Enhancing Patient Experience in Secure Mental Health Services

 
Giving patients the key:
Unlocking patient experience and
involvement in secure mental
health services
 
Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust
Nigel Groves – Kath Alder – Michael Salter    
 
@InvolveT1
 
Quick summary of what we did
 
We pioneered an approach to capturing feedback from patients in national high secure mental health services.
 
From the only real opportunities for patients to have a say being:
 
ineffective, closed patients’ meetings
 
a survey
 
To:
 
wealth of feedback from patients (39% increase from 2016)
     improvement to patients’ sense of being listened to
 
patients play a bigger part in how things run day-to-day, and influence bigger decisions
     good, regular attendance at various involvement meetings/patients council/committees
 
better understanding and dialogue between staff and patients
     Feedback Action Plans (actions that roll over 3months escalated to Associate Director of Nursing
     Significant improvements to services due to patient feedback (evidenced in Board reports)
 
The first NHS organisation to post stories and feedback from patients in a secure forensic setting on Care Opinion.
 
This could be replicated in any inpatient service.
 
Five of the most important
things we learned…
 
1
 
FIND THE CHAMPIONS
 
…in positions of influence and
secure their commitment 
to the
work early on.
Choose carefully what to ask of
them so that it has most impact…
 
 
BUILD TRUST BY SHOWING
WHAT YOU’RE CHANGING
 
It takes a lot of faith for patients to be
open about their experiences, especially
when they are negative, and the patient
will remain in your care.
 
Ensure that patients see 
what has
happened as a result
 of them giving
feedback.
 
 
 
2
 
PERSEVERE!
 
Things that are worth doing, don’t
usually happen quickly or easily!
 
We changed our culture, but it
required 
perseverance and
energy.
 
3
 
VOLUNTEERS ARE INVALUABLE
 
Service user volunteers are able
to build long-term rapport and
trust with patients and it is this
trust and rapport 
that means
they capture the richest, most
honest and intimate feedback.
 
4
 
SHOW AND TELL
 
Once you’ve made it work in one
service, 
be quick to share 
it with
others.
 
None of what we did was rocket
science – it has started to work
elsewhere already, and it could
work in lots of other services.
 
5
 
“We have to be 
brave and transparent 
in exposing
situations where things are not right in our services.  We
will do whatever we can to work with patients to make
things better, and when there are things we can’t change,
I expect staff to give honest answers
 – not to give false
hope, or to shy away from a problem.”
 
Head of Clinical Operations
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Pioneering an innovative approach to capturing patient feedback in high secure mental health services led to significant improvements in patient involvement and service quality. Key learnings include finding champions, building trust through visible changes, perseverance, and the invaluable role of service user volunteers in fostering rapport and obtaining genuine feedback.

  • Patient Experience
  • Mental Health Services
  • Feedback Capture
  • Service Quality
  • Involvement

Uploaded on Sep 20, 2024 | 0 Views


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  1. Giving patients the key: Unlocking patient experience and involvement in secure mental health services Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust Nigel Groves Kath Alder Michael Salter @InvolveT1

  2. Quick summary of what we did We pioneered an approach to capturing feedback from patients in national high secure mental health services. From the only real opportunities for patients to have a say being: ineffective, closed patients meetings a survey To: wealth of feedback from patients (39% increase from 2016) improvement to patients sense of being listened to patients play a bigger part in how things run day-to-day, and influence bigger decisions good, regular attendance at various involvement meetings/patients council/committees better understanding and dialogue between staff and patients Feedback Action Plans (actions that roll over 3months escalated to Associate Director of Nursing Significant improvements to services due to patient feedback (evidenced in Board reports) The first NHS organisation to post stories and feedback from patients in a secure forensic setting on Care Opinion. This could be replicated in any inpatient service.

  3. Five of the most important things we learned

  4. FIND THE CHAMPIONS in positions of influence and secure their commitment to the work early on. Choose carefully what to ask of them so that it has most impact

  5. BUILD TRUST BY SHOWING WHAT YOU RE CHANGING It takes a lot of faith for patients to be open about their experiences, especially when they are negative, and the patient will remain in your care. Ensure that patients see what has happened as a result of them giving feedback.

  6. PERSEVERE! Things that are worth doing, don t usually happen quickly or easily! We changed our culture, but it required perseverance and energy.

  7. VOLUNTEERS ARE INVALUABLE Service user volunteers are able to build long-term rapport and trust with patients and it is this trust and rapport that means they capture the richest, most honest and intimate feedback.

  8. SHOW AND TELL Once you ve made it work in one service, be quick to share it with others. None of what we did was rocket science it has started to work elsewhere already, and it could work in lots of other services.

  9. We have to be brave and transparent in exposing situations where things are not right in our services. We will do whatever we can to work with patients to make things better, and when there are things we can t change, I expect staff to give honest answers not to give false hope, or to shy away from a problem. Head of Clinical Operations

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