Occupational Therapy News OTnews January 2019 | Page 11
NEWS
How the AHP fit notes are already helping people back into work
RCOT will be leading on a new government-funded project
to deliver occupational therapy-led vocational clinics in GP
surgeries (OTnews, December 2018, page 8).
One of the key tools used by occupational therapists in
these new clinics will be the AHP Advisory Fitness for Work
Report, also known as AHP fit notes, delivering personalised
return to work information that provides more detail than the
broader GP Fit Notes.
In the next two issues of OTnews we will be speaking
with occupational therapists who have already integrated the
reports into their work.
Lisa Greer and Shonaid McCabe both work in GP surgeries
for NHS Lanarkshire, and have been using the AHP fit notes as
part of a wider piece of work looking at the role of occupational
therapy within primary care. With Shonaid’s background in
physical health and Lisa’s in mental health, they provide a clear Says Shonaid: ‘It’s not always as simple as requesting a
phased return – the term is bandied about but people don’t
always think about what it will look like. It could be about
shortened hours, or shortened days, finding what would work
for the person and their employer. If someone works three
12-hour shifts, is it better to start off doing less hours over
three days or do two longer shifts? It’s all the nuts and bolts of
phased return.’
The notes also help to give people official backing to get
the support they already know they need. Shonaid helped one
client who worked in a petrol station at night get a chair for
during their shift which their employer had previously declined.
‘The patient knew what they needed and had had that
conversation with the employer, but getting a recommendation
from an occupational therapist using a formal document
helped,’ she says.
example of how the AHP fit notes can be employed in a whole
array of occupational therapy work.
Says Shonaid: ‘I think it’s an area that we both feel will
progress. As occupational therapy is embedded more into
primary care and we educate the GPs more about the AHP
Fit Note, we see more people with employment needs being
referred, so we will see that numbers increasing.’
Lisa is based in a training practice for GPs and is taking
the opportunity to bring junior doctors and GP trainees up to
speed on her work so that they have a better understanding of
OT and know when to refer; Shonaid is working with both GPs
and other colleagues such as practice nurses and pharmacists
so they know she is available.
And what the AHP fit notes provide is a more detailed way
to flesh out what support individuals need to get back into
work. For other clients, provision of the AHP fit note could help
them and their employers to develop helpful support and
communication strategies, for example by recommending
regular supervision, refresher training or buddy systems. This
increases employees’ confidence in their ability to return to
work successfully.
Adds Lisa: ‘One of the big things people are worrying
about is the response of their colleagues when they go back
to work, especially after a long period of sickness absence.
A recommendation that I often include on an AHP fit note is
to meet colleagues before they actually go back to work on
the first day so they can get over that kind of uncomfortable
anxiety – what will everybody say, will I lose my composure as
everyone is asking me how I am?
Those things can be really helpful to the employee and the
employer as they won’t necessarily think about those things.’
Occupational therapy question in Scottish Parliament after service visit
The role of occupational therapists in GP practices has been
promoted in the Scottish Parliament after an MSP visited an
occupational therapy-led service.
Margaret Mitchell, a Conservative MSP for Central
Scotland, visited a GP practice pilot in Lanarkshire and met
with occupational therapists to hear how they work with
people with physical and mental health issues.
She went on to ask the government whether it plans to
use more occupational therapists in GP practices to improve
early interventions and preventative care.
Jeane Freeman, the Scottish health secretary, said
the new requirement in the GP contract to use more
multidisciplinary care offered a route to do that.
For more on inviting decision makers to your occupational
therapy service, please email: [email protected].
Margaret Mitchell MSP visit
OTnews January 2019 11