What I learnt this week #WILTW

The full list of #WILTW 

A few weeks ago I posted a blog with some thoughts on becoming a new consultant. I’d postulated that having insight into learning being a  life-long journey was an essential element to being a good healthcare professional. I’ve now been in post a couple of weeks: finding my feet, performing induction rituals and thinking about the goals I would like to achieve in my next year.

online-learning

What has hit me like a bomb has been my first clinical experiences on the shop floor. It’s been an amazing learning curve, far greater than I expected actually. The pure clinical component is not really an issue. I have been acting, in some respects, in a consultant capacity for the last three years as I performed locum shifts as part of my PhD. Making clinical decisions, practical skills and running a busy emergency department are almost second nature. What struck me was how little thought I’d previously put not into ‘what‘ I was doing but ‘how‘. I am now a consultant. Clearly I don’t want to create false hierarchies, I recognise I am part of a senior team of doctors and nurses and that the title does not make me lord of the manor. However I also recognise that I have  a responsibility to role model the best possible professional and clinical behaviours. In all situations the demeanor with which I speak to colleagues, the way I approach children, young people and their families and how I interact with staff sets a tone. It’s not until now that the importance of this has become crystal clear.

I thought I knew a bit about leadership. It transpires I have a great deal to learn. Reflecting on my approach to particular challenges (mainly difficult conversations about referrals or picking up staff on sub-optimal behaviours) has demonstrated how difficult being a consistent and strong ‘leader’ is. It is very easy to take a second-best option; that in order to avoid confrontation a compromise is reached which may not be your preferred choice. But when do you draw the line? Obviously always ensuring your way is the best way is no better than always accepting the other person’s point of view. However it’s all too easy to avoid the conversation about the tone that a junior has taken (potentially accidentally) with a parent or other member of staff, for example; but it’s these conversations I need to start having.

Tough Decisions Ahead Road Sign

(via http://www.advisoranalyst.com)

So what I have I learnt this week? Well, I’ve learnt that potentially I’m not as strong as I thought I was. That some of the things I thought I would be able to do in role will take a little more embedding. I am also sure that with the guidance of colleagues and passing of time I will get better. As I said previously – the learning has only just begun again….

So what have you learnt this week? #WILTW

13 years of training and tomorrow it all begins again…

The art of medicine was to be properly learned only from its practice and its exercise.
Thomas Sydenham 

So after managing to prolong my training to its maximal extent, with two separate years in Perth, Australia and a PhD, tomorrow my medical ‘training’ in one sense comes to its end as I start work as a consultant. I’ve had a chance to reflect on what I have actually learnt since starting on the wards as a wet-behind-the-ears junior doctor back in 2001. Its funny, I don’t feel I am in any way, shape or form an expert now, even though I have probably done my obligatory 10000 hours. I certainly don’t feel as wise as the paediatric consultants I remember when I was a house officer. This might reflect an element of an impostor syndrome – or perhaps I have actually become unconsciously competent.

I’m not really sure how this all happened. I struggle to remember more than a handful of occasions when I specifically learnt anything from anyone, although there are some notable exceptions.

Don’t listen for the murmur, listen for the absence of noise

This brilliant advice has always stuck with me, especially as someone who has always struggled with the complexity of paediatric cardiology.

I remember being shown during my first neonatal attachment that babies often open their eyes when put over their mother’s shoulder (which makes identifying the red reflex much quicker).

One of my most powerful experiences occurred in Australia as I watched an Emergency Department Consultant at the resuscitation of an infant from an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. After several of rounds of CPR it was clear the outcome was going to be devastating. I saw the mother realise this; she was inconsolable. And then the consultant handed leadership of the resuscitation to someone else and went over to her, putting his arm around her and bringing her to her child’s side. He spoke to her about loss and how no more could be done. I don’t remember exact words but I vividly emember him crying with her as we all took a step back. It was one of the most incredible things I have seen a consultant do.

Clearly I was taught things – lectures, seminars, ward rounds must have had an impact – but nothing tangible remains and many of the times I know I learnt the most were situations when I was on my own, sometimes inappropriately so.

I have no idea how I learnt to cannulate the septic ex-prem with tiny hands already scarred, little knowledge of when I gained the confidence to lead a group of people I have never met to deliver emergency care to an injured child, and certainly not a clue when I began to appreciate the subtle difference in the reaction of a parent who has not deliberately injured their child compared to one who has when asked how that bruise happened.

But what is more incredible is what I still have to learn. I am a mere ’13 years old’ – health permitting, I may be practicing medicine for double that time yet. It is inconceivable that I will not learn exponentially in that time. And it will be an exciting time, I think. I hope I continue to reflect on those learning experiences, painful or not, in this next phase of my life.

My training begins again  – it’s just that now I have a different title.

Networking: Twitter doesn’t build communities, stories do…

This blog posting is based on my talk to the #HSJRisingStars. It’s good to have the opportunity to expand on my thoughts as it’s clear from feedback that this didn’t quite touch the nerve I was expecting. Raising concerns about twitter, within twitter, is an interesting experience…

In the run up to NHS Change Day 2014 a number of constructive criticisms had been voiced on the type of pledges made. How can it be that health care professionals are pledging to “deliver safe care”, “create caring cultures”? Aren’t these pledges just paying lip service to the broader purpose? Are people just jumping on a bandwagon?

I wrote a blog in response to these concerns. It centred around my acknowledgement that on a busy shift I had forgotten to introduce myself to the parents/child I had just seen. I had essentially failed Kate Granger

I am not a prolific blog writer, I’m probably not even a good one, but Kate tweeted the blog post and in the space of 3 hours it had received 1300 views. This was dissemination on a pretty impressive scale and in fact far more powerful than any previous networking opportunity I had been engaged in. It made me really think about reach and how I had communicated in and out of networks.

Change Day has taught us a lot about the NHS. There seems to be a unmet need to publicly discuss and celebrate core values; reports by Francis and Berwick have removed the taboo of some of these issues. It has taught me personally a great deal about my role in change and the roles of other networks. The story of Change Day began with a discussion about junior doctors and at the very first Change Day meeting I told a story inspired by Helen Bevan, describing how it is the new generation who are most likely to bring about radical change. Interestingly, though, one of the groups least involved in Change Day (in terms of raw numbers) were junior doctors (probably second only to GPs).

How did that happen? Did my networks fail to understand to the message? Was I wrong in my belief that Change Day can – and will – be a powerful instrument for cultural change? I think the reasons are subtle but well worth exploring.

Change Day was in essence about individual people. The real narrative was the reasons behind the individual pledges; the event itself was more like a big scrap book recording and highlighting more than half a million stories. My biggest transformation of thought in the last couple of years has been about the power of narrative. It’s personal narrative which drives us. The networks you are part of, represent, lead or create, contain people who share parts of that narrative. But I wonder how often your (or your network’s) narrative is shared by others. Just because I know ‘x‘ doesn’t necessarily mean that an e-mail by ‘x’ to their “network” will spread to a wider “network” and will be effective at spreading the message.

I’m sure I am as guilty as anyone at pushing the ‘send all’ button. Similarly asking friends  “can you send to your networks?” is something I have realised may not really add value. In fact the use of networks in this way may, in fact, create silos due to the lack of proper dialogue between them. “Nobody talks anymore” is oft quoted but there is some danger that it really is a little too easy not talk. By all means use technology – Hangout, FaceTime and Skype have enabled conversations to take place that weren’t possible previously. They are conversations with animation of expression and vocal nuance. But the real essence of good narrative goes beyond the physical conversation to the nature of what is being spoken. My story of failing at #hellomynameis is much more powerful than telling people how important Change Day is. Similarly describing my personal pledge is a much better vehicle to create interest than a newsletter about the day itself.

None of us wish to create silos as I’m sure we share the same the values. The translation of those values into a vision is probably different between our networks though. So in this time of social media and electronic interfaces, maybe we all need to be a bit more personal. We need to reconnect with each other with personal stories and communications that unite networks – not just transfer information between them.

“In this age of omniconnectedness, words like ‘network,’ ‘community’ and even ‘friends’ no longer mean what they used to. Networks don’t exist on LinkedIn. A community is not something that happens on a blog or on Twitter. And a friend is more than someone whose online status you check.” – Simon Sinek

This (admittedly controversial) quote was really brought home to me when I attended #SMACCGold, a social media and critical care conference. I thoroughly recommend watching the talks when realeased as they are all very much personal stories. Undoubtedly it was twitter, google and blogs that brought people in the #FOAMed community together but the real benefit for me was meeting the people there and engaging directly with them. As I said after the #HSJRisingStars event:

 

(Thanks to Natalie May for pre-publication proof-reading and editing)

#SMACCGOLD – It hurts..

Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought

The 2nd SMACC (social media and critical care conference) has just finished. A packed 4 days (including pre-conference) with over 1000 delegates developed by a few brilliant individuals who have envisioned a different way of learning and collaborating.

This is no ordinary conference, with fantastic topics discussed and innovative events. See Salim Rezaie’s great blog for the detail. There are few conferences where professionally executed simulation debriefings occur in front of an entire auditorium, speakers’ cry in a context that feels appropriate and delegates give standing ovations in some of the break out sessions.

I sit writing this approaching Doha on the second stage of my journey home. I am a SMACC virgin, utterly humbled by the invitation to speak in Brisbane. I have met and listened to some extraordinary people but my over-riding emotion at the moment is one of sadness. I am truly sad it has finished. Don’t get me wrong, my youngest developed chicken pox during my journey away, I do want to go home. I am sad though that I know I will be attending other conferences (unfortunately SMACC Chicago is over a year away!) where I will sit and listen, I may learn some additional clinical information, I may meet a future research collaborator, if I am really lucky something may inspire me to change practice.

What is unlikely to happen is that there will be a tangible excitement when the first speaker takes to the stage, that over coffee break all the delegates will be smiling, that I will witness carefully constructed slide sets that support (not deliver) the stories the speakers are telling.

The attention to detail in the narratives delivered at SMACC was brilliant. It’s likely those reading this who weren’t at SMACC will probably be a little sceptical of this hyperbole. Please, please, watch the video casts when they are released. Watch how Cliff Reid and Iain Beardsell bring their emotional talks together full circle. Natalie May delivers to a packed crowd on “paediatric tips you won’t find in a book” using slides with no text and Tamara Hills received a standing ovation for her PK presentation.  Listen to Victoria Brazil deliver a 20 minute presentation in exactly 20 minutes with no timing aids (ok – I admit this is only probably considered really cool by geeks like me).

The hierarchical nature of academic events is not present at SMACC. It was brilliant to see a mix of professionals, grades, and specialities mucking in. Medical students and junior doctors delivering lectures and being part of the panel discussions. And so I could go on….

If there was one thing that encapsulated SMACC it was the patient centered approach to challenging dogma. I am struck that although the patient should be at the heart of everything we do – I often don’t see that at conferences. I hear people ‘talk’ about it but during lectures on new treatments or methods it’s about stats and facts. It’s about why the speaker thinks something is wrong. What SMACC did was deliver lectures where the speakers understood the challenges of normal practice. That patients are humans, that the things we do in critical and emergency care have an impact on them. That if we do what we always did, we will get where we are going – and is some cases that is simply not acceptable. Challenging Dogmalyis, championed by Prof. Simon Carley is uncomfortable. It hurts sometimes to be challenged.

SMACC hurt.

But until SMACC Chicago this type of hurt is so much better than the pain of any other conference you will go to….

Post Blog note:

Have already started getting messages saying but what about…..? Will start adding 🙂

How I let @GrangerKate down and what you can do about it..

It was not a particularly busy shift. The patients were not any more sick than other evenings I have worked. I may have been a little more tired than normal, I don’t think I was anymore distracted, but as I walked out of the consulting room I realised I hadn’t #hellomynameis.

I’m pretty thorough by nature. I have always felt my communication skills were at least ok and I certainly think I’ve introduced myself to patients/parents since being a junior doctor. I actually felt everyone else did as well. It wasn’t until Kate Granger‘s #hellomynameis campaign really took off that I realised this might not actually be common practice. It’s interesting what is perceived as common practice or ‘assumed’ to be normal. You would think most people or systems would deliver at the minimum a style of care that at least doesn’t harm people but we know from some tragic events this is not always the case. We know for a fact that there must be pretty huge differences in the way things are done from variation in many healthcare outcomes (atlas of variation in care in children being one example).

It always upset me, and the term upset is correct, when I was a trainee representative for the RCPCH and AoMRC and senior medical leader or educator made a pronouncement on what trainees must be able to do. “It’s ridiculous trainees can’t get their WPBA signed off by consultants. At my hospital there is always a consultant available” Yes – at your hospital perhaps. Your world and training environment is very different from others.

And so I raised a wry smile at this tweet this evening

I’ve never met Partha but he sounds like a pretty awesome bloke. Cruelly overlooked in the HSJ Rising Stars awards he clearly has a great vision and passion for health care. He also seems to insist on calling NHS Change Day – pledge day but I’ll let him off that. It’s worth following the chain this tweet produced. I make no secret of my support for NHS Change Day and I’m happy to accept and defend criticism about it (Partha – I know your weren’t criticising but your tweet was perfect for this blog!). “What’s the point?” is a common question. “You had 3500 people pledge to smile last year. Don’t they do that anyway?” is another. For the answer to the latter reflect on when was the last time you spent an entire shift in public view and at no point looked like you weren’t upset, annoyed, bored or frustrated. How do you think your patients felt when they saw you looking like that?

Yes someone has pledged they want to keep patients safe. And yes this is a fundamental part of a healthcare professional’s role. But, unfortunately, sometimes the healthcare service doesn’t always keep patients safe. Yes – its fairly obvious that you should introduce yourself at the beginning of every consultation. But, unfortunately, even someone who has been supporting #hellomynameis passionately can fall short.

In some ways it is a shame it is ‘change’ and it is ‘day’ because it’s not always about ‘change’ and hopefully its not about one ‘day’. But if you can find a better mechanism that brings the NHS together and say look – lets just think about this – then please let me know. Because until I find one I will continue to support people pledging what they feel is important to them however obvious that might seem to you.

Post Blog Note (23.2.14)

A subsequent comment from @parthaskar following this post deserves mention as it is something I strongly support and given I gave the poor chap no notice about using his original tweet think it is only fair I utilise his wise words!

An ABC of an ACF (academic clinical fellow)

This was first writen in 2010 and never published – I was prompted by a recent article in Archives of Disease of Childhood Education and Practice to put it into a blog form.

“Ability is of little account without opportunity”.  ~Napoleon

Prior to the introduction of the Modernising Medical Careers Programme (MMC) it had been recognized that academic medicine was in decline in the UK and there were perceived deterrents to entry into this specialist field. Dr. Mark Walport, the director of the Welcome trust, brought together a number of stakeholders with an aim to use MMC to find solutions to the traditional barriers to an academic career. What emerged from these meetings was the Walport report and the development of an integrated academic training path (table one).

Table One – The Integrated Academic Training path as proposed by the Walport report [1]

integrated academic trainingpath

(please click on to expand – picture via Imperial College)

So although many doctors were unsettled by the experience of implementing the MMC programme, and even more disaffected by the initial failure of its recruitment method (MTAS), there was one group of trainees who potentially stood to benefit. Those interested in an academic career found themselves able to gain academic experience and competencies without having to go out of programme or at detriment to their careers. Introduced in 2006 the initial recruitment of the Academic Clinical Fellow (ACF) was slow. However as knowledge of these positions has increased they have become increasingly popular and for the 2009 year 260 posts were available.  The concept of the Post is novel and a summary of the role from the Walport report [1] quoted below:

Each trainee will have the opportunity to develop a flexible training programme to achieve his / her academic and clinical goals, through the provision of an ad personam training programme and mentoring. Delivery of these programmes should be trainee-centred as far as possible, with a single point of contact for the trainee.

Essentially an ACF is designed to give enthusiastic clinicians protected time (25% over three years) to develop a thesis proposal. When they embark on a PhD or MD their fellowship ends to return afterwards either to a clinical lectureship or back into clinical medicine. Their run through training pathway is protected and, subject to clinical competencies, they would be able to return with minimal disadvantage if their academic career was not successful or didn’t suit them.

So what’s it like to be an ACF and why would you want to be one? There are many popular misconceptions about academic medicine. You do not have to be the cleverest of your peers, have a photographic memory or be a social recluse. I know that because I was an ACF and received no distinctions or awards at medical school (you’ll just have to take my word for it that I have friends.)

Although originally designed for entry at ST1-3 I entered an ACF in paediatric emergency medicine in March 2008 at the level of a year three registrar (ST6). I already had some research experience from a fellowship I undertook in Australia so had a few imprecise academic competencies. Examples of some of these are listed in table two. They are much less specific than clinical ones and some may be interpreted in an open-ended manner. Therefore you need to go out and find the information required; it will certainly not present itself to you fortuitously while you are on call.

The aim was, given a protected day a week, to develop a research proposal which would enable funding to be obtained for a higher degree. I had an office, a desk in a blood taking room with painfully bright lights and a buzzing ultra-low temperature fridge, but away from a nurses’ station and a bleep.

Table Two – Selected Academic Competencies

Have developed critical and evaluatory skills such that they are able to engage with and review published research literature.
Demonstrate a comprehensive knowledge of reference sources and be able to use them in an appropriate manner.
Be able to summarise the hypothetico-deductive model of scientific work, illustrating how this may be applied to a particular clinical question.

There is always the potential for resentment from your colleagues when you are given time away from the shop floor. You sense they feel you will be sitting in front of a computer playing solitaire and looking up friends on face book. It is interesting that I am more tired at the end of an academic day than a clinical shift! When you start it is virtually impossible to sit there doing nothing as you have a range of meetings to organise, courses to book and journals to read. You feel guilty (not least because of your colleague’s unseen glares) if you don’t do anything. This is spur enough to wade through a soporific statistical book trying to explain the difference between sensitivity and specificity, something you thought you learnt in medical school but actually never understood.

“Everyone who’s ever taken a shower has an idea.  It’s the person who gets out of the shower, dries off and does something about it who makes a difference”.  ~Nolan Bushnell

The purpose of the ACF programme is to steer you towards obtaining funding for a thesis (MD or PhD). Although the academic department you are based in will have its own research themes this application will not have been written yet. Ownership and development of an idea by the ACF is considered good practice. It is both enjoyable and frustrating to develop a project. The learning process involves being able to formulate a question (very different from an ‘idea’) which is practical, achievable but most importantly fundable. Many of the suggestions you have will be placed on a back burner as, although good, they are just not achievable in time scale available. In order to develop your ideas experienced advice is needed and developing that advice is a useful first lesson. In my first year as an ACF I had 42 distinct meetings with various individuals and groups and many more ad hoc encounters with my research supervisor. While trying to formulate a research question I first approached those who had any potential connection with my planned topic. Those initial discussions spawn many ideas and lead to a cascade of meetings both within and without the university, hospital and even region. You quickly learn it is vital to have a plan or strategy prior to any meeting. All health care professionals whether doctors, academics, research nurses or representatives of funding organisations are busy people. An initial question of “what can you do to help me?” can be easily be perceived as wasting their time. Explaining your background, interests and aims focuses your direction of travel and it is a lot easier for appropriate advice to be given.  Directly associated with this is need to record information effectively. It was three months before one senior lecturer asked me why I was writing everything she said on a small scrap of paper; “how on earth was that going to be useful in the future?” The next day I brought an A4 ring binder and now have an organised log of all meetings and most importantly outcomes. This is not only necessary for project development it was also a vital piece of evidence for my academic ARCP.

“Librarian is a service occupation.  Gas station attendant of the mind”. ~Richard Powers

In conjunction with developing your question it is important to understand the background research which already exists in your area of interest. Libraries are familiar places to doctors from the late nights spent trying to cram, now long forgotten, knowledge into your brain prior to finals. Librarians at this stage were of little practical use especially as they never seemed to find riotous laughter as much of an adjunct to revision with friends as you did. However the clinical librarian is a mine field of information and is extremely useful in being able to locate a recent article of the “Journal of Amytrophic Lateral Sclerosis” or a 1974 response to an editorial in “Augmentative and Alternative Communication” (both real journals). They are also extremely skilled in designing literature searches and an hour spent with one reaps many hours saved in the future.

Having reviewed the relevant journals and spoken to various authorities on the subject I began putting together an initial research proposal. This document was subsequently revised 13 times before an acceptable version was submitted for a NIHR Research Doctoral Fellowship. Although the theme, questions and method of the final version was very different from the initial draft it was not unrecognisable. With each draft came an increased focus to the question, a better idea of the projects limits and perhaps most importantly an increased understanding of the style of language needed to write applications. Aside from the draft of the proposal the final application took nearly three months to complete. In applying for grants all monies have to be accounted for, which includes your salary, pension and national insurance contributions. The costs of expenses as simple as paper and pens need to be included and statistical help is unfortunately not free. In hindsight trying to bring a whole application together on a day a week (and I certainly did a lot of work in the evening and weekends) added to the stress of the process. With advance agreement and co-ordination the time taken for research over the three years can be taken in any form up to 25 % of the total clinical time. Some centres provide a six month academic block which is especially useful for laboratory studies and allows the ACF to gain experience to inform the thesis application. Others allow a mix of time dependant on the clinical demands (some attachments require a greater clinical commitment to achieve competencies – neonatology during paediatric training is a good example). It is expected the ACF will progress at a faster rate than their peers enabling the academic time to be taken without prolonging the training programme.

Effective forward thinking is important as decisions on major grant applications may take up to six months. Following submission it may take a month to decide whether to send the proposal for peer review and even then a final decision, based on interview, may not be made for another 4-5 months. In that time there will be other grant applications to write and additional research to be performed. It may be during these periods that a return to full time clinical medicine occurs to obtain competencies and exams.

“Failure is only the opportunity to begin again more intelligently”. ~Henry Ford

My initial NIHR Doctoral Research Fellowship application was unsuccessful. The detailed feedback indicated that although I was a suitable candidate the thesis project and support was not of sufficient quality. It is important for grants that you show that you are a committed potential candidate with a robust project detailing measurable outcomes in the planned time frame. You must also demonstrate your supervisors have sufficient experience to supervise you and a training programme is in place for you to obtain the skills necessary to complete the work. It is easy to forget the latter two points in applications. I had presented a couple of abstracts at national meetings based on reviews and audits performed while an ACF. This improved my academic curriculum vitae however we had not thought carefully enough about some of the research techniques needed for the qualitative components of the project. During the next year we refined the question and developed a project group consisting of my research supervisor but also containing academics with specialists interests which were not present in my academic department. I have subsequently obtained funding for a revised project via a fellowship opportunity which has become available at my trust. This certainly would not have been a possibility without the time available from an ACF position.

I have thoroughly enjoyed my time as an ACF despite the pressures of applications deadlines, hours in front of a keyboard and a buzzing fridge.

Regardless of how my academic career develops the experience has been extremely stimulating and rewarding and will be of benefit to me whatever the future holds.

References

1. Medically- and dentally-qualified academic staff: recommendations for training the researchers and educators of the future (the ‘Walport report’). The Academy of Medical Sciences. 2005.

Harry Potter may have been a leader but Neville Longbottom was the radical one

(apols for advert at start)

I watched the Harry Potter and Deathly Hallows during the christmas holiday period. It first reminded me that I really need to go back and read the books as I am sure they are lots of subplots that I missed. But secondly that Neville gets a pretty raw deal compared to Harry Potter. If I was going to be a hero, Neville Longbottom is the hero I would like to be. Little point in believing I am not a geek. But at least a geek who achieves things, a quiet leader.

Neville Longbottom: So how are we going to get to London?

Harry Potter: Look, it’s not that I don’t appreciate everything you’ve done, all of you, but – but I’ve got you into enough trouble as it is.

[walks past everyone]

Neville Longbottom: Dumbledore’s Army’s supposed to be about doing something real.

[Harry stops turns around to face them]

Neville Longbottom: Or was all that just words to you?

[extract from Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix]

The concept of leadership in medicine is pejoratively and passionately pontificated. The impossibility of everyone being a stereotypical ‘leader’ balanced with the importance of all professionals needing to demonstrate ‘leadership’. Harry Potter commonly seen as the former archetype but not everyone can be a ‘Harry’. This is either because they don’t have the subtle instinct to act the right time, are not willing to embrace the negatives or simply weren’t in the right place at the right time. Conversely not everyone sees Neville as a traditional leader but from a hesitant ackward beginning he quietly goes about his business supporting those who need help. He actually has much in common with Harry. Their values and motivations are no different and he ultimately co-ordinates a resistance movement in Harry’s absence. Neville demonstrates true leadership by followership.

Perhaps it is time for us to acknowledge the Neville Longbottom’s of the healthcare system. Those that deliver, sometimes in the absence of guidance, even when everything is stacked against them. The Neville’s appreciate the desire to be involved in creating an effective, high quality healthcare  (it’s not just the Harrys) but acknowledge the system doesn’t give everyone the chance to help deliver it.

If you feel more like a Neville than a Harry then there are things you can do. The School for Healthcare Radicals has opened – an opportunity to learn how to develop yourself, and others, to create change in health and care environments. This school itself has percolated out of NHS Change Day, the 2014 event being now less than two months away. Both are open to all regardless of your profession, grade or place of work. The ideas and pledges you submit are yours and the manner in which you carry them out is up to YOU. But like Neville its likely that you are the type of person who will be delivering more than words…..

“Text, Slides and Videotape”: #SMACCGold Workshop Pre-reading

The pre-conference workshops for #SMACCGOLD represent an opportunity for delegates to gain additional skills direct from some of the conference speakers

The Education Workshop contains a short session on “Text, Slides and Videotape” hosted by yours truly. The aim of this session is to aid delegates use of audio-visual tools to maximise the impact of their teaching. There will be lean towards the use of video as resources on other medium are easily found elsewhere (and its the area in which the greatest gains for least effort can be made IMHO)

I will also be offering an individual feedback session on videos/pictures used in teaching/assessment for attendees. Please send me your cases in advance (secure if needs be) and I’ll touch base at #SMACC. There might be a prize for the best use of audiovisual material for teaching….

It would be worthwhile for all participants to have a look at the following: (more will follow in the new year)

Resources

Education by Video 

P (cubed) A blog on Presentation Skills by Ross Fisher 

A literature review of Patient Video Cases (only for the seriously interested!)

ABC of learning and teaching in medicine

Tasks (these are not obligatory but will help inform the workshop)

1) Please register on www.spottingthesickchild.com (you’d don’t need to have any paediatric experience. This is to demonstrate videos in education. Orientate yourself to the site and then please go to

My waiting room > Patient Stories > Difficulty Breathing > Case 1

I’d like to start a discussion about this google + site.

2) I have added a test video to my vimeo site. It is password protected as the consent for this film means is only available to health care professionals. If you need a password please find it on the SMACC Education Google Discussion group or e-mail me on damianroland@me.com

Look forward to seeing you in 2014!

On Change, Challenging and Christmas Carols….

Last week I went to see my daughter’s school carol service. A small church in our town hosted pupils singing carols in-between reading the nativity. I was particularly inspired by a nine-year old girl commencing the proceedings with a solo version of “Once in Royal David’s City” but also by the general quality of the readings.  My daughter, barely 4 when she started this year I suspect was not as interested, but over the next few years I hope she will take on board this sign of a very positive culture at the school.

This has been a year of emphasising culture and compassion in healthcare. Francis and Berwick laying down a gauntlet that the status quo is simply an unacceptable path to follow. The mechanisms by which this can occur are still not clear though. This has been clearly illuminated to me as I spend my last few months in medical training. Having recently been appointed as a consultant, to start in spring 2014, I reflect on the current thinking about the need for cultural shifts in the future. My practical skills, clinical reasoning and communication with other health care professionals have been developed during my training to avoid the need to ‘step up’ once in post. However developing and enhancing a culture of quality and compassion in my department will require me to speak up about others practices and be exemplary in my own. As a junior medical professional it is easy, although not necessarily right, to turn a blind eye to others’ terse tones with patients, unnecessary delays providing treatments or passive aggressive overtones in communicating with colleagues. I am not talking about clear breaches of professionalism or causing patient harm but those things which unchecked can lead to the development of ‘acceptability’ of poor practice.

This will be a hard for me.  I am also very aware it really easy to talk about these things on a podium at a conference (or in a blog) but a completely different thing to act on in the clinical work place. I have much to learn from other colleagues but I hope I can be a credible and consistent champion for excellent practice in my trust. On a national level much time has been spent developing medical ‘leaders and managers’. I am still not clear of the definition of these words but I am increasingly aware that management skills and techniques can be learnt and developed but ‘leaders’ are not so easily bred. “Leadership” though is something that any health care professional can display. Demonstrating compassion, empathy and quality of practice, consistently, even if not challenging others sets a tone for a strong culture. Anyone can do this, you just need to remember that you are always potentially being watched. The cynics who challenged the Change Day 2013 “Smile” pledge missed the point:

Yes, it seems like such an obvious thing to do, but do you always do it?

This is a time of year of reflection. For some reason a particular christmas song will remind you of past events and states of mind. The constant repetition of these songs forces an often frank summation of where you have been and where you are going. New Years Resolutions one mechanism of acting these subtle challenges.

I hope in 2014 I can set a similar example to colleagues and patients the pupils of Farndon Fields school showed to their fellow pupils.

Have a great holiday period and New Year…….

Post Blog note:

If you want an mechanism for acting on any healthcare related resolution please do pledge at changeday.nhs.uk and join a social movement of individuals, teams and organisations delivering on what is important to them. Look out for the #100daysofchange listing some of the achievements so far..!

We must never forget what we have failed to do.

Last week I attended the latest King’s Fund Medical Leadership Network/Development event. These bring together a number of clinicians and managers of varying degrees of experience. There is a focus on outcome, rather than just being talking shops, and there is a clear aim to increase the number of those attending who are early in their careers.

One of the talks was from Prof. Rory Shaw, the Medical Director of Health Care UK. This organisation aims to bring NHS healthcare expertise to the world and establish partnerships that will be beneficial for the UK economy. Prof Shaw was quite open about the questions this raises and some of the challenges to be faced. My interest peaked however in respect of NHS expertise in digital healthcare. It is an interesting paradox that many worldwide healthcare services don’t have access to, or any clear plan to develop, some of the initiatives and expertise which exist here. The concept of a universal number, for example,  is something that is taken for granted in the UK but is not present at all in many other healthcare systems. However from my point of view, a young (but potentially naive and impatient) junior doctor, there is nothing particularly brilliant about our digital systems. Very recently I was involved in a case where the failure to have access to the healthcare information of a patient presenting to a paediatric emergency department may well have resulted in harm to the patient. This was not an individuals fault, it was the fault of the absence of an electronic system that can share information about patients throughout the country.

I was pretty vitriolic about this at the conference, and despite furtive glances and frowns from some members of the audience, will remain so about this. It is not an excuse to say we tried that and it didn’t work. The simple fact remains that most members of the public remain extremely surprised that we are unable to access electronic records in one vicinity but not another. Even worse it remains a cause for concern patients can frequent numerous different health care providers  without any of them knowing anything about these visits. This isn’t about being a ‘big brother’; it’s about managing risk for vulnerable patients and ensuring patient safety in a system which harm if often to easy to come by.

What then are we to make of the failure of the National Programme for IT in the NHS? One argument is that we have moved on, the initiative for local solutions and then joined up working more pragmatic and ultimately more achievable. There are still large costs involved though as the governments recent announcement of a £1Billion fund for Emergency Departments emphasises. Appreciating it’s sometimes easier to judge rather than action, I have been working hard locally towards an electronic integrated illness identification system for children (POPS)  which is now used in other centres and could ultimately be used to compare acuity rates between emergency centres. This solution had to bypass NHS IT and is not the safeguarding safety net that is desperately needed.

It is vital that we remember where we have been in the past and what we haven’t achieved. There are many people and organisations passionate about improving the digital infrastructure of the NHS, and Tim Kelsey is clearly keen on making progress. It is likely solutions will eventually been found but we must honest about our past failures. It would be equally disastrous, probably more so,  should further Berwick and Francis reports be needed, but unfortunately history demonstrates we often fail to learn.

Extolling our strengths is fine, acknowledging our failings much the braver thing to do.