Read the summary of highlights from day two.
Employing OTs ‘has been one of the best things we have done as a PCN’, delegates hear in first plenary session of 46th Annual Conference
Over 1,100 people from the global occupational therapy community joined us for the first day of our 46th Annual Conference, to ‘learn, discuss, debate and grow’.
Steve Ford kicked off day one by introducing a plenary session on growing the occupational therapy presence in primary care.
The panel discussion showcased the inspiring work currently growing in Sheffield, and focused on building collaborative personalised care teams, recruitment and retention, leadership, clinical practice, student education and research.
Delegates heard from occupational therapists, an academic, GPs and students, who also shared their lessons learnt and top tips, to help delegates think about local implementation.
Julia Clifford, Clinical Specialist Occupational Therapist, Township 1 PCN, hosted by Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, and First Contact Practitioner, was the first to talk about how the clinical model in Sheffield has developed and why OTs were recruited.
She works across five General Practices (GPs) in one Primary Care Network (PCN), with older patients, and talked about how she co-designed her model with Tom Holdsworth, PCN Clinical Director and GP.
‘It’s very much a population, assets-based approach, which means looking at the skills and resources that patients have got and building on those to really support patients in developing their own strategies to enhance occupational performance and their quality of life,’ she told delegates.
The service is clearly guided primarily by what matters to patients. ‘There is a strong emphasis on anticipatory care and prevention in this way of working,’ she explained. ‘It’s about working upstream to proactively find and manage the impact that frailty can have on patients’ lives, before frailty finds us in primary care and secondary care services.’
In doing this, Julia works very closely with care co-ordinators and social prescribers; ‘key in supporting that infrastructure’, she adds.
Helen Blomfield, Trainee Advanced Clinical Practitioner and Occupational Therapist, Primary Care Sheffield, talked about her role, where she is supporting care home residents. Leading a team of care co-ordinators, Helen explained how she has two key roles, driven by the population needs of the PCN.
The first is around delivering the Enhanced Health in Care Homes framework, with the second focused on working with GPs to keep people in work, through work support clinics, as the PCN has a large number of working age adults in employment, but on low incomes.
The third OT to be employed directly by a PCN in Sheffield, was Laura Di Bona, Clinical Specialist Occupational Therapist and Trainee Advanced Clinical Practitioner (SAPA 5 PCN/Sheffield Health and Social Care NHS Foundation Trust) and Honorary Research Fellow at the University of Sheffield.
Her focus is mental health, due to the high level of unmet clinical need in her network’s population, and the result this was having on people’s lives and GP services.
She said: ‘Most people I see present to their GP in crisis regularly. Usually with anxiety and depression, but often with an undiagnosed complex trauma. [They] are rarely in work or education, and are almost always living in poverty, and most struggle to leave the house for any non-essential reason.’
Often with co-morbid conditions and unhealthy lifestyles, they want to change, but lack the confidence and money to, Laura shared how she uses her OT skills to set goals, increase occupational function and participation, building people’s skills and confidence to self-manage, by working in partnership with a wider team and the voluntary sector.
Delegates then heard from GPs Tom Holdsworth and Tom O’Brien on how OTs are making a difference in Sheffield’s PCNs.
GP Tom Holdsworth, Townships 1 PCN Clinical Director and Chair of Sheffield PCN Clinical Directors, explained how when bidding to set up a new service, he ‘knew almost nothing’ about occupational therapy, until a colleague encouraged him to ‘take a leap of faith’ and to recruit an OT.
Tom O’Brien, GP Partner at Green Cross Group Practice and Clinical Director of the SAPA5 PCN, added that, ‘the beauty of PCNs are that it allows us as GPs… to be a little bit more creative and daring in our approach to how we manage patients.’
He said: ‘We too didn’t have a really good idea of what occupational therapy would bring to our network’. But rather than employing someone they had a good knowledge of and saying 'this is what we want you to do’, instead they employed an OT and said, 'this is the issue we want you to address’, then giving them the freedom as to how they would accomplish it.
Tom Holdsworth said: ‘The real strength of occupational therapy is the way the approach is so holistic, avoids over-medicalising things, is problem solving and solution focused, and it’s a great natural fit as part of a multidisciplinary team’.
While it has required changes in the way practices work, he concluded: ‘It’s a really proactive model. It’s not firefighting same day demand… we proactively go out and find unmet need. It really has been one of the best things we have done as a PCN.’
The session also covered the importance of hosting and undertaking leadership placements, led by Natalie Jones, Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust. Natalie was joined by Oli Ridge and Simran Sangha, Sheffield Hallam University students, who talked passionately and insightfully about their experiences.
We also heard from Jennifer Read, University Teacher; Research Fellow and state registered Occupational Therapist, University of Sheffield, on her top tips for getting involved in research in primary care – the first section below, ‘Four top tips for getting involved in research and evidencing your role’.
For a full report on this and other great sessions from annual conference, look out for the July issue of OTnews.