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Redesigning the Emergency Ambulance PDF

40 Pages·2011·2.92 MB·English
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Helen Hamlyn Centre for Design Redesigning the Royal College of Art Kensington Gore London SW7 2EU Emergency Ambulance www.rca.ac.uk www.hhc.rca.ac.uk Improving Mobile Emergency Healthcare RE covers.indd 1 06/09/2011 10:30 Helen Hamlyn Centre for Design, Royal College of Art Project Partners Ed Matthews, Senior Research Fellow Gianpaolo Fusari, Research Associate Vehicle Design Department, Royal College of Art Professor Dale Harrow, Director of Vehicle Design Department Peter Stevens, Visiting Professor Richard Winsor, Senior Tutor Royal College of Art University of the West of England University of the West of England, Bristol Helen Hamlyn Centre for Design and Vehicle Design Coldharbour Lane Kensington Gore Bristol BS16 1QY Dr Jonathan Benger, Professor of Emergency Medicine London SW7 2EU www.uwe.ac.uk London Ambulance Service www.rca.ac.uk Dixie Dean, Emergency Care Practitioner www.hhc.rca.ac.uk London Ambulance Service NHS Trust 220 Waterloo Road Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust London SE1 8SD Professor the Lord Ara Darzi of Denham, Professor of Surgery The Bays, South Wharf Road www.londonambulance.nhs.uk Dr Dominic King, Clinical Lecturer in Surgery St Mary’s Hospital London W2 1NY NHS London Design: www.imperial.nhs.uk 105 Victoria Street Gianpaolo Fusari London SW1E 6QT www.london.nhs.uk Photography: Petr Krejci, Tim Saunders and Gianpaolo Fusari Printing: Redlin Printing Ltd www.redlin.co.uk helen hamlyn Redesigning the Emergency Ambulance centre for design © 2011 Helen Hamlyn Centre for Design, Royal College of Art ISBN 978-1-907342-45-5 British Library Catalogue-in-Publication Data: a catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. All rights reserved. Imperial College Healthcare No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, NHS Trust photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior consent of the publishers Published by Helen Hamlyn Centre for Design Royal College of Art Kensington Gore London SW7 2EU London www.hhc.rca.ac.uk RE covers.indd 2 06/09/2011 10:30 Redesigning the Emergency Ambulance A report from the Helen Hamlyn Centre for Design and the Department of Vehicle Design at the Royal College of Art in association with the London Ambulance Service, Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust and the University of the West of England, Bristol. Contents Forewords by Lord Darzi and Lady Hamlyn 3 Executive Summary 5 The Need for Change 7 Evidence Base 9 The Design Brief 11 The Design Process 15 Testing the Design 17 Scenario Testing - Round One 18 Design Issues 23 Design Changes 24 Scenario Testing - Round Two 27 Scenario Testing - Round Three 30 Next Steps 34 Further Reading 36 REDESIGNING THE EMERGENCY AMBULANCE 3 Contents Foreword The interior of a present-day ambulance looks in many One of my most fervent wishes in supporting the Helen ways much as it did when I first started working in the Hamlyn Centre for Design at the Royal College of Art has NHS over two decades ago. How we practise pre-hospital been to direct the practical application of design thinking and emergency care has, however, changed significantly. towards projects and activities that address important Paramedics and ambulance staff now have the skills and social challenges in a serious, creative and engaging way. technology to better manage the complex needs of For many years now I have been interested in the redesign patients and treat them where possible in the community of the current frontline ambulance. rather than at hospital. In London, we have networks of The Helen Hamlyn Centre for Design has assembled centres that specialise in the care of trauma, stroke and a dedicated design research team in partnership with the cardiac patients. This means that patients may have to Vehicle Design Department at the Royal College of Art, travel further in ambulances to ensure they receive better the University of the West of England, Bristol, Imperial care. It is therefore essential that we provide an College Healthcare NHS Trust and the London Ambulance ambulance environment that is more in keeping with the Service to design a new interior for the current emergency times and facilitates excellent care rather than hinders it. ambulance. Funding from the innovation fund at NHS London has Research has shown that there are many problems with given us the support to approach ambulance redesign the present vehicle, which have a negative impact on both from a unique multidisciplinary perspective. The design patients and ambulance crews. The project team has spent team has done a tremendous job in developing solutions the past 18 months in consultation with frontline clinicians, to the problems that ambulance staff face with the patients and healthcare providers in order to provide a current environment in which they work. I would like to better, more hygienic and workable interior. It has been thank the project team for their hard work and also the noted that ambulance crews suffer from badly designed members of the steering group for their support. Staff vehicles and equipment, which is surely unacceptable given from London Ambulance Service have been central to the the life-threatening situations they regularly face. design process, and we hope this work will facilitate the I am personally very involved and excited about this development of an ambulance that is fit for purpose for project and have wanted to see this happen for a long them and their patients. I would also like to thank Lady time, having had first-hand experiences myself of the Hamlyn for her continuing support of such an deficiencies in many of the ambulances now being used. important and innovative stream of work. I am especially pleased that this is a co-design project involving patients who use this service and ambulance Lord Ara Darzi of Denham crews who work on the vehicles on a daily basis. It is vital that we engage these groups in the design process so that we provide a vehicle that is fit for purpose in the 21st century. Helen Hamlyn 4 REDESIGNING THE EMERGENCY AMBULANCE 5 Executive Summary This report describes design and development work that has been supported by the Innovation Fund of NHS London and the Helen Hamlyn Trust to redesign the interior of the modern emergency ambulance. The current interior has emerged piecemeal from Eight key design innovations emerged from the a 20th century ambulance that was required to do little first round of evaluation, which were further modified more than convey patients to the nearest hospital. Yet the and developed during two further iterations. Evidence 21st century ambulance service provides both definitive collected to date, and the final evaluations performed in treatment of urgent care conditions at scene and the May 2011, clearly indicate that the new design improves emergency treatment and transport of seriously ill and safety and the patient experience, while enhancing the injured patients to the centre best suited to their needs. clinical and cost-effectiveness of care. This will yield By taking a fresh look at the ambulance interior, we have significant benefits to patients, staff and the NHS as addressed both of these modern requirements, improving a whole. patient care and safety alongside enhanced healthcare This project has created a new and innovative efficiency. ambulance interior, in response to evidence collected The project has built on existing evidence and previous through three research projects since 2005. The purpose- work to address ten improvement areas. It used a process built mobile demonstrator will be used to showcase the of co-design, in which designers from the Helen Hamlyn project throughout the UK, to build confidence among Centre for Design worked closely with clinicians from manufacturers and the wider NHS, with the ultimate aim London Ambulance Service and patient representatives, of progressing to frontline clinical testing and successful through an iterative process of design, evaluation and implementation into modern emergency care. modification. During three cycles of testing, ideas were proposed, developed and evaluated. These ideas were then implemented, refined or discarded. 6 REDESIGNING THE EMERGENCY AMBULANCE 7 The Need for Change In June 2008 Lord Darzi’s report ‘High quality care for all: NHS Next Stage Review’ outlined plans to create specialised heart, stroke and trauma units. The report also recommended utilising alternative care pathways similar to those provided in community settings, such as urgent care centres and community health teams. An important and integral component of this that in order to improve quality, efficiency and community-based approach was an improved mobile cost-effectiveness, they need to change. In recent years healthcare system provided by ambulance services, this understanding has led to the introduction of a wider moving away from the traditional approach of range of different, often smaller and less expensive transportation to hospital, in favour of a ‘treat-at- responder vehicles to treat and refer patients where they scene-and-refer’ model of healthcare. are (for example at home, school or work). However, the figures cited above suggest that these changes alone The need for change within the Ambulance Service have not achieved the ambitions set out in the Darzi The Information Centre for Health & Social Care review. reported that in 2009/10 there were a total of 7.87 million In order to effect real change and improvements in ambulance 999 calls. Approximately 40% did not require care, the ambulance service must be able to bring more treatment in an A&E department, so over three million of the skills and facilities of the hospital to the patient. patients were transported unnecessarily to hospitals in This will in turn better enable ambulance staff to deal the UK as a result of the lack of alternative methods and/ with those urgent care problems that do not necessarily or pathways for treatment. This figure alone illustrates require a trip to hospital, thereby providing the patient that an approach aimed at significantly increasing the with the ‘right treatment in the right place at the right proportion of healthcare treatments delivered in the time’. However, to be successful, these changes in vehicle community, rather than in hospital, could subsequently design and treatment approach will also require better improve the quality and effectiveness of care, while training, in particular increasing the diagnostic skills and delivering considerable cost savings – and reducing the knowledge of ambulance clinicians to enable them to pressure on emergency services within the NHS. treat and discharge patients on-scene. Again, ambulance Ambulance services across the UK have recognised services in the UK have recognised this need and have responded in part by introducing Emergency Care 8 Practitioner and more recently the ‘Advanced Paramedic’ changes has lagged behind the strategic ambitions of or ‘Paramedic Practitioner’ roles. Government, the NHS and ambulance services. The In parallel, centralisation of specialist heart attack, introduction of First Responders, using a range of stroke and trauma services has improved outcomes for vehicles, has helped to manage response times and those who are treated in these hospitals, but placed an thereby improved efficiency to some extent, but has not additional burden on ambulance services to transport as yet led to significant improvements in the quality or and provide emergency care to critically ill and injured cost-effectiveness of ambulance service provision. This is patients over longer distances in safety. Thus the current compounded by the fact that ambulance staff do not ambulance is now called upon both to perform better in always have the environment and equipment to provide these critical roles and to provide effective treatment at- optimum care according to patient need. scene to patients with urgent care needs. It was originally designed for neither of these tasks. Real solutions to generate real change To address the challenges outlined above, it is necessary Challenges to change to design a 21st century mobile treatment space, which is These alternative approaches to the delivery of urgent truly ‘fit for purpose’ and therefore capable of delivering healthcare have presented significant challenges to the ‘right treatment, in the right place, at the right time’. ambulance services in terms of the types of vehicles Since 2005, the Helen Hamlyn Centre for Design and required, and the need for additional staff training and the Vehicle Design Department at the Royal College of Art operational structures. In 2005 the Government report has been working collaboratively with other institutions, ‘Taking Healthcare to the Patient’ outlined the case for increasing the range of services available; it described including the London Ambulance Service and the some potential delivery models for these services and University of the West of England, to improve ambulance also some of the changes required in funding structures design. This report describes an innovative approach to and governance. An important aspect of the proposals the design and development of the emergency was the recommendation that a national approach ambulance, building on previous successes to produce an be taken to the procurement of ambulances. It also ambulance interior that provides better treatment to all recognised that, within such an approach, there would patients, matched to their specific healthcare needs, and be a need to develop delivery models that could provide improves efficiency by transporting only those that an effective mix of vehicles, ranging from emergency require hospital care to the centre best suited to their treatment to urgent services care, and patient transport condition. within the community. However, the design and development of the equipment and vehicles necessary to support these

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deficiencies in many of the ambulances now being used. I am especially pleased .. In the new design there is no need to use a personal bag inside the vehicle, because .. The images shown here reflect the development of the
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