Homecare Medical announced as successful partner
Homecare Medical announced as successful partner to develop and deliver new integrated national telehealth service
Reaching the community in new ways
with comprehensive health and wellness advice, support and
information.
Homecare Medical – a leading New Zealand tele-triage organisation - has been announced as the Ministry of Health’s partner to develop and deliver a new, enhanced, integrated, national telehealth service for New Zealand. The national telehealth service will see clinical and non-clinical staff provide phone and online advice, support, assessment of symptoms, triage, treatment advice, and preventative and educational aspects for a range of health, wellbeing and counselling services. Initial services available will be a health advice and triage service, quit smoking services, poisons advice, alcohol and drug advice, immunisation and vaccination advice, depression advice and services, and gambling advice and services.
Homecare Medical Board Chair Dr Martin Seers said today “People expect to get help and advice through a variety of channels, they expect to be able to talk to a ‘real’ person and they expect a joined up system that ‘knows’ them.”
Dr Seers explained “We will work to deliver a
service that can be accessed through multiple channels 24 x
7 – phone, websites, email, txt message, chat, and in the
future, video calling and mobile applications. This will be
a service where every door is the right door – where
users’ needs are met directly, or by linking them to the
appropriate service - their GP, nurse, pharmacist, a
midwife, paramedics, a counsellor or therapist.”
The
service aims to provide accessible, people-centred, flexible
and adaptable quality health and counselling services, where
the individual who takes the call is responsible for
ensuring the caller gets the help or advice they need. Key
to this is that the service is integrated with local and
regional services and that users get a consistent service no
matter where or how they make contact, and where each caller
should only have to tell their story once.
The benefits will be better care outcomes for New Zealanders, a reduction in acute and unplanned care - reducing emergency department admissions and pressure on ambulance services - improved health and wellness support for users, improved health literacy, more care delivered close to home, more self-management, and getting the right advice from well trained staff.
“While the current health and wellness phone advice lines work well and we’re starting from a strong base, there is an opportunity for them to be more connected and to significantly enhance the services currently offered. We will integrate with them and collaborate with other service providers over time. We are thrilled to have this once in a generation opportunity to fundamentally change the health services and agencies approach to health and wellness in New Zealand to meet growing demand, consumer expectations and the need for sustainable healthcare.”
From 1 November 2015 the following services will make up the 24 x 7, free national telehealth service:-
• Health triage and
advice
• Homecare Medical will deliver the Healthline
service, with experienced registered nurses providing high
quality health advice.
• Poisons advice
• The
National Poisons Centre will continue to provide a service
to clinicians and the public; Homecare Medical will
integrate and partner with the Poisons Centre to give the
national telehealth service triage nurses access to elements
of their extensive database.
• The University of Otago
have been involved in designing our approach.
•
Quit smoking services
• Using suitably qualified and
experienced staff, Homecare Medical will be responsible for
delivering virtual smoking cessation support. We are
delighted that throughout the procurement process we have
built a constructive relationship with the Quit Group Trust
who have agreed to support us during the transition period
to 1 November.
• Alcohol and drug
advice
• Homecare Medical, using highly experienced
staff will deliver the Alcohol Drug Helpline services. We
will continue to work very closely with Alcohol Drug
Association New Zealand (ADANZ) who currently deliver this
service.
• Immunisation and vaccination
advice
• The Immunisation Advisory Centre (IMAC) team
will train Homecare Medical nurses to provide advice to the
public; IMAC will continue to provide clinical advice to GPs
and hospital staff and support our nurses when required.
• Depression advice and services
• This will
be provided by a well-resourced team with a thorough and
deep understanding of mental health and depression.
•
Gambling advice and services
• We will have leading
New Zealand mental health and addiction specialists
providing this service.
No phone numbers or contact
details that users access will change at this stage.
The current services manage around 2 million calls per year.
In addition, Homecare Medical is working with Plunket to jointly manage calls to PlunketLine that are currently referred to Healthline, and with St John on extending the advice for non-urgent, not life threatening 111 calls for ambulance currently provided in Auckland by Homecare Medical nurses.
Dr Seers explained “Our commitment has always been to innovate, create and deliver services that are focussed on giving all New Zealanders the best possible chance to live well. In developing our telehealth vision and designing the national telehealth service we worked closely with current service providers, with consumer organisations, nurses, pharmacists, doctors, counsellors and others to inform our proposal and our idea of the best ‘design’ for a national telehealth service. We kept focussed on developing better, easier ways of getting health and wellness support for the mum with an asthmatic child, for the middle aged overweight man who is depressed and struggling to monitor his diabetes, for the gen x smoker who needs help quitting. We named them and we built our models with them at the centre.”
“For them, the benefits of a new national telehealth service will be a pathway to the right information, care or service they need, whenever and wherever they need it. And for their general practice team, the national
telehealth service means
additional, integrated support for their patients and better
continuity of care. For DHBs it will mean fewer emergency
department admissions.”
“This isn’t an exercise driven by costs – this is an initiative focussed on reaching the community in new ways with comprehensive health and wellness advice, support and information.”
Homecare Medical (formerly HML) is a New Zealand-owned healthcare organisation currently providing 24 x 7 telehealth services, including nurse-based teleconsults, care coordination, telephone-based screening and in and out of hours general practice support.
ENDS