Roles and Responsibilities of Doctors On Continuing Care Wards
Roles and Responsibilities of Doctors On Continuing Care Wards
Roles and Responsibilities of Doctors On Continuing Care Wards
• Doctors should set a tone in line with the philosophy of care of the ward which
enables patients to be treated with respect, avoids stereotyping and treats people as
individuals.
• Have developed a clear and open policy defining eligibility for continuing care
services.
• Have an understanding of the difficulties presented to the nursing and care staff by
sensitive to the psychological demands placed on staff who spend a lot of time
• Have an understanding of the difficulties and anxieties faced by relatives and friends
of the patient.
• Be aware of the potential for many types of abuse of dependent and difficult patients
and be involved in plans and training for prevention, recognition and management of
abuse.
• Visit regularly and frequently. Have a regular time for reviews and make other
conditions.
• Medical: treat physical conditions within the competence of the psychiatrist. Have
developed liaison plans with robust arrangements in place to manage the interface
• Have individual and ward treatment policies available and accessible for out of hours
medical cover.
• The patient’s GP will be contacted at the beginning of the admission so that all
• Different wards will develop different resuscitation policies depending on the location
of the ward and accessibility to a cardiac arrest team. However, any policy needs to
take into account individual differences between patients and the wishes of their
families. The doctor will be aware that the best course of action is not always to
attempt resuscitation and that in most patients it will be unsuccessful and traumatic
medical treatments.
dementia and the appropriate use of legislation. For those who lack capacity the
patients.
• Ensure that systems are in place for the support of patients’ families and friends.
Recognise that the needs and wishes of patients and their families although often the
• Be able to consider moral and ethical dilemmas at the end of life and be able to
• Develop a scheme for ward reviews which encompasses all aspects of a patient’s life.
Each ward and team will develop their own scheme. Some will prefer the use of
standardised rating scales, others free discussion. Each long stay patient will be
reviewed by the ward doctor three monthly and at a ward review with a senior doctor
The ward doctor will have examined the patient beforehand and results of any
Family members, partner or close friend may be invited to discuss aspects of the
patient’s care and particularly contribute to drawing up a plan of action for when/if
• Medication review
• Functional abilities
• Behaviour
• Care needs
• Communication skills
• Activities
• Family
• Strengths
• Ensure that complete, understandable and legible records are kept of clinical
clinical advances.
• Develop an understanding of how services are planned and managed within the NHS,
Units which are entirely within the NHS and those which are private but treating NHS
patients present similar but different issues and responsibilities for doctors. Each
catchment area should have some NHS beds, staffed and managed entirely by NHS
personnel.