A new collaborative model of care introduced into Al Maha Children’s Unit at Rumailah Hospital is benefiting patients in a big way.
Al Maha 1 is a 26-bed long-term facility providing complex care for children aged from three months to 14 years.
Many of them have their breathing supported by a mechanical ventilator.
The length of stay for each child varies from months to years depending on the patient’s diagnoses, ranging from hereditary disorders and neuro-muscular disorders, to respiratory disorders.
Amira (not her real name) was born prematurely at 33 weeks and was mechanically ventilated, hospitalised and dealing with one medical condition after another.
However Amira, now four years’ old, is no longer dependent on hospital care and now resides with her family in the community thanks to this new facility.
“At three months of age, Amira, who was the first baby for her family, was admitted to the Paediatric Intensive Care Unit with respiratory failure because of a viral illness. From then until the age of four, Amira was hospitalised and attached to a mechanical ventilator through a tracheostomy, suffering from multiple episodes of acute illnesses,” recalled Dr Reem Babiker Abdalla Mohamed, general paediatrics consultant at Al Maha Children’s Unit.
Al Maha Children’s Unit introduced the new collaborative model of care as the population of its patients has continued to rise by about 150% in less than two years after its opening and also because the level of patient complexities became more challenging.
The new multi-disciplinary subspecialties round ensures continuity of care for its young patients, improves their health outcomes and increases satisfaction levels of their families.
Al Maha Children’s Unit was established in October 2010 as a collaboration between Rumailah Hospital and Hamad General Hospital and in consultation with the Toronto-based Hospital for Sick Children and Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabilitation Hospital.
The aim was to establish a specialised unit to provide the highest standard of care and improve the quality of life for medically complex technology-dependent children.
The initiative is led by General Paediatrics, and Child Rehabilitation with development teams who are role models in taking a collaborative approach to treatment and care.
Dr Mohamed said once every month, the Al Maha team, which comprises a paediatrician, pharmacist, nutritionist, respiratory therapist, physiotherapist, nurse and occupational therapist, is joined by paediatric pulmonology consultants and specialists from other Hamad Medical Corporation’s network of hospitals to conduct their rounds.
“Each subspecialist clinician, usually from Hamad General Hospital, has a scheduled time they visit based on their other duties and each patient’s needs.
Although this is challenging for many of the specialists since it is offsite work, the incentive that keeps them going is the positive patient outcome,” Dr
Mohamed said.
She explained that the Al Maha teams of specialists usually discuss each child’s current health condition, future care plans and their possible long-term outcome with the child’s family.
On some occasions, other clinicians are invited to join these discussions based on the patient’s needs and the complexity of their illness.
Dr Mohamed noted that part of the collaboration also includes the regular paediatric dental services by the Department of Dentistry.

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