Putting the right foot forward
Last Friday saw me showing my mum and girlfriend around my nearly completed extension. Excitement and stupidity led me to fall (off what will be the retaining wall,) landing and cracking my ankle. Result – me, prostrate on the concrete floor and what has become a huge blue foot/ankle/leg, a pimp style limp and walking stick that has cheered my colleagues up no end.
Having left it a number of days, I finally hobbled down to St Charles Hospital’s Minor Injuries Unit for a check up and X-ray expecting the usual secondary care inner London cliché. What greeted me was an organisation that sang with efficiency and care. Each person I hobbled passed asked, ‘did I need a hand?’, and ‘whether I knew where I was going?’ Furthermore, each initiated interaction contributed hugely to my view of the NHS as a service. I couldn’t help but ask the source of this feeling. The receptionist, porter, doctor, and nurse all were consistent in their answers. They put the amazing vibe of the hospital down to it feeling autonomous, working within a clear process whilst having the freedom to use their initiative, team and individual visibility, defined roles, and putting the patient right at the centre. I raised this last night at a meeting with a strategy head of a large PCT, and he aired the view that Polyclinics are aiming for exactly this – smaller, autonomous, organisations, staffed with empowered carers all driving towards a better patient experience. I only hope this can be realised.







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