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Using models of care to understand the impact of networks of care for Long Term Conditions Improving health outcomes across England by providing improvement and change expertise

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Page 1: Using models-of-care-to-understand-the-impact-of-networks-of-care-for-lt cs

Using models of care to understand the impact of networks of care for

Long Term Conditions

Improving health outcomes across England by providing improvement and change expertise

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Welcome

A patient’s storyFiona McLoughlin

Setting the contextDr Martin McShane, Director, NHS England Domain 2

Introduction to Long Term Conditions Improvement

ProgrammesBev Matthews, NHS Improving Quality,

Long Term Conditions Programme Delivery Lead

The Long Term Conditions House of Care ToolkitLesley Callow, NHS Improving Quality,

Long Term Conditions Delivery Support Manager

Developing new modelsRob Meaker, Director of Innovation, Barking, Havering and Redbridge CCGs

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Meet the Speakers

Fiona McLoughlin, Patient speaker.

Fiona has been living with M.E. for eight years. She experiences fatigue and pain, but the most annoying

symptom is the brain fog. Her interest in healthcare provision developed after her late mother was diagnosed

with the rare neurological condition Progressive Supranuclear Palsy.

Dr Martin McShane, Director, NHS England Domain 2

Leading authority on improving the quality of life for people with long term conditions. Appointed NHS England

Director in 2012 following illustrious career as a GP and Chief Executive.

Bev Matthews, NHS Improving Quality, Long Term Conditions, Programme Delivery Lead

Passionate about service transformation through developing networks and leading complex

programmes. Providing strategic leadership to partners within health communities, managing stakeholders and

working across agencies.

Lesley Callow, NHS Improving Quality, Long Term Conditions, Delivery Support Manager

Extensive experience leading large scale change programmes for public services nationally and internationally.

Registered clinician for adult nursing and public health practitioners. Practice educator on the Nursing and

Midwifery Council register, and advisory panel member for Self-Management UK.

Rob Meaker, Director of Innovation, Barking, Havering and Redbridge CCGs

Leads innovation work across three CCGs, where testing new ideas is critical in developing them so they can

be replicated on an economical basis, while ensuring better outcomes for patients. In 2013 the team won the

NHS Challenge Prize, for the innovative work undertaken for the “A Year in The Life Project”.

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Fiona McLoughlin and

Carol McCullough

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Dr Martin McShane

Medical Director (Domain 2)

Long Term Conditions

NHS England

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Modelling Models of CareBev Matthews

Programme Lead for Long Term Conditions

Improving health outcomes across England by providing improvement and change expertise

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20%

75%

Population profiling

40%

15%

Multiple

complex

conditions

Single LTC/

at risk

Healthy /

minor

risk

Population segments Cost

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Commissioning in silos:

• All PbR (except YoC or

package currencies)

Acute Community Mental Health Social Care Voluntary/ Independent

Primary care

Primary care prescribing

NHS England as commissioner• Non-PbR block

contract• PbR excl drugs

• Crit. Care

Personal healthcare

budget

Specialised MH Services

Means-tested

services (incl. residential)

Within currency

Rehabilitation palliative & end of life

Maternity pathway

• Reablement• Adult Services

PbR MH clusters

Children’s services

GP services

Include if possible

Residential continuing

care (Include if possible)

Include if possible

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• Risk stratification tool applied

• LTC codes applied (18 in total - QoF)

• List segmented by LTC currency (Bands B – E applied - B=2,C=3-

5,D=6-8,E=9),

• Risk Score over time mapped (looking for rise in risk score in last

6 mths – 4 of 6 show an increase) or

• Rapid Riser in last 3 mths (mthly increase in risk score over past 3

mths and overall increase of >15pts).

• Kent – 80 GP practices, Band B = 2197, Band C= 3506, Band D

=261, Band E= 5 Total 6369 of 729, 275

• Now driving increased engagement in risk stratification

Identifying patients:

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Long Term Conditions Year of

Care Commissioning Model

Implementation Guide

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Over 30% of people over 75 years have

multimorbidity

Population Level Commissioning for the Future:

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Population Level Commissioning for the Future:

Multimorbidity is more common than single

morbidity

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The total health and social care cost is strongly

related to multimorbidity

Population Level Commissioning for the Future:

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The main contributors to total health and social

care cost are acute non-elective admissions

Population Level Commissioning for the Future:

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People with complex health and social care needs

appear to demonstrate a ‘crisis curve’

Population Level Commissioning for the Future:

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More community, mental health and social care

services are delivered to people following a ‘crisis’

than before the ‘crisis’

Population Level Commissioning for the Future:

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Some indications that an integrated care plan changes

the pattern of services delivered to people

Source NHS Barking & Dagenham, Havering and Redbridge CCG

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Long Term Conditions Year of

Care Commissioning Model

Implementation Guide

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SIMUL8 Corporation | SIMUL8.com | [email protected]

• A service and system redesign

• Understanding the impact of changing service

utilisation on:

- Flow

- Cost

- Capacity/Resource

• No historic data

• Different impacts on organisations, costs and

patients

• Use local data to test assumptions

• Ability to update and review

• Patients in each “state” have A likelihood of

accessing certain types of service, including

accessing services more than once:

- Acute

- Community

- Mental Health

- Social Care

• Costs associated with those services

LTC Year of Care Simulation Model

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SIMUL8 Corporation | SIMUL8.com | [email protected]

Results:

• Cost by each area of service/organisation

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SIMUL8 Corporation | SIMUL8.com | [email protected]

• Costs by state per year

• Average cost per patient

• Comparison with tariff

Results:

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Future chapters:

• Recovery,

rehabilitation and

reablement clinical

audit

• Minimum dataset

• Getting started

Long Term Conditions Year of

Care Commissioning Model

Implementation Guide

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Join our lunch and learn

webinars

Population level commissioning for the futureWednesday 3 December 2014 - 13:00 to 13:45

Hosted by Beverley Matthews, NHS Improving Quality Long Term Conditions Programme Lead and Dr Abraham George, Assistant Director & Consultant in

Public Health, Kent County Council

Commissioning for outcomesWednesday 21 January 2015 - 13:00 to 13:45

Hosted by Bob Ricketts CBE, Director of Commissioning Support Services and Market Development for NHS England

For more information contact [email protected]

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Long Term Conditions House of Care Toolkit

Lesley CallowDelivery Support Manager

Improving health outcomes across England by providing improvement and change expertise

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Long Term Conditions House of Care

• The 15 million people in

England with long term

conditions have the greatest

needs of the population

• People living with long term

conditions report that they

require person centred coordinated

care

• The House of Care provides

a framework for this to be

delivered

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The House of Care in value to

people/patients: The House supports

National Voices ‘I’ statements

My goals/outcomes All my needs as a person were

assessed and taken into

account.

Communication I always knew who was the

main person in charge of

my care.

InformationI could see my health and

care records at any time to

check what was going on.

Decision-making I was as involved in

discussions and decisions

about my care and treatment

as I wanted to be. Care planningI had regular reviews of my care

and treatment, and of my care

plan.

TransitionsWhen I went to a new

service, they knew who I

was, and about my own

views, preferences and

circumstances.

Emergencies I had systems in place so that

I could get help at an early

stage to avoid a crisis.

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The House of Care in

value to NHS:

£1.2bn:Avoid ambulatory care

sensitive admissions

though e.g. following

NICE guidelines (1)

£0.8bn:Reduction of hospital

admissions for common

LTCs through integrated care

esp frailty, comorbid (2)

£0.8-1.2bn:Reduce use of low value drugs,

devices and elective procedures

using commissioning analytics

and clinician education (3)

£0.2-0.4bn:Empower people in

supportive self-

management (4)

£1-1.6bn:Shift activity to cost

effective settings

e.g. pharmacy minor

ailments (5)

£0.4-0.6bn:Avoidance of drug errors

e.g. through electronic

records/e-prescribing (7)

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The House of Care - Person

centred, coordinated care at three levels

NationalWhat can national

organisations and policy

makers can do to enable

construction of the House

of Care at the next two

levels.

LocalHow local health

economies ensure that the

House of Care involves a

whole system approach,

including ‘more than

medicine’ offers

PersonalHow the House of Care

gives professionals on the

front line a framework for

what they need to do for

patients and ask local

commissioners to secure for

them

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The House of Care - Person centred,

coordinated care at three levels

The national level is built and is

available at:

http://www.nhsiq.nhs.uk/improvem

ent-programmes/long-term-

conditions-and-integrated-

care/long-term-conditions-

improvement-programme/house-

of-care-toolkit/national.aspx

NationalWhat can national organisations and

policy makers can do to enable

construction of the House of Care at the

next two levels.

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The House of Care - Person centred, coordinated

care at three levels

LocalHow local health economies ensure that the House of Care involves a whole system approach, including ‘more than medicine’ offers.

The local level is built with case

studies continuously being

uploaded at:

http://www.nhsiq.nhs.uk/improvem

ent-programmes/long-term-

conditions-and-integrated-

care/long-term-conditions-

improvement-programme/house-

of-care-toolkit/local.aspx

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The House of Care - Person centred,

coordinated care at three levels

PersonalHow the House of Care gives professionals on the front line a framework for what they need to do for patients and ask local commissioners to secure for them

The personal level is built and is

constantly being updated at:

http://www.nhsiq.nhs.uk/improvem

ent-programmes/long-term-

conditions-and-integrated-

care/long-term-conditions-

improvement-programme/house-

of-care-toolkit/personal.aspx

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Rob MeakerDirector of Innovation, Barking, Havering and Redbridge CCGs

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Complex Primary Care Practice

in East London

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Overview of BHR CCGs’ Health

Economy

East Of England

Hospital LAS Station

Central London

Cluster 1

Cluster 2

Cluster 3

Cluster 4

Cluster5

Cluster4

Cluster6

Cluster2

Cluster 1

Cluster 1

Cluster 2

Cluster 3

Cluster 4

Cluster 5

Cluster 6

Walk In Centre

Total Population 759,285

BHR Dashboard

£50m non elective admissions

£55mNon elective admissions

£8.8mA&E attendances

Havering

£36.5m Non elective admissions

Barking

£7.6m A&E attendances

£7.6m A&E attendances

Redbridge

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BHR CCGs’ Development

Timeline2008 – Polysystems & Person Centred Care

2009 – Risk Stratification

2010 – Integrated data

2011 – LTC management, & The Year of Care

2012 – Integrated Case Management

2013 – Rapid Response & Community Treatment Teams

2014– Complex Primary Care PracticeHealth 1000 Ltd, the Complex Primary Care Practice, is a Primary Social and Acute Care System located in King George Hospital, Ilford

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How BHR CCGs are Implementing a Primary,

Social and Acute Care System

Health1000 is a new primary care evolved provider organisationoperating a new model of care being developed as part of the Prime Minister’s Challenge fund and aligned to the PACS (Primary and Acute Care Systems) models set out in the 5 Year Forward Plan.

The Year of care work provided the foundation for the service design and the supporting capitated budget.

The model has been designed in collaboration with the users it intends to serve and will be guided by what people with complex needs want to achieve from their health and social care

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Aligning the PSACS model with

existing services.

EoL / CHC

> 5 LTCs

Frail/1-3%/2LTCs

3-6%/1LTC

Comm

Pharmacy

GP

BHRUT

NE

London

FT

Cont.

Heath

Care

111

Urgent

Care

Centres

Voluntary

Sector

Meds Man

Non

Year of

Care

Year of

Care

Social

Care

Federated

Urgent and

Planned

Primary Care

Services

London

Ambulance

Out of

Hospital

Integrated

Urgent &

Emergency

Care Service

Complex

Care model

Complex Care Service

Individual

Care

Multidisciplinary

Teams

PatientsChildren

Elderly or

RetiredUnemployed

Full time

mothers or

carers

Working

Adults

Complex

Patients

OnlineCall2

Practice

Planned GP

Appointment

Existing urgent care services

Primary Care Prof

Support

Non-Direct

Emergency Triage

OnlineUnified

point of

access

Urgent Primary Care Appointments

Walk-in

CentresGP Core

PlusWeekend

6-10 pm

openingGP core

In the future, a unified urgent primary care service joins patients and clinicians

across BHR primary care

New or significantly enhanced

services

Patients flow through primary

careKey Existing services

Implementing a new model of care, it is essential to align the model with other Key services.

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Complex Care Practice Patient

Selection

Complex Care cohort

Row Labels Cohort Hypertension CHD Diabetes Stroke Depression COPD Heart Failure Dementia

LTC 5+ 100 99 96 80 70 80 69 75 36

Scottish modified LTC 4+ 1924 1816 1559 1421 863 793 783 679 303

Grand Total 2024 1915 1655 1501 933 873 852 754 339

211 of the cohort currently receive Integrated case Management Services

The Complex Primary Care Practice intends to register 1000, of the 2024 eligible patients

Eligible cohort, must have 4 diagnosed long term conditions from Hypertension, CHD, Diabetes, Stroke, Depression, Heart Failure and Dementia.

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The costs have increased for these patients over the 7 years, presumably as more of the patients in the cohorts need services and/or patients in the cohorts need greater volumes of services

The greatest cost increases over the period for patients in the cohorts were primary care and community care. In percentage terms, the cost of acute care has decreased over the period.

The trend in adjusted cost for all patient in the complex care cohort by service type

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Activity Cost (£)

2012/13 2013/14 2014/15 2012/13 2013/14 2014/15

Primary Care Contact 42.1 45.2 45.1 1,897 2,032 2,030

Pharmacy 134.8 134.1 135.5 2,373 2,362 2,387

Acute care A&E 1.2 1.2 1.0 137 144 120

Outpatient 5.7 5.5 5.6 602 742 764

Daycase 0.6 0.5 0.3 424 366 217

Elective 0.1 0.1 0.1 286 194 174

NEL short-stay 0.2 0.2 0.2 246 228 166

NEL long-stay 0.5 0.5 0.4 1,568 1,570 1,254

Community care Face-to-Face 6.0 10.2 12.3 1,092 1,884 2,172

Telephone 0.5 0.9 1.1 27 47 54

Combined average cost per patient (£) 8,652 9,569 9,337

Total annual cost of patient cohort (£million)17.51 19.37 18.90

The averages hide a great deal of variation. If we take one example, patient's in the cohorts on average visit A&E once a year but over 50% of patients did not visit A&E at all during 2013/14, and one patient visited 41 times .

Perhaps the most striking feature of the data is that large percentages of patient in the complex care cohorts didn't require acute inpatient care at all in 2013/14.

Cost and Activity for the

selected cohort

Average annual number of events and average annual cost per patient in the cohort - all CCGs

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Commissioning the Service,

Who, Where, When

Acute Trust Community Trust

Private Provider

Health1000

Voluntary Sector

GP Federation

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Patient enrolled

in programme

Data is

transferred Initial Visit

Rapid Response Team

Care delivery (Preventative) Team Escalation

• Transfer data from the primary

care record and import from any other source e.g. community or

social care record and

incorporate into a new single

electronic care record

• Document patient conditions, consider evidence for diagnoses and confirm or challenge these

• Record patient preferences e.g. settings of care, treatment approaches

• Optimise management against NICE guidance

• Initiate patient and carer self management programme where appropriate

• Clarify the new system to patient and carer(s)

• Clarify emergency procedure

• Document and agree care plan with patients /carers

• Agree EoL wishes

• Agree emergency escalation plan eg to A&E or not

• Allocate case manager and team

• Educate patient / carer on service and provide details of key contacts (patient-specific)

Programme

GP/Nurse

Multi-disciplinary Team

(icons are illustrative only, the composition of the

team will be tailored to individual patient needs)

Case Manager

• Care is proactive in nature, with regular touch points between the patient and care staff

• Care is front-loaded during crises/exacerbations to prevent escalation

• Patient receives face to face visits and or telephone calls on a regular basis depending on personal need

• 24/7 option for patient to call for advice

• Telehealth monitoring where appropriate

• Regular clinical review of needs and

adherence to plan tailored to patient need

• E patient care plan is accessible to the

patient and their family by both electronic

and paper means

• Patients with more complex management under care of

multi-disciplinary team including specialist input

• Every admission reviewed as a critical incident for team

and patient learning

Multi-disciplinary team case

conference (includes specialist

input as required)

• Urgent care team working across the LTC

chronic care team responsive to patient emergency with a 1 hour maximum call out

• Patients managed via phone until team

arrives

• Teleheath interaction for care homes and some individual patients where appropriate

Pharmacist Social Care

Worker

GP

Nurse Other

professional(s)

(as required)

Telehealth

(where appropriate)

UC Team

5 6 7

9a 10a

10b

Patient consent 4

Patient engagement 3

• Provide details of the pilot and

service to the patient and carer(s)and help them

understand ‘what it would mean

to them’

• Register patient willingness to participate

• GP refers patient to the service if

patient response is positive

Patient /

Carer

• Obtain patient consent to

enter programme

• Obtain patient consent for

research

• Remove patient from current

primary care list a re-registered with the new

practice

GP engagement 2

• Meet with GPs to provide background to programme

• Discuss potential patient(s) for

pilot and obtain buy-in from GP

• Agree engagement plan for

patient(s)

GP Programme

Rep

Patient /

Carer Patient /

Carer

Case

Manager

Specialty Team

Assessment

8

GP

Hospital

Physician /

Geriatrician

• Review patient

record and need for specialty input

Self Management and

education

9c

Patient /

Carer Nurse

External expertise

accessed as needed

(Cardiologist, Dietician,

gastroenterologist,

Domiciliary Dental Service

etc)

Additional Expertise 9b

• Additional

expertise is available quickly

via phone or face-

to-face as needed

• Nurse educates patient/carer on how to use services and manage LTCs

Integrated

care record

GP sends letter to

patients

1

GP Patient /

Carer

• The current GP sends a letter to patient(s) to introduce the

service

• The letter will also outline next steps to the patient i.e. a face-to-

face meeting or phone call with the GP to discuss service in more detail

• Interviews with patients to understand the following: What are the gaps in the current service? What would their ideal service look like? What would persuade them to join the new service and leave their GP? Who else would need to be involved in the decision e.g. carer? What do they think of the proposed service model, i.e. care closer to home?

• Patients interviewed for co-design are unlikely to be the patients involved in the pilot

• Interviews with charities to understand how would they input into the design of a new service and what would be their role in the new service if given opportunity

Co-Design of Model with Patients & Charities

PSCAS Staffing Model

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PSCAS Staffing Model

ROLE WTE at

start up

Start up Cover provided WTE by

month 3

MD and Geriatrician (50:50

role)

1.0 20 hours direct patient care plus 17.5 hours management

plus on call support as required

1.0

HCS Key workers 5.0 73.5 hours per week 8am to 18.30pm Monday to Sunday.

This is a dual function role covering reception and health

care support and requires two members of staff to be on

duty during 08.00 to 18.30pm Monday to Friday

6.0

GPs 3.0 52 hours per week 08am to 18.30pm Monday to Friday

plus

On call for 5 hours per week Monday to Friday 6.30 to

8pm and 24 hours on Saturday and Sunday from 8am to

8pm

A total of 81 hours per week

3.0

Practice Manager 1.0 37.5 hours per week as required to cover 7 days per week

on rota

0.5

Nurse 1.0 37.5 hours per week during 8am to 6.30pm 0

OT 0.5 18.5 hours per week during 8am to 6.30pm 3.0

Physiotherapist 0.5 18.5 hours per week during 8am to 6.30pm 2.0

Pharmacist 0.5 18 hours per week Monday to Friday as required 1

Community Nurse 0.0 Not applicable 4.0

Mental health Nurse 0 Not applicable 0.5

Social Worker 1.0 Seconded from Local Authority

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People interviewed about the new Health1000 service told us:

“We feel helpless trying to get the best care for our mum.”

“The professionals don’t understand all of my needs.”

“I just want to be able to go fishing. I don’t want any more operations or medication, I just want to be able to o Fly Fishing again. Why wont anyone help me achieve this ?

Complex Care Service

Individual

Care

Multidisciplinary

Teams

4+ LTCs

Mental HealthSocial Isolation

End of Life NeedsComplex

Patients

Care plan

developed

New and existing services

(Sectors including Voluntary, Charities, Private Sector, Social models, Communities,

user developed services etc)

Care Navigator

Scope of existing services Scope of IPC development

Health

1000

Care

Navigation package

Directory of

Services

Learning we

will make available to

the IPC

programme for sharing

with others

Focus of the

IPC application

Updated Service updated to meet the registered patient needs

Patient Feedback resulting in

design changes

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Connect with us

Visit the Long Term Conditions

web pages at www.nhsiq.nhs.uk

The House of Carewww.england.nhs.uk/house-of-care

Get in touch on twitter:

#ltcimprovement

#LTCYearofcare