“It’s about the 3 P’s: Person, Patient, Prisoner - in that order.”

An innovative integrated care system for patients in the prison service

A community within four walls

Northamptonshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust (NHFT) provides mental health and community services to the population of Northamptonshire and is a long-term partner of iWantGreatCare (iWGC).

NHFT uses iWGC across all its mental health and community services to listen to what service users are saying and use this insight to make quality improvements and build a ‘patient first’ culture within the organisation.
NHFT also provides healthcare services in prisons, specifically the following three secure settings:

We have used the values established within the Trust and put them to work in a prison setting

Northamptonshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust (NHFT)

The challenges

Initial challenges of working in the prison environment included:

‍Discovering a workable operational model

NHFT with an ‘outstanding’ CQC rating, brought many of their proven core working practices and experience of using iWantGreatCare in engaging with patients to the Prison settings, believing care for the individual’s health needs is just as important in a secure environment as elsewhere.

“It’s about the 3 P’s: Person, Patient, Prisoner – in that order.”
Treating residents as a person first, patient second and prisoner third, this was the foundation for the workable ‘Trust’ model.
The team then brought their own innovations to the operational model including the removal of the term ‘Managers’, replacing only with ‘Leaders’, closely followed by establishing regular Patient Experience Groups (PEGs) each with Healthcare Representatives, gaining buy-in from the Prison Governors with each revision of process and practice.

Actions from early feedback

To address form filling fatigue, administrators went through every clinic attendance each week to select 2 patients at random to send the patient form to; thereby ensuring a rotational freshness of feedback.
To address the concern of evidential feedback, a system was developed of ‘You said – We did’:

Example 1

Example 2

Staff began receiving regular feedback, making it clear they were being listened to, which in turn helped to build the framework of trust, both throughout the command chain and across the patient community.
It is disrespectful to deny the opportunity for healthcare to anyone.
Underpinning the early changes, was the adoption, application and where necessary adaptation of the core principles and values learned within the parent Trust (NHFT); equally,the reverse was true, with clear successes being fed back to the Trust as learning and development opportunities.

Benefits and outcomes over time

To address form filling fatigue, administrators went through every clinic attendance each week to select 2 patients at random to send the patient form to; thereby ensuring a rotational freshness of feedback.

Feedback has facilitated the continuous shaping of services, albeit within the constraints of each of the prison profiles.
Notably, the Care QualityCommission have both applauded the work and sought insight as to the processes and procedures deployed, resulting in frequent and ongoing dialogue withCQC and the staff being the norm.
Taking all contributing factors into account, there has been a major positive morale boost for staff, with key benefits seen as:
Stable staffing levels reflected in:
In turn, that generated positive relationships between the staff and residents, with one of the major upsides being a marked reduction in disruptive events, especially given the additional pressures from Covid constraints.

I have been very impressed with the ‘iWantGreatCare’ initiative at HMP Whitemoor. The collaboration between Northamptonshire Healthcare and the prison has improved directly as a result and directly impacted on the quality of care provided to residents. The approach taken between us on two very complex residents who had been long-term gated-cell occupants was particularly useful and, in the case of one of them resulted in breaking an extremely self-destructive cycle of behaviour and getting him back onto normal location where he is being managed appropriately and sympathetically.

Conclusions

To address form filling fatigue, administrators went through every clinic attendance each week to select 2 patients at random to send the patient form to; thereby ensuring a rotational freshness of feedback.

Given the full spectrum of prison categories with their individual behaviours and challenges, the application of consistent principles of care, mean that this is an entirely replicable process.
The Trust, in partnership with iWantGreatCare has been able to evidence the following findings for its innovative approach:
In turn, that generated positive relationships between the staff and residents, with one of the major upsides being a marked reduction in disruptive events, especially given the additional pressures from Covid constraints.
People think it’s too hard to engage with patients in prisons – it’s not.

Further information

This case study has been co-authored by iWantGreatCare and Katie Bates, Head of Specialist and Secured Services – Cambridgeshire, Northamptonshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust. Please get in touch via the enquiry form on this website if you’d like more information or to speak to Katie or the iWGC team.

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