last year of life and enable
that choice to be realised
Ambulance ServicesTo implement alternative pathways of care to reduce ambulance conveyance rate to hospital
To commission medical support for ambulances
Walk In Centre To review the role of the WIC and explore options which maximise the potential of WIC in its contribution to the efficient delivery of urgent care services
Out of Hours ServicesSupport for care homes
To develop closer working with A&E and community hospitals facilitating access to beds OOHs
Effective & efficient use of capacity across the systemNHS 111 development
Develop Directory of Services with WMASDevelopment of capacity hub
Proactive support for patients with mental illnessTo implement RAID model supporting patients (& carers)with Dementia, self harm and substance misuse
Commission primary Care mental Health Service (IMHAT)
Delivering QIPP – our planned care projects
Project Aim
Orthopaedic Triage (ICATS – integrated clinical assessment and treatment service)
Continue to triage patients through orthopaedic practitioners to ensure that patients receive the correct intervention & only those requiring consultant opinion are referred to secondary care. QIPP savings target of £634,000.
Out-patient follow-up appointments Work with our hospital colleagues to ensure that only patients who clinically require a follow-up are seen in out-patient clinics. QIPP savings target of £314,000.
Ophthalmology Continue to work with consultant ophthamologists and local optometrists to ensure that patients receive clinically appropriate care. QIPP savings target of £40,000.
Mental Health Develop a patient pathway which provides an enhanced service in primary care, reducing the number of referrals to consultant psychiatrists and create more capacity for those with serious mental health problems. QIPP savings target of £177,000.
Delivering QIPP – our primary care schemesProject Aim
Intra-venous therapy in a community setting
Improve assess to IV therapies at home or in a community setting, reducing both planned and emergency admissions to hospital. Facilitate early discharge from hospital for patients requiring on-going IV therapy .
Leg Ulcer Pathway Implement the leg ulcer pathway across SWCCCG which will ensure that all patients with venous ulcers have access to trained nurses and diagnostic facilities in the community
Medicines Management Lower expenditure on prescribing by moving to generic, clinically safe brands. QIPP savings target of £1.1m.
Integrated Community Teams Implement an integrated system of nursing, therapy & social care teams to improve communication, reduce duplication & provide proactive care which keeps more patients as well as possible in the community , thus reducing emergency admissions
Clinical Support for Care Homes Develop enhanced assessments for patients in care homes to ensure they receive the same level of services as people in their own homes
Contact usThe government reforms of health services which have culminated in the Health and Social Care Act (2012) aim to increase the accountability of health care organisations to their local population. We seek to be an open, transparent organisation which is accessible and listens to our local community and all our stakeholders.
Read more about us on our website - www.southworcsccg.nhs.uk where you will find a full version of our Operational Plan
We will be holding further public events during 2012/13 and we are in the process of building a list of members and volunteers to work closely with us. Read more about these opportunities in our Engagement Plan.
We look forward to hearing from you.
GlossaryA&E Accident and
Emergency
CCG Clinical Commissioning Group
CQUIN Commissioning for Quality and Innovation
GP General Practitioner
ICATS Integrated Clinical Assessment & Treatment Service
IV Intra-venous
JSNA Joint Strategic Needs Assessment
JSR Joint Services Review
LINk Local Involvement Network
NHS National Health Service
NICE National Institute of Clinical Excellence
PPI Patient and Public Involvement
PRG Patient Reference Group
QIPP Quality, Innovation, Productivity and Prevention
RAID Rapid Access Interface Discharge
SWCCG South Worcestershire Clinical Commissioning Group
WAHT Worcestershire Acute Hospital Trust
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