The Humanising Health and Care podcast
By The Point of Care Foundation
The Humanising Health and Care podcastDec 02, 2023
How to use EBCD for quality improvement
Patrick and Rhiannon (NELFT) share how they improved their services for laryngectomy patients using Experience Based Co-Design (EBCD).
To find out more about EBCD, including our upcoming course dates:
visit pointofcarefoundation.org.uk
or email us at patientexperience@pointofcarefoundation.org.uk
Why do patients rebel?
Why is it we always follow the advice of healthcare professionals?
Katie Campion (@KatieCampion7) talks with Billy Mann (NeuroBilly247.blogspot.co.uk) and Clare Dawson (@thewheezylife) about their experience living with long-term health conditions, and why – as patients – we don't always follow the advice we're given.
Follow us on Twitter and Instagram at @PointofCareFdn.
A transcript of this episode is available to download at www.pointofcarefoundation.org.uk/the-humanising-health-care-podcast
Francis Inquiry report and the Point of Care Foundation
Jocelyn Cornwell interviews Sir Robert Francis about chairing the Mid Staffordshire inquiries and the growth of the Point of Care Foundation following the publication of his report.
Follow us on Twitter at @PointofCareFdn.
A transcript of this episode is available to download at www.pointofcarefoundation.org.uk/the-humanising-health-care-podcast
The paramedic's tale: Carl Betts
Aggie Rice, Staff Experience Network Lead at the Point of Care Foundation, speaks to Carl Betts, a paramedic and quality improvement lead, about his experiences. He has previously written for the Point of Care Foundation website about the challenges faced by paramedics in the NHS. This interview was recorded on 21st March 2022.
The anaesthetist's tale: Emma Evans, St George's Hospital, Tooting
Emma Evans, consultant anaesthetist and senior leader at St George's Hospital in Tooting, South London, talks to Bev Fitzsimons about her experience as both a clinician and manager during the Covid pandemic. She reflects on the value of teamwork, staff wellbeing, learning from the impact of Covid rules on service users, and dealing with uncertainty. The Point of Care Foundation worked closely with Emma on the New Beginnings project to improve maternity services at St George's.
The Schwartz facilitator's tale: Rebecca Myers
In this episode, David Jones, the Point of Care Foundation's Head of Staff Experience, speaks to Rebecca Myers about her views on the challenges faced by leaders in the healthcare system, and the support available to them. Among other roles, Rebecca is a Schwartz facilitator, a practicing nurse, and a visiting fellow at London South Bank University, where she focuses on clinical leadership and service improvement. She brings a wealth of perspectives about the needs of health and care staff at all levels, from board to front-line services.
The GP's tale: Martin Marshall, RCGP
In this episode, Martin Marshall, chair of the Royal College of General Practitioners and a practicing GP in East London, talks about the twin crises facing general practice - Covid and workload - and the challenges they pose for humanised care.
The patient leader's tale: Ceinwen Giles, Shine Cancer Support
Bev Fitzsimons speaks to Ceinwen Giles about Shine Cancer Support, a charity working to support people in their 20s, 30s and 40s with a cancer diagnosis, which she established after going through cancer treatment herself. She reflects on some of the issues faced by young adults living with cancer, and the unique challenges of providing support services through the pandemic.
The manager's tale: Lisa Cooper, Alder Hey
In our second podcast series we want to share some of the reality of working in healthcare from different perspectives across the NHS and social care. These 'voices from the point of care' are an important counterbalance to media portrayals of healthcare staff as heroes or villains, because In reality we are all just humans who have good days and bad days.
In this episode Bev Fitzsimons speaks to Lisa Cooper, director of community and mental health services at Alder Hey Children's Hospital in Liverpool, about life as a senior leader in the NHS.
Humanised care in mental health services
In the final episode of this first series of podcasts, Bev Fitzsimons discusses humanised healthcare in mental health services with Bev (Bhairavi) Sapre, Consultant Psychiatrist at Cheshire and Wirral Partnership NHS Foundation Trust. Bev brings a range of perspectives from her psychiatry career: she works in the perinatal service at Cheshire and Wirral, but combines this with long-standing service as an army reservist. She has worked as a psychiatrist for the military and, as a visiting professor at the University of Cheshire, she conducts research into the wellbeing of veterans. Bev and Bev talk about how patients' perspectives can be brought to bear on services supporting mental health and women's experience of pregnancy and birth - two areas of healthcare with a strong record of service user involvement.
Why is medicine so... medical? Long-term conditions
Bev Fitzsimons asks what humanised healthcare looks like for people with long-term health conditions. She meets three women whose long-term conditions mean they have needed to engage regularly with the system over an extended period. They share their experiences of long-term treatments (for sickle cell disease for two guests, and a long-term mental health condition for the other), and give their perspectives of the way the NHS works for them.
What does humanising healthcare mean in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit?
In this episode Bev Fitzsimons is joined by Howard Cohen and Sean Sweeney, neonatologists at the Randall Children's Hospital in Portland, Oregon. They share their experiences of life in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) and the 'emotional labour' of their work with families whose experiences are often highly traumatic. The Randall Hospital is part of the Vermont Oxford Network (VON) of neonatal units around the world. The Point of Care Foundation has worked with VON to introduce Experience Based Co-Design (EBCD) techniques, enabling clinicians to learn from families about improvements in their care. Howard Cohen, with clinicians and parents from the Portland Providence Hospital, are due to publish an article in the British Medical Journal about their experience of using EBCD and what they have learned.
What does the experience of Covid teach us about humanising care?
This episode features Hayley Hughes, Associate Director of Patient-Centred Care at Somerset NHS Foundation Trust, who speaks with Point of Care Foundation founder Jocelyn Cornwell about her experiences as Head of Compassionate Care at the Bristol Nightingale Hospital, created in 2020. What can we learn from her experience of thinking about humanised care in what was set to be a centre for the mass treatment of Covid - potentially one of the most inhuman care settings imaginable?
Why is medicine so... medical? Death and dying
This episode looks at humanised care in the context of death and dying. Bev Fitzsimons is joined by Richard Smith, former editor of the BMJ and now Point of Care Foundation chair, and Libby Sallnow, a palliative care medical consultant at the Central North West London NHS Trust and lecturer at UCL and St Christopher's hospice. Both were members of the Lancet Commission on the value of death.
Because people, not bodies, suffer
In the first of our new podcast series, Bev Fitzsimons speaks to Point of Care Foundation founder Jocelyn Cornwell about what humanising healthcare means, and her work in pursuit of this goal.