日本无码

In this section :

  • Priority Health Innovation Challenge

Priority Health Innovation Challenge Participating Teams: Home and Community Care听

Alberta Health Services: Edmonton Zone Home Living, Edmonton, Alberta

Team lead: Jasneet Parmar, Physician Medical Lead, Home Living and Transitions, AHS EZ Continuing Care

Patient/family representative: Brenda Bell

Senior officer/director: Anita Murphy

Indicators:

  • Primary outcome indicator: Home care services helped the recipient stay at home
  • Supplementary outcome indicators: Caregiver distress
  • Patient/population reach indicator: All primary caregivers of long-term supportive and maintenance home care clients

The Edmonton Zone Enhanced Home Living Supports Pilot Program听

Alberta Health Services developed this program to ensure caregivers and home care clients with complex chronic conditions have a real choice to remain in their homes in the community and caregivers are supported to sustain care and maintain their own wellbeing. Home care staff are educated to provide Caregiver Centered Care. Case managers use the Carer Support Needs Assessment Tool (CSNAT) to complete a person-centered assessment of family caregivers鈥 support needs, and the Caregiver Risk Screen (CRS) to identify 鈥渁t risk鈥 caregivers. Home care staff help caregivers access the support they need and navigate health and community systems. Enhanced respite care and supports for independent activities of daily living are available for caregivers at high risk of burnout and/or being unable to sustain caregiving. The program was piloted in multiple settings 鈥 urban, rural, suburban and inner city 鈥 and rolled out to the entire Edmonton Zone from late 2019.

Connect:

CBI Home Health Group, Etobicoke, Ontario

Team lead: Kathleen McQueen, Manager of Clinical Excellence, Therapy

Patient/family representative: Curtis Hiemstra

Senior officer/director: Omar Aboelala

Indicators:

  • Primary outcome indicator: Caregiver distress
  • Supplementary outcome indicators: N/A
  • Patient/population reach indicator: Caregivers who are all ages

Care for the Caregiver Program听

CBI Health Group, the largest provider of community healthcare services in Canada, has developed the Care for the Caregiver Program 鈥 a three-tiered program offering varying levels of support for caregivers. Tier 1 provides referral to the appropriate services or programming. Tier 2 provides caregiver support needs assessment (via the Caregiver Strain Index [CSI]). Tier 3 provides a self-management approach to wellbeing, supporting and connecting caregivers to a comprehensive suite of resources and tools. The program was initiated for caregivers involved in the enhanced palliative program and restorative care program in the South West Local Health Integration Network, with plans to spread next to Erie St. Clair Local Health Integration Network.

Connect: and and

Children鈥檚 Hospital of Eastern Ontario (CHEO), Ottawa, Ontario

Team lead: Carlie Brown, Case Manager, Home Ventilation Program

Patient/family representative: Teresa Macmillan

Senior officer/director: Sherri Katz

Indicators:

  • Primary outcome indicator: Home care services helped the recipient stay at home
  • Supplementary outcome indicators:
  • Wait times for home care services, referral to services
  • Caregiver distress
  • Death at home/not in hospital
  • Patient/population reach indicator: Paediatric home ventilation patients (age newborn to 18), including tracheostomy dependent and invasive ventilation patients, patients on non-invasive ventilation for life support, complex patients on positive airway pressure devices and patients requiring lung airway clearance devices such as LVR and cough assist. Secondary reach includes caregivers (RN鈥檚, PSW, school staff and family members) via caregiver competency checklists and number of providers trained.

Complex Respiratory Care for Paediatric Patients听

Through this program, the Children鈥檚 Hospital of Eastern Ontario鈥檚 (CHEO) intensive care unit addressed the length of stays and admission rates by improving home care services for paediatric patients so they can remain at home. The program was funded by the Local Health Integration Network (LHIN) and modelled on the Somerset West complex respiratory care program, which has demonstrated success for moving adult patients with complex respiratory needs and technology from the acute care setting back to the community. A community paediatric respiratory specialist offered home visits as needed for complex respiratory patients 鈥 addressing home equipment issues and creating a more seamless transition between patients and hospital teams. The program team also delivered training and education to home care agencies, to decrease wait times to home care services and decrease length of stay for inpatients requiring home care services.

Learn more:

Connect:

Children鈥檚 Hospital of Eastern Ontario (CHEO), Ottawa, Ontario

Team lead: Amelie DesLauriers, Social Worker-System Navigator

Patient/family representative: Lillian Kitchen; Teresa MacMillan

Senior officer/director: Michele Hynes, Director; Chantal Krantz, Manager

Indicators:

  • Primary outcome indicator: Caregiver distress
  • Supplementary outcome indicators: N/A听听听听听
  • Patient/population reach indicator: Parents in the Champlain region experiencing caregiver distress who have children and youth under the age of 18 with medical complexities and are receiving support from the Children鈥檚 Hospital of Eastern Ontario (CHEO)

Navigator Program听

Parents of children and youth with medical complexities experience many challenges when caring for their child. Among the highest concerns are the effects on parents鈥 physical and mental health, and their increased social isolation. 听听
The Navigator Program helps to address critical gaps in supports and connections, and promote social and emotional health, for these families.

Two Parent Navigators help families to socialize, share ideas and connect with others, through workshops, wellness and social events, social media, and supporting them during admissions and clinic visits. In addition, a System Navigator can help families with needs beyond social isolation to navigate the complex care system, by finding resources and through one-on-one counselling, family counselling and workshops. Parents decide what their goals are and meet with Parent Navigators and/or System Navigators depending on their needs.听

Learn more:
Connect:

HOPE Model, SE Health, Ontario

Team lead: Zayna Khayat

Patient/family representative: Randy Filinski

Senior officer/director: Zayna Khayat

Indicators:

  • Primary outcome indicator: Home care services helped the recipient stay at home
  • Supplementary outcome indicators: Wait times for home care services, referral to services, caregiver distress, (in)appropriate move to long-term care, death at home/not in hospital.
  • Patient/population reach indicator: Home care clients in London-Middlesex and Englemount Lawrence neighbourhoods

The H.O.P.E. Model庐 (Home Opportunity People Empowerment)听

The H.O.P.E. Model addresses many of the gaps identified in the current transactional fee for service model of home care. Through combining both the health and social aspects of clients' lives, H.O.P.E aims to reduce clients鈥 use of high cost acute services while delivering a community-based care model whereby nurses provide a more integrated and holistic approach to care. Clients are supported to meet their goals by self-managing teams of nurses that take care of a person's full set of needs, including the majority of care services (nursing, PSW, therapies, etc.), care coordination and connections to both formal and informal care. The empowered teams of nurses work to their full scope to manage complex patients in the community with a lean infrastructure and management backbone.

Learn more:

Lanark Renfrew Health and Community Services, Lanark, Ontario

Team lead: Christina Dolgowicz, Lung Health Coordinator

Patient/family representative: Christine Love

Senior officer/director: John Jordan

Indicators:

  • Primary outcome indicator: Home care services helped the recipient stay at home
  • Supplementary outcome indicators: N/A
  • Patient/population reach indicator: Clients over the age of 40 with a diagnosis of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)

Lanark Renfrew Lung Health Program听

North Lanark Community Health Centre worked to integrate and enhance three of its regional chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) related programs: lung health, community-based pulmonary rehab and primary care outreach for seniors. The aim of integrating these programs was to improve early screening of COPD, enhance appropriate referral and care, and identify patients requiring palliative care supports. The team targeted four key areas for improvement to increase access, with the goal being to keep patients at home:

  • Increasingly early screening and detection for people at risk of COPD
  • Implementation of a 1-833 phone number to connect patients with a respiratory therapist to manage care from home
  • Connecting patients to primary care outreach programs and providing education sessions to rehabilitation participants
  • Early identification of palliative care clients based on specific indicators of decline

Learn more:

Connect: @christinadolgow

McGill University Health Centre (MUHC), Montreal, Qu茅bec

Team lead: Carolyn Freeman, Chair of the MUHC Clinical Pertinence Coordinating Committee

Patient/family representative: Susan Szatmari

Senior officer/director: Martine Alfonso

Indicators:

  • Primary outcome indicator: Death at home/not in the hospital
  • Supplementary outcome indicators: N/A
  • Patient/population reach indicator: All stage IV lung cancer patients referred to palliative support within 60 days of initial visit to the MUHC for diagnosis or care.

Integrating Palliative Support as Routine Care for Patients with Stage IV Lung Cancer听

The McGill University Health Centre (MUHC) is rolling out a program to integrate early referral to palliative support as part of routine care for all patients with stage IV lung cancer treated at the MUHC. A feasibility study will be undertaken by conducting stakeholder interviews to assess readiness of clinicians and the institution/network and identify preferences of patients and caregivers. The program involves:

  • All patients with stage IV lung cancer presenting at the MUHC will be referred to palliative care within 60 days of initial visit.
  • In order to implement this policy, we plan to organize several focus groups with the various stakeholders including physicians, patients and caregivers, allied health care providers, as well as hospital managers and senior administrative staff.
  • Qualitative data from these focus groups and interviews that will help evaluate feasibility and stakeholder preferences and identify current gaps and areas to target (for example, patient and physician education about end-of-life discussions and need for methodical and transparent recording of advance care directives).

Learn more:

Connect: @cusm_muhc

Provincial Seniors Health Team, Alberta Health Services, Alberta

Team lead: Laurel Stretch

Patient/family representative: Judy Brown

Senior officer/director: Max Jajszczok

Indicators:

  • Primary outcome indicator: Home care services helped the recipient stay at home.
  • Supplementary outcome indicators: Caregiver distress, (in)appropriate move to long-term care.
  • Patient/population reach indicator: All home care clients in Alberta

Provincial Seniors Health Project听

The Provincial Seniors Health team designed a quality measurement framework and performance monitoring process for home care within Alberta. They identified quality measures/key performance indicators (KPIs) and developed a reporting process to drive quality and measure progress. The team established accountability for quality in a consistent, standardized and transparent way which supports collaboration and sharing.

Learn more: Connect: continuingcare.quality@ahs.ca

University of Alberta, Calgary, Alberta

Team lead: Tammy O鈥橰ourke, Nurse Practitioner

Patient/family representative: Pearl Todd

Senior officer/director: Tammy O鈥橰ourke

Indicators:

  • Primary outcome indicator: Home care services helped the recipient stay at home.
  • Supplementary outcome indicators: N/A.
  • Patient/population reach indicator: Homebound seniors.

Collaborative Community Care (C3) for Seniors: Health Services @ Sage听

Collaborative Community Care (C3) for Seniors: Health Services @ Sage was a senior focused/senior friendly clinic providing all the services that a traditional health team provides, with additional services not typically offered by traditional community primary care teams. For example, clients could access housing assistance or purchase a meal during their visit. Seniors who were homebound had home visits to integrate them into a social services program, helping them to stay at home. C3 Nurse Practitioners and other team members saw seniors in their home for both ongoing primary care and urgent care requests. Both of these types of visits contributed to seniors鈥 ability to stay at home, which decreased the number of non-urgent visits to emergency rooms, avoided hospitalizations and potentially decreased 911 calls for non-emergency concerns.

Learn more:

Connect:

Wellness Campus, Richmond, British Columbia

Team lead: Dennis Natembeya听

Patient/family representative: Tiara Driedger

Senior officer/director: Zahid Merali听

Indicators:

  • Primary outcome indicator: Home care services helped the recipient stay at home.
  • Supplementary outcome indicators: Wait times for home care services, referral to services.
  • Patient/population reach indicator: Clients in the community on polypharmacy, discharged from the hospital, GP, or referral from case managers and community health nurses.

Naz Wellness Campus听

Wellness Campus was a robust service for patients who were on a complex medication regime, had compliance issues, were non-mobile and/or required additional assistance. It was an innovative initiative under the Wellness/Naz pharmacies located in Vancouver, Surrey and Langley, British Columbia. The team facilitated care transitions from the hospital to the client鈥檚 home as well as supporting older adults to stay healthy at home, therefore reducing emergency and primary practitioners' visits. The service supported clients around their immediate and long-term medication needs, wellness checks and reducing social isolation. The Wellness Campus鈥檚 innovative services helped clients with medication compliance such as insulin administration, daily injections and smart medication dispensation, as well as case managing and facilitating GP consultations to keep clients at home.

Learn more: