New Daffodil Standards and QOF: Supporting quality improvements in palliative and end of life care

March is the awareness month for Marie Curie’s Daffodil campaign. Part of this campaign includes the Daffodil Standards for palliative and end of life care, aimed at GP practices, and explained here by Dr Catherine Millington-Sanders, RCGP and Marie Curie National Clinical End of Life Care Champion and Clinical Lead for the Daffodil Standards, and Dr Simon Stockill, RCGP Clinical Champion for Quality Improvement. 

Introduction

One person dies every minute in the UK. With an ageing population, deaths - along with a greater need for palliative and end of life care and support - are set to rise by 17% by 2030. Evidence tells us the majority of people want to be cared for and die in their own home or care home, where possible. Most people who die in the community receive palliative and end of life care form general practice, without involvement of hospice care. We have the opportunity to make a bigger impact on people’s experiences towards the end of their lives with high quality, consistent, planned care, across GP practices and their networks.

Daffodil Standards

General practitioners and their teams play a vital role in caring for terminally ill or dying patients and in surveys they overwhelmingly identify this is a rewarding part of their job. That is why the Royal College of GPs and Marie Curie have worked together in partnership to create the Daffodil Standards. The Standards provide evidence-based guidance, tools and resources to help practices test what they are doing well and spot where they can make improvements.

New GP Contract

From 1 April, the new five-year GP Contract in England will be in place. NHS England, RCGP, NICE and the Health Foundation have worked together to produce a new quality improvement approach as part of the revised Quality Outcomes Framework (QOF). One of the two new priorities for this year is end of life care (EOLC) and it draws heavily on the new Daffodil Standards. Completing the QOF EOLC module is a firm foundation to achieving the full Daffodil Standards. Combined, both initiatives represent the most significant change in end of life care in general practice for a decade.

So, you may ask, what are the changes from 2018 to the new 2019 EOLC QOF?

Importantly, the pre-2019 QOF for EOLC equated to only 6 QOF points

Indicator

Points

Achievement thresholds

Records:

 

 

PC001: The contractor can demonstrate continuous quality improvement activity focused on end of life care as specified in the QOF guidance.

3

 

Ongoing management:

 

 

PC002: The contractor has regular (at least 3 monthly) multidisciplinary case review meetings where all patients on the palliative care register are discussed.

 

3

 

 

The new 2019 EOLC QOF offers 37 points. 

Indicator

Points

Achievement thresholds

QI003: The contractor can demonstrate continuous quality improvement activity focused on end of life care as specified in the QOF guidance.

27

N/A

QI004: The contractor has participated in network activity to regularly share and discuss learning from quality improvement activity as specified in the QOF guidance. This would usually include participating in a minimum of two network peer review meetings.

10

N/A

 

The new QOF approach recognises the profession’s long-maintained view that practice’s know their own patients the best. The focus on quality improvement and reflection as a practice, and peer review within the new Primary Care Networks, allows practices to assess and reflect on their baseline EOLC. This should inform the outcomes practices and networks plan to achieve, across the key areas. 

Completing the new QOF End of Life Care module will establish GP practices well on the way to achieving the Daffodil Standards 

Practices are expected to focus their quality improvement activities in four key areas:

  1. Early identification of patients;
  2. Seamless, planned and coordinated care; offering patients timely and relevant personalised care and support plan discussions; documented and shared electronically
  3. Carer support – before and after death;
  4. Systems in place to monitor and improve, based on timely feedback of the experience of care from staff, patients and carers.

These four areas also align perfectly within with the eight core areas of quality improvement of the Daffodil Standards. Unlike the QOF, the Daffodil Standards are a virtual, scalable continuous learning and development programme designed to be completed over three years. They are flexible and manageable, so that those working in practices can fit them around their everyday work.

Signing up to the Daffodil Standards

The Standards are a free, voluntary resource with attributable CPD points. Practices signing up receive a free welcome pack, which includes a ‘Daffodil Mark’ certificate to display, showing their commitment to improving end of life care.

Furthermore, the CQC acknowledges the Daffodil Standards in providing a framework for evidence collection which practices will be able to use to demonstrate the quality of end of life care that they provide.

To sign up for free and receive a welcome pack, go to the RCGP website. For further information on QOF QI modules go to the NHS England website.

Last updated : 19 Mar 2019

 

Recommended codes for vaccinations (12 Apr 2018)

Childhood vaccination coding can be unexpectedly complex there are just 26 pre-school and school age vaccinations, but practices can record these vaccinations using over 1,000 different codes.  Data export providers,...
Read more »

LEAD events May and June 2018 (12 Apr 2018)

Hold the date: our annual Practice Manager Conference will take place on Thursday 22 November 2018 at Woburn House Conference Centre. The following events are now available for online booking....
Read more »

Stand. Vote. Engage. The 2018 LMC elections (12 Apr 2018)

Nomination papers for this year’s LMC elections were sent out in the week beginning 30 April 2018. This year every LMC seat is up for election.  We want any GP...
Read more »

Concerns about coroners issues (21 Mar 2018)

In response to concerns raised regarding GP relationships with the coroners’ office, we recently requested examples of problems experienced by GPs and practice staff. Examples provided so far include:  ...
Read more »

GMC requests for evidence of English language competence (20 Mar 2018)

The House of Commons Library has release updated guidance on what documentation the GMC will accept as evidence that GPs, nurses and pharmacists have sufficient English language skills. These controls...
Read more »

LMC elections – join us in May to learn about what is involved in being an LMC member (20 Mar 2018)

This year every LMC seat is up for election and next month you will have a chance to stand for election to your LMC. Any GP working in one of...
Read more »

NHS Digital questioned on Home Office data sharing (20 Mar 2018)

On Thursday 15 March the Health and Social Care Select Committee took evidence from Sarah Wilkinson, Chief Executive Officer, NHS Digital; and Noel Gordon, Chair, NHS Digital on data sharing. ...
Read more »

UK LMC Conference 2018 round-up (20 Mar 2018)

This year's LMC Conference saw debate on a range of issues of concern to London GPs: from Bawa-Garbar and the use of written reflections, to mass resignations, workload management, and...
Read more »

Sign-up to our new Buying Group and win an Amazon Kindle Fire tablet (20 Mar 2018)

Any practice who signs-up to our new Buying Group before 12:00 Wednesday 2 May (end of the morning break during our conference) will be entered in a draw to win...
Read more »
Next Page »
« Previous Page