HSE Health Matters Spring 2022

Page 47

The idea took hold and UL offered the sports arena free of charge as one of the possible options. A steering group was formed, chaired by Professor Paul Burke, Chief Academic Officer with the Head of Strategy in UL Hospitals Group, Suzanne Dunne, pulling the plan together. It was finally agreed that the space would operate as a rehabilitation facility, as championed by Fiona Steed, then Group Lead of Allied Health in UL Hospitals Group. It would take patients who required rehabilitation care with complex medical discharges, out of the acute hospital setting and give them the necessary supports and therapies to facilitate their journey home or to longer term care settings. This would not only assist in positive patient outcomes but also free up beds for acute care in the hospital. This opened the door to the more direct involvement of the UL School of Allied Health (SAH) in the process and particular opportunities for allied health profession students around placements and completing course requirements for graduation. Dr Aileen Wright, head of the School of Allied Health, said the sudden closure of the university and the almost overnight move to online teaching was very challenging for her staff. The ICF provided an opportunity for SAH students to both complete their clinical placement requirements and also gain valuable experience in the contribution to the care of patients in the ICF, under the supervision of qualified clinicians. Nursing students from the UL Department of Nursing and Midwifery (DN&M) could also avail of the learning opportunity offered by the ICF. Chief Director of Nursing and Midwifery Margaret Gleeson worked on securing the nursing personnel to staff the facility. Niamh O’Grady, General Manager for Operational Services in UL Hospitals and her team ensured that all the necessary facilities and personnel were in place - porters, catering, cleaning, security – to operate the facility. The issue of clinical governance proved to be one of the most difficult challenges to overcome as there was no spare capacity among consultants already working in UL Hospitals Group. Professor Paul Burke approached two of the most respected retired Consultants in the region – Dr Eithne Molloy and Dr Con Cronin. They agreed to come out of retirement to fulfil this clinical governance role in the ICF. Once the planning framework was finalised, it was handed over to Breda Duggan, Project Manager in UL Hospitals, to operationalise. The logistics of turning the Sports Arena into essentially a hospital ward was a mammoth task covering everything from infection control, catering, toilet and sewerage facilities, health and safety, equipment, patient transport and security. But perhaps one of the inspired ideas was to engage the Irish Army in the project. Once the planning was done with the project team, the local 12th battalion Infantry Unit, based in Sarsfield Barracks in Limerick, rolled in to do the ‘heavy lifting’. “The army was amazing,” said Project Manager Breda. “They laid out the units, put wheels on wheelchairs, dressed beds … they did everything, they were an amazing bunch of men and women and they just did what had to be done.” The doors were finally opened in the ICF on June 8th, just 10 weeks after the idea had been first floated. Consultants, allied health professionals, doctors, security, medical social workers, nurses, students, porters, cleaners, health care assistants, patient advocacy service (PALS), receptionists, caterers all came together in this 84-bed facility.

Top: Members of the Allied Health team at the Intermediate Care Facility. Front, from left: Aoife McCarthy, Senior Occupational Therapist; Joanne Mannion, Senior Speech & Language Therapist; and Mary Flahive, Senior Physiotherapist. Middle (from left): Fiona Steed, Group Lead, Allied Health; and Sheila Bowers, Dietitian Manager. with Joanne Hayes, Senior Medical Social Worker; Anne Hegarty, Principal Medical Social Worker; Catherine Daly, Occupational Therapist; Anne Harnett, Chief Pharmacist; and Scott Murphy, Physiotherapy Practice Tutor. Above left: Josephine O'Shea (91) from Oola, Co Limerick, taking exercise with Scott Murphy, Physiotherapy Practice Tutor, and Emer McGettrick, student physiotherapist: "With all the rest and exercise I’ve had, I feel so much stronger now. I have a much more positive attitude now as well." Above right: Tom Noonan from Dromcollogher, West Limerick: "I didn’t know what to expect when I was coming here, but I’ll tell you this, I couldn’t have come to a better place.”

Yvonne Young, who led the Centre in the Associate Director of Nursing role, and the entire team nurtured an ethos of kindness and compassion in the ICF that had a ripple effect across the whole facility based on a holistic approach to care. Patients arrived over the five month period with various needs ranging from post-operative care, to respiratory conditions, to post COVID-19 rehabilitation. While the patients and the students were the primary beneficiaries, the staff who worked there also derived huge personal satisfaction and learning from the process. It opened their eyes to a new patientcentred model of care, anchored by effective multi-disciplinary working in which the health and social care professionals are an intrinsic part. The ICF closed its doors on X with the last patient discharged. The experience has thrown up many new and exciting ideas about further incorporating health and social care professionals into patient care in the UL Hospitals Group, and about the benefits of inter-discipline training and education for students and staff alike. The Intermediate Care Facility is now the subject of a collaborative research study facilitated by the Health Sciences Academy with the Faculty of Education and Health Sciences and the UL Hospitals Group, led by Professor Judi Pettigrew in the School of Allied Health. The project aims to capture through in-depth interviews, the experiences of a wide range of stakeholders involved in the ICF from those who conceived it through to those who physically set it up to those who operated it or received care it in.

HEALTH MATTERS SPRING 2022 | 45

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A Message from our CEO

2min
page 3

Get yourself summer ready

3min
pages 81-83

Living Well helping patients manage long-term conditions

1min
page 80

Menopause and Me webinar a huge success

3min
page 79

Healthy Ireland report

3min
page 76

Musicians on call

2min
page 77

EU4Health programme

3min
page 74

New recruitment operating model for HSE

4min
page 75

Change practices

4min
pages 69-70

Introduction to Human

3min
page 72

Reduce your risk of injury at your workstation

3min
page 73

Trust and confidence in the HSE

3min
page 68

Spark Ignite competition supports innovation on frontline

2min
page 63

Sexual wellbeing campaign hits TV screens

3min
page 66

Nursing home expert panel

4min
page 67

Teen pregnancy study reports major decline in numbers

3min
page 65

CxIO team brings insights of clinical work to IT team

4min
pages 61-62

Online health appointments using video

1min
page 59

Be cyber security aware

2min
page 58

Data privacy is everyone’s responsibility

3min
page 57

Support and understanding for the bereaved

4min
page 56

Ground-breaking COVID research

3min
page 54

Keeping track of the COVID-19 vaccine

2min
page 53

Sporting memories boost for people with dementia

4min
page 52

Urology clinic cuts visits from four to one

3min
page 49

Digital initiative to prevent future cardiac arrests

3min
page 50

Dementia advisers in every county

2min
page 51

Medicines initiative supporting patients

5min
pages 47-48

Health Passport gets new app

2min
page 44

ICF in Limerick opens eyes to new patient-centred model of care

6min
pages 45-46

Childhood vaccines

3min
page 42

Specialist mental health service marks 20 years

3min
page 43

National Service Plan

8min
pages 39-41

Perinatal mental healthcare explored at conference

2min
page 35

Nurse-led care in oncology haematology clinic

3min
page 37

New sanctuary of care

2min
page 36

Demo rooms at new children’s hospital

2min
page 34

CHI video on managing allergies

2min
page 32

Awards for public health teams

5min
pages 29-30

New National Clinical Guidelines to help people give up smoking

3min
page 25

Pathfinder keeping elderly out of hospital

4min
page 31

Boy hailed a hero after father’s cliff fall

2min
page 26

St Luke’s long service awards

3min
page 27

Caoimhe tells us her quit story

6min
pages 23-24

Our COVID experience - staff look back at last two years

26min
pages 3-8

Inside the children’s vaccination

6min
pages 9-10

Return to Nursing

2min
page 21

Kerry Integrated Care

2min
page 18

Martin bows out of nursing career

6min
pages 19-20

Day in the life of a community nurse

3min
page 22

Message from our editor

2min
page 2

Reflections from a team of vaccinators

4min
pages 11-12
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