Showing posts with label NICE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NICE. Show all posts

Tuesday, 8 January 2013

NICE reveals plans for dementia QOF expansion

NICE launched a consultation on 14 proposed new indicators for the QOF 2014/15 on Monday, including four in the dementia clinical domain.

Targets for hypertension, CHD, diabetes, peripheral arterial disease and stroke are also being considered. If approved following the consultation and piloting, these indicators will form the proposed 'menu' of QOF targets for 2014/15 and will be passed to GP negotiators in the autumn.

The new dementia targets would see GPs paid to hold contact details for a carer on the records of people with dementia, keep a register of dementia carers who are patients of the practice, and assess their health annually.

Full Article on GP Online

Monday, 18 June 2012

GPs set for QOF indicators to support dementia carers

GPs will be required to assess the emotional and psychological needs of carers for people with dementia under a trio of indicators proposed for the 2014/15 QOF, NICE decided yesterday.

NICE is piloting the indicators – which are designed to better support the carers of people with dementia - in practices in the Midlands this year, with a view of including them in the 2014/15 QOF.

The QOF currently requires that practices create a register of patients diagnosed with dementia and address their health needs, but this will be extended to carers of those patients.

Full Article on Pulse

Tuesday, 27 March 2012

Children with autism to get quality standard

NICE has been asked to produce a quality standard for children with autism.
 
Following last week's fantastic news that the Department of Health has asked the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) to publish a quality standard for adults with autism, we are delighted that NICE has also now been asked to produce a quality standard for children with autism.

NICE quality standards are a set of specific, concise statements that set out markers of high-quality, cost-effective patient care. Quality standards for children were a key demand of our You Need To Know campaign, which aimed to improve mental health services for children with autism. As part of the campaign, over 1,000 NAS campaigners emailed Andrew Lansley, the Secretary of State for Health.

Research has found that over 70 per cent of children with autism also experience mental health issues, so it is vital that Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) are able to fully meet the needs of children with autism. As details about the content of the quality standards emerge, the NAS will be pushing hard to ensure that they have a strong focus on mental health support. We hope that they will help to fully entrench the needs of children and young people with autism into the health and social care system in England.

Sarah Lambert, the NAS's Head of Policy, says:
After two years of campaigning, the decision to include autism as a topic for NICE's quality standards work programme is great news for over 100,000 children living with autism in England.

Children with autism have a distinct set of needs and with 71 per cent experiencing mental health issues along with their autism, support from local services is vital. These standards should set out clearly what's expected from local services and go a long way towards improving the experiences of children with autism.

We'd like to see quicker access to diagnosis for those with suspected autism, good follow-up so that there is proper understanding of what diagnosis means, and appropriate ongoing support, which would make all the difference in the lives of children and their families up and down the country.

The Government has got the ball rolling; it's now up to NICE to ensure they get it right.
 Article taken from National Autistic Society