HSE Health Matters - Autumn 2021

Page 45

SERVICE ENSURES ACCESS TO EARLIER TREATMENT Slaintecare-funded Integrated Heart Failure Service in Donegal allows GPs to directly refer patients they suspect of having heart failure

collaboration between Primary Care Donegal and LUH enables primary and secondary care to be aligned in one system closer to the local community. This also supports a more efficient and coordinated transfer of care and improved experience for people accessing our services. Keeping the patient central is most important for all of the healthcare workers involved,” she said. Heart failure is one of the major chronic diseases in Ireland and quality of life can be improved with appropriate medication and lifestyle changes. It affects around 2% of the

DID YOU KNOW? HEART FAILURE AFFECTS AROUND 2% OF THE GENERAL POPULATION BUT THIS RISES TO 10% TO THOSE OVER 70

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etterkenny University Hospital (LUH) and Community Healthcare Organisation Area 1 (CHO1) have established a new Heart Failure Service to support earlier access to diagnosis and treatment. Funding for the new service and a portable echocardiography machine was secured as part of Sláintecare Integration Funding. The new service allows GPs to directly refer patients they suspect of having heart failure to the dedicated heart failure clinics in community locations where they can get their echocardiogram and full assessment to confirm or rule out the diagnosis, which will then guide the treatment plan. It also allows patients who have been admitted to LUH with heart failure to have their follow up in community locations reducing the need to travel to Letterkenny for many. Speaking of the new service Cathy Farrell, Advanced Nurse Practitioner, said, “I have worked in LUH as a heart failure nurse for 15 years now and the number of people attending the clinic has more than doubled in that time. I am delighted to see this new service which will allow earlier diagnosis and therefore treatment of heart failure. We know through

Donegal Heart Failure team members (left to right) are: Karen McCafferty, Clinical Nurse Specialist, Heart Failure Integrated Care; Cathy Farrell, Heart Failure Advanced Nurse Practitioner; and Eoin Sheehy, Chief Cardiac Physiologist, Heart Failure Integrated Care.

appropriate education of self-management and self-monitoring we can improve quality of life and reduce hospitalisations and this service will allow us to see more people in a more timely manner.” Mandy Doyle, Primary Care General Manager for CHO1, said the integrated service for heart failure demonstrates the ‘potential and further possibilities’ of what can be achieved through the Sláintecare principles of ‘right care, right place, right time’ and the integration of primary and secondary care. “The Sláintecare vision for healthcare is one where care is seamless and integrated and is provided at the most appropriate service level. This new integrated heart failure service is a fine example of this, a service that seeks to improve the quality of care for individual patients by ensuring that services are well co-ordinated around their needs. This

general population but this rises to 10% to those over 70 and is the leading cause of admission to hospital in those aged over 65. It is one of the major chronic diseases in Ireland and quality of life can be improved with appropriate medication and lifestyle changes. Seán Murphy, Hospital Manager, Letterkenny University Hospital, said the hospital and the cardiology service in particular are delighted to be part of this innovative service development for patients with heart failure. “As Cathy highlighted, cardiac illness is unfortunately increasing in Donegal. This Sláintecare project delivers a service to those patients with heart failure across the County, integrated with the acute hospital based service. This approach which provides easier access for patients will also be the future for other services and I congratulate all those who have been involved in realising this vision for the care of patients with heart failure,” he said. Ciaran O’Fearraigh, GP in Millbrae Surgery Stranorlar, expressed his own delight. “It’s great to see investment in community services and better access to diagnostics in primary care. The existing heart failure service in LUH has been a great support to those with heart failure in Donegal and to General Practice. This new service builds on that, with timely access to high quality diagnostics and care in the community setting, and will hopefully provide a model for further projects going forward.” HEALTH MATTERS AUTUMN 2021 | 43

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COVID care concert Dungarvan performance

2min
page 79

Healthy Ireland swim – buoys in place

2min
pages 82-84

Children’s art project – Beads of courage

4min
pages 80-81

Cork goes green – progress on climate initiatives

3min
page 78

Outdoor gym – Enniscorthy opening

3min
page 76

Castlebar music – Brendan Shine shines

2min
page 77

QI journey – quality improvement

3min
page 75

Webinars – Sláintecare

1min
page 73

New directorate – QPS

2min
page 74

Service user feedback – Naas hospital host awareness day

2min
page 71

Community Healthcare Networks – in focus

2min
page 72

Estates – focus on energy efficiency

2min
page 70

Internal controls programme latest updates

2min
page 68

Schwartz Rounds – online tips

4min
page 69

Open disclosure – training for staff

4min
page 67

PPE fund – European money helped in purchases

2min
page 65

Confidential recipient – vital role

2min
page 66

Virtual health – services continue to grow

6min
pages 62-64

Digital mental health – boost for services

3min
page 61

Antibiotic survey – high usage in residential facilities

3min
page 58

Men’s health week – raising awareness

2min
page 59

Bealach Nua – peer support for families

3min
page 60

NCHD app – success for team

2min
page 57

Croom hospital – new facility unveiled

5min
pages 52-53

Portlaoise opening – midwife led clinic

2min
page 55

Select mutism – support for parents and school staff

2min
page 56

Lymphoedema clinic – leading the way in care

2min
page 54

Supported discharge – aid for stroke patients

2min
page 51

Sunsmart videos – team produce resources

1min
page 50

Respirasense – digital device transforms care

5min
pages 48-49

DASH – mobile sexual health and drug advice

3min
pages 42-43

Heart failure clinic – boost for Donegal

3min
page 45

Flu vaccine – protect yourself and others

3min
page 41

LGBTI survey – mixed experiences with screening

2min
page 44

Innovation service – TUH role

2min
page 40

Music therapy – Edel highlights benefits

3min
page 36

Kindness project – making a real difference

2min
page 37

My Home project – service users find forever homes

6min
pages 34-35

Quit smoking – cessation officer

7min
pages 32-33

Annual report – HSE unveils latest report

7min
pages 28-29

Breastfeeding week – supports during COVID

5min
pages 30-31

Galway community café mental health initiative

3min
page 27

On a COVID ward – two nurses’ experiences

10min
pages 24-26

Artwork – morale boost for staff

2min
page 20

Accident survivor – tributes to emergency services

8min
pages 22-23

Rainbow badges – message of inclusion

3min
page 21

COVID survivor – walk to remember

1min
page 3

Vaccines – staff pay tribute

5min
pages 8-9

Birthday joy – Kevin hits 100

2min
page 15

Data protection – it’s all our responsibility

3min
pages 18-19

Cyberattack – CUMH case study

5min
pages 16-17

COVID reunion – mum and daughter recover

2min
page 14

Vaccine programme – a reflection

2min
page 4

Vaccines – why we got the jab

4min
pages 6-7
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