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Safe and Sustainable

Children's Cardiac August 2009 Surgery Services News

Welcome to the first issue of "Safe and Sustainable" - the

stakeholder newsletter for all those with an interest in the

children's cardiac surgery services programme.

The aim of the programme is to ensure that the NHS delivers a high

quality, safe and sustainable heart surgery service for babies, children,

young people and their families. We all want world class care for the

children of this country, and especially those with life-threatening

heart conditions. This programme will ensure that this care remains the

best it can possibly be well into the future.

We want the surgeons who operate on our children and the teams

who support them to have the skills and experience that meet the

highest national and international standards.

In this newsletter we outline the aims and objectives of the programme

and we explain how we are going to develop the paediatric cardiac

surgery programme in England.We also explain how you can get

involved and feedback your views. Our new, national vision must be

created by patients and families, front line NHS staff, and the public all

working together.

To help inform the ongoing debate we will be holding a major discussion

event on 22 October 2009 in London - the first of a series that will take

place over the coming year. Details can be found on the back page.

I hope that you find this newsletter informative and I look forward to

hearing your views and seeing you in October.

Dr Patricia Hamilton

Director of Medical Education for England

Immediate Past President of the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health

Chair of the Steering Group for the Safe and Sustainable Paediatric

Cardiac Surgery Service Programme

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Background to the Safe

and Sustainable programme

This is called the Safe and Sustainable

programme, and its motivation is to deliver

the best possible care for children and their

families.

There are currently 11 children's heart surgery

centres in England. Approximately 30 surgeons

conduct children's heart operations in England

and between them they carry out around

3,800 procedures a year. This number is

unlikely to change significantly in the years to

come.

Children's heart surgery centres in England

currently provide a safe and high quality

service for children with heart problems. But

several current developments mean they will

need to evolve if they are to continue to

provide a top quality service into the future.

The Safe and Sustainable programme has

based its agenda on the following core

principles:

· the NHS must provide the very highest

standard of care for all children in England

who need heart surgery regardless of where

they live or which hospital provides their care

· the care that every centre provides must be

based around the needs of each child and

family, and take account of the transition to

adult services

· other than surgery and interventional

cardiology all relevant treatment (including

follow-up) must be provided as close as

possible to where each family lives

· we will develop a set of quality standards

and will ensure that services deliver the best

care by meeting these standards.

Over the past few years one particular view

has begun to emerge of how we might

reconfigure children's heart surgery centres to

address these principles and best meet the

needs of children and their families in the

future.

In summary this view involves creating largervolume

centres of excellence, increasing the

number of surgeons operating in each centre

and increasing the total volume of work that

each centre undertakes. This view is described

elsewhere in this newsletter in an article by

Leslie Hamilton, President of the Society of

Cardiothoracic Surgery of Great Britain and

Ireland.

The purpose of the Safe and Sustainable

programme is to canvass the opinions of all

stakeholders, to weigh the evidence for and

against different views and to deliver a safe,

sustainable and high quality service into the

future.

The NHS Management Board and the NHS Medical Director - Professor Sir Bruce

Keogh - have asked the National Specialised Commissioning Group (NSCG) to

examine the way that children's heart surgery services and interventional

cardiology services are provided in England. He has asked us to deliver a

sustainable service into the future.

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Programme who's who

The Safe and Sustainable programme is run by

a Steering Group that has been established by

the NSCG. The Steering Group is chaired by Dr

Patricia Hamilton, Director of Medical

Education for England and the Immediate Past

President of the Royal College of Paediatrics

and Child Health. Support for the Steering

Group is being provided by the National

Specialised Commissioning Team.

The Safe and Sustainable Steering Group is

supported by a Standards Working Group,

chaired by Mr William Brawn, a consultant

paediatric heart surgeon who works in the NHS.

The recommendations for future service

delivery will be developed by local

commissioners and health professionals, in

consultation with local stakeholders. Four

Specialised Commissioning Group (SCG)

collaboratives have been established to lead

on the process for delivering local

recommendations on behalf of all SCGs in their

zone (see table). The Steering Group will ensure

that the four proposals are consistent with each

other and consistent with the overall aims of

the Safe and Sustainable programme.

The Safe and Sustainable project team - comprising staff from the National Specialised

Commissioning Team - is detailed in the table below.

The programme project plan sets out a list of key milestones:

SCG Collaborative Member SCGs Lead SCG

Northern Zone North East, North West and North East SCG

Yorkshire & the Humber SCGs

Midlands Zone East Midlands and West Midlands SCGs East Midlands SCG

South Eastern Zone East of England, London London SCG

and South East Coast SCGs

South Western Zone South Central and South West SCGs South West SCG

Key milestones Date

Draft clinical standards circulated to stakeholders for comment Sep 2009

National stakeholder event in London Oct 2009

Final version of clinical standards circulated Nov 2009

SCGs submit recommendations for future service delivery Jul 2010

NHS Management Board considers the recommendations Jul 2010

Public consultation on the recommendations begins Sep 2010

Implementation of recommendations begins Jan 2011

(subject to the outcome of the consultation)

Steve Collins Deputy Director of Commissioning and Policy [email protected]

020 7932 3944

Jeremy Glyde Safe and Sustainable Programme Manager [email protected]

020 7932 3951

Andy Martin Safe and Sustainable [email protected]

Assistant Programme Manager 020 7932 3958

Stuart Pinel Safe and Sustainable Project Officer [email protected]

020 7932 3945

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In search of consensus

In this first issue of the Safe and Sustainable

newsletter Leslie Hamilton, the President of

the Society for Cardiothoracic Surgery of

Great Britain and Ireland and a member of the

Steering Group describes his personal search

for a consensus view on the future of

children's heart surgery services.

The NHS is continually changing and services

must change too if we are to provide the

highest quality care for patients into the

future. Over the past few years I believe a

consensus view has begun to emerge on the

best future shape of children's heart surgery

services in England.

This view involves a higher number of surgical

procedures being carried out by each clinical

team, with a larger number of surgeons in

each surgical centre, and a smaller number

of centres.

Critical mass

There is also a need to ensure that surgeons

conducting the enormously complex clinical

procedures involved in children's heart

surgery always have the experience and

expertise required to achieve consistently

excellent standards of care.

Many senior clinicians now believe there is a

direct correlation between the number of

surgical procedures carried out by a team of

surgeons and clinical outcomes - this has been

demonstrated in other specialties and recent

papers focussing on paediatric cardiac surgery

have confirmed this finding.

Sustainability

This emerging consensus viewenvisages a new

andmore sustainable configuration of services

supported by locally delivered, non-surgical

services - including follow-up appointments

- as close as possible to where the child lives.

Having a larger team of surgeons will allow

staged appointments at regular intervals giving

us the opportunity to develop a real team

approach. It will also allow for the mentoring of

newly appointed surgeons by more senior

colleagues in a supportive environment and on

a practical note, larger teams will help us do

away with excessively onerous on-call rotas.

I am convinced that working together as a team

is key to delivering good outcomes for patients

especially in the field of children's heart surgery.

Sub-specialisation

Throughout the developed world there is

currently a trend towards clinical subspecialisation.

This is widely deemed to be a

good thing because it is felt the more a

surgeon undertakes specific treatments, the

more honed his or her skills become.

Many clinicians argue that if a specialist centre

is to be able to treat the full range of

children's congenital heart conditions then

sub-specialisation means we will need a larger

number of sub-specialist consultants working

together in a single team in that centre.

Safe and Sustainable

Children's Cardiac Surgery Services News

Working hours

In addition the long working hours culture that

has been prevalent amongst clinicians over

many years is breaking down. Junior doctors

now work far fewer hours than they used to.

Younger doctors coming into the medical

profession are less likely to want to work

long hours. I also think we will increasingly

see consultant surgeons operating together.

This means we will need larger surgical teams

to ensure the provision of a sustainable, oncall

rota in each of our children's heart surgery

centres. Clinical expertise is currently spread

too thinly across the 11 English centres to

ensure long-term sustainability. Change must

happen now in the interests of our children.

History of the review

In 2006, Professor Roger Boyle, National

Director for Heart Disease and Stroke and

Dr Sheila Shribman, National Clinical

Director for Children, Young People and

Maternity Services chaired a workshop of

surgeons and cardiologists, other clinicians,

specialised services, commissioners and

parent/patient groups. In line with previous

reviews it concluded that the current service

configuration in England was not

sustainable and it reached the unanimous

view that we should aim for larger centres

of excellence and fewer of them.

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Support for the Safe and

Sustainable programme

The Children's Heart Federation (CHF) has announced its

support for the Safe and Sustainable programme for children's

heart surgery services in England.

CHF is the leading children's heart charity and the umbrella

body for voluntary organisations representing the needs

of children and young people with heart conditions and

their families.

Anne Keatley-Clarke, Chief

Executive of CHF, said: "Families

will feel more comfortable

knowing that a complex procedure such

as children's heart surgery is carried out

by a team of specialists that is doing

hundreds of these procedures a year.

Of course, parents want the very best

care for their children and they have

told us they are willing to travel

significant distances in order to get that

care. We fully support the Safe and

Sustainable programme and look

forward to working with the National

Specialised Commissioning Group to

ensure that every young child

who needs heart surgery

receives a world-class service."

And Professor Terence

Stephenson, President of Royal

College of Paediatrics and Child Health,

has added his support too. He said:

"The Royal College of Paediatrics and

Child Heath welcomes this review of

children's heart surgery services across

England. This is a very specialised area

of care and it is important that we have

the right number of specialist centres

offering the service with the right

training in place for tomorrow's

paediatric cardiac surgeons. The College

believes that this is in the best

interests of children and their

families."

"

"

"

"

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Have your say

The Safe and Sustainable programme team is keen to

hear from anyone who has views on the future delivery

of children's heart surgery services in England.

Please tell us your views. You can do so in the following ways:

·write to Jeremy Glyde, Programme Manager, National Specialised

Commissioning Team, 2nd floor, Southside, 105 Victoria Street,

London, SW1E 6QT.

·call Jeremy on 020 7932 3958

·e-mail: [email protected]

On 22 October 2009 we will be

holding a national event in London

for everyone who cares about the

future of children's heart surgery

services in England. You will have the

opportunity to discuss draft service

standards, to shape the work of the

programme and to agree on how we

take this important piece of work

forward. This event will be an

invaluable opportunity for parents

and carers, NHS staff, the public and

other stakeholders to help create the

world-class service of the future for

our children.

The event will take place at:

Dexter House

No.2 Royal Mint Court

Tower Hill

London

EC3N 4QN

Places are limited, so please confirm

your attendance as soon as possible

by:

·e-mailing

[email protected]

·calling Robin Matheou

on 020 7932 9122.

National stakeholder event

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