Community update
Thursday 21 November 2024
Welcome

Welcome to our community update. This is NHS North West London's newsletter for local community and voluntary groups.

We would encourage you to help us by sharing the relevant content in your community newsletters and email updates aimed at your members and residents. You may also use this wording in social media posts. Images and some campaign materials in different languages are available on our resources page.
Have your say on the future of specialist community palliative care for north west London Residents

‘Compassionate Care For All’ - Public consultation 18 November 2024 to 24 February 2025

NHS North West London is inviting the public to share their views on proposed improvements to adult community specialist palliative care services across the region. These proposals are part of a commitment to provide compassionate, high-quality support for residents facing serious or life-limiting illnesses.

Robyn Doran, Senior Responsible Officer for the review, called Compassionate Care For All, said:

"Our goal is to offer the best possible care when patients, families, and friends need it most. Compassionate care means supporting people through the challenges of life-limiting illnesses, helping them live as fully as possible, with dignity and relief from pain and symptoms."

The consultation focuses on creating a community specialist palliative care service that ensures equal access to quality care—whether at home, in the community, or at a hospice. This means every adult in north west London will have access to specialised, round-the-clock care and support when they are at their most vulnerable.

Proposed key improvements

The proposals aim to address a wide range of needs, including:

  • A specialist palliative care nursing team available 12 hours a day, 7 days a week, across all boroughs
  • 24/7 telephone support for specialist palliative care advice for all North West London residents
  • “Hospice at Home” services available around the clock
  • Specialist palliative care outpatient clinics in each borough
  • Improved access to psychological and bereavement support for families at local hospices.
  • Expanded lymphoedema services for conditions related to both cancer and non-cancer causes. Lymphoedema is a long-term condition where a build-up of lymph fluid in your body's soft tissues causes swelling
  • 46 new enhanced end-of-life care beds across the region, providing additional options for those whose needs cannot be met at home but do not require hospice-level inpatient care
  • Maintaining 57 consultant-led hospice specialist palliative care inpatient beds that are currently available, which our analysis shows will meet community needs over the next five years.
Dr Lyndsey Williams, Local GP and Clinical Lead for the review, said: "This is about ensuring everyone has access to high-quality care, no matter where they live in North West London.  We want to hear from residents to make sure these services meet the real needs of our community."

Options under consultation

The consultation presents two options:

Option A (Preferred): Fully implement the proposed model, including 46 new enhanced end-of-life care beds, while maintaining the existing hospice beds without reopening the Pembridge Hospice inpatient beds. This option would be easier and quicker to implement and benefit more north west London residents as a whole.

Option B: Fully implement the proposed model, including 46 new enhanced end-of-life care beds and reopen Pembridge Hospice inpatient beds. This would require a reduction in hospice beds elsewhere and have a longer implementation timeline due to the need to recruit specialist palliative care consultant cover and 35 additional staff.

Have your say

Rob Hurd, Chief Executive of NHS North West London added:

"We are committed to putting residents’ voices at the heart of these changes. Your feedback will help us shape a service that supports the dignity, comfort, and quality of life of everyone in our community."

To learn more and participate in the consultation, visit the NHS North West London website: www.nwlondonicb.nhs.uk/cspc


Don't wait for minor health concerns to get worse – think pharmacy first

Community pharmacies can offer treatment and when appropriate some prescription medicine, for seven common conditions without patients needing to see a GP, as part of Pharmacy First, a major transformation in the way the NHS delivers care.

Highly trained pharmacists at more than nine in ten pharmacies can now assess, treat, and when appropriate, provide some prescription medicine for earache (for those aged between 1 and 17), impetigo, infected insect bites, shingles, sinusitis, sore throat, urinary tract infections (UTIs) for women aged 16-64 - without the need for a GP appointment.

Available at the heart of local communities, community pharmacy teams have the right clinical training to give people the health advice they need, with no appointment necessary and private consultations available. Community pharmacists will signpost patients to other local services where necessary.

By expanding the services community pharmacies offer, the NHS is aiming to help free up GP appointments and give people more choice in how and where they access care.
 
For more information, visit www.nhs.uk/thinkpharmacyfirst
Community insight report published

Our published Quarter 2 insights report gives an overview of the healthcare services successes and challenges experienced by residents in north west London between July and September 2024.

This report is built on extensive community feedback and interaction, identifying key areas that impact patient experiences and healthcare access.

The most frequent issue raised unprompted by our residents and communities continues to be access to primary care. Barriers to communication, digital exclusion, mental health and cultural sensitivity are also highlighted.

Read the report here.
Email: nhsnwl.communications.nwl@nhs.net