NHS SEL CCG Planning and Commissioning, Local Maternity System, London, UK.
Obstetrics and Gynaecology Department, Lewisham and Greenwich NHS Trust, London, UK.
BMJ Open Qual. 2021 Sep;10(3). doi: 10.1136/bmjoq-2021-001340.
The SARS-CoV-2 COVID-19 pandemic has had an immediate and profound impact on how healthcare systems organise and deliver services and specifically, there is a disproportionate negative impact on Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic groups and other risk factors. This has required clinical leaders to respond at pace to meet patient's care needs, while supporting staff working in a volatile, uncertain, complex and ambiguous environment. During the initial wave and then the later waves within our South East London sector, there were new challenges as everyone faced a novel disease necessitating real-time learning and reflection. Through informal conversations and networks, the clinicians highlighted in the first wave the need for a forum for clinical discussion. Using our existing South East London Local Maternity System and the evolving Maternal Medicine Networks alliance, we initiated a sharing and learning platform to support clinical decision-making for all maternity health professionals during the pandemic. Fortnightly, multidisciplinary virtual huddles were established allowing obstetric physicians, obstetricians, midwives and obstetric anaesthetists to share their clinical experience, operational and service challenges. This approach fostered and developed cross-site team working and shared learning across traditional, organisational boundaries. In South East London, prior to the introduction of universal testing in the first surge, we had a total of 65 confirmed positive cases of which 5 women were delivered due to COVID-19, 5 women required high dependency or intensive care and 3 women were intubated and ventilated. During the second and third waves, the COVID-19 Local Maternity System huddles provided monthly learning opportunities to share clinical practice, guidelines, vaccination updates and challenges with workforce. The huddles have proven to be a sustainable platform, which have built trust across the sector, facilitating effective teamwork and providing invaluable support for clinical decision-making. We describe the evolution of this structure and share our experience of working within this new clinical network during the first wave and how this established way of working facilitated collaboration during the second and third waves as staff and the system became more fatigued. The huddles have developed to become multi-professional, multisite collaborations with the whole group taking joint ownership to develop shared learning and are providing a forum for discussions for the emerging South East London's Maternal Medicine Network.
SARS-CoV-2 新冠疫情对医疗系统的组织和服务方式产生了直接而深远的影响,特别是对黑人和少数族裔群体以及其他风险因素造成了不成比例的负面影响。这要求临床领导者迅速做出反应,以满足患者的护理需求,同时支持在不稳定、不确定、复杂和模糊的环境中工作的员工。在我们东南伦敦地区的第一波疫情和后来的几波疫情中,由于每个人都面临着一种新的疾病,需要实时学习和反思,因此出现了新的挑战。通过非正式的对话和网络,临床医生在第一波疫情中强调需要一个临床讨论的论坛。我们利用现有的东南伦敦地方产妇系统和不断发展的产妇医学网络联盟,为所有产妇保健专业人员在大流行期间提供了一个分享和学习的平台,以支持临床决策。我们每两周举行一次多学科虚拟会议,让妇产科医生、产科医生、助产士和产科麻醉师分享他们的临床经验、运营和服务挑战。这种方法促进和发展了跨站点的团队合作和跨传统、组织边界的共享学习。在东南伦敦,在第一波疫情引入普遍检测之前,我们总共确诊了 65 例阳性病例,其中 5 名妇女因 COVID-19 分娩,5 名妇女需要高度依赖或重症监护,3 名妇女需要插管和通气。在第二波和第三波疫情中,COVID-19 当地产妇系统会议为分享临床实践、指南、疫苗更新和劳动力挑战提供了每月的学习机会。这些会议已经证明是一个可持续的平台,在整个部门建立了信任,促进了有效的团队合作,并为临床决策提供了宝贵的支持。我们描述了这一结构的演变,并分享了我们在第一波疫情期间在这个新的临床网络中工作的经验,以及在第二波和第三波疫情中,随着员工和系统变得更加疲惫,这种工作方式是如何促进合作的。这些会议已经发展成为多专业、多站点的合作,整个团队共同拥有,共同开展学习,并为新兴的东南伦敦产妇医学网络提供了一个讨论的论坛。