Transcript Slide 1

Welcome and introductions
David Smith, Chief Officer for Kingston CCG and Director of
Health and Adult Services for Kingston Council
Update on Kingston CCG
Dr Naz Jivani, Chair
Changes to the NHS
• GPs taking over commissioning of
hospital, community and mental health
services from PCTs
• National Commissioning Board to
commission doctors, dentists,
pharmacists and opticians
• Health and Wellbeing boards established
in each borough
• Increased role for Healthwatch in
engaging patients
• Public health services transferred to
councils and Public Health England
How things are now
How they will be after April 2013
Developments in Kingston
• Kingston CCG was given delegated
responsibility for hospital, mental health
and community services
• One of three in London and 35 nationally
to apply for ‘first wave’ authorisation
• We now have an elected governing body
and a unique Council of Members,
representing all GPs
• We also have a constitution and robust
governance arrangements
• Once approved the CCG will take over
full responsibility from April 2013
What we have been doing
• Kingston at Home was launched - a
joint health and social care
programme to support people to stay
living in their own homes
• Medicines management – working
with GP practices to ensure patients
get the right medicines for their
condition
• Urgent care – increasing options so
patients can avoid a long wait in A&E
Other CCG priorities
• Helping patients look after
themselves - e.g. Kingston exercise
programmes have decreased
hypertension levels
• Outpatients – ensuring patients are
referred to the right place for the
treatment they need
• Contributing to the Better Services
Better Value review. Public
consultation begins soon.
Mental health improvements
SW London engagement events were held to capture views
Initial findings:
• Agreement that changes are needed
• Greater need for joint working between organisations
• Proactive involvement of a wide range of voices
• Clearer communications
• More consistency of care
• Quicker access/referral times
What we’re already doing:
• Tendering for new substance misuse and psychological
therapies services
• Working across SW London to act on patient feedback
Involving patients
• We’re talking to patient reference groups,
voluntary organisations and other
stakeholders to make sure people can
influence decision making ‘upstream’
• Engagement to be carried out before
relevant board reports are submitted
• This will involve proactive engagement
using a range of routes
• We’re proposing a regular patient forum
and email network
• Views reported to Integrated
Governance Committee
Questions
This is a work in progress – we
need your ideas!
Contact us
e:[email protected]
t: 020 8547 5557
www.kingstonccg.nhs.uk
Health and Wellbeing Strategy
Dr Jonathan Hildebrand, Joint Director of Public Health
Why have a health and
wellbeing strategy ?
• As part of changes to the NHS, Health
and Wellbeing Boards are being set up
• Kingston’s H&WBB has been meeting
for two years
• Members include representatives of the
voluntary sector, Healthwatch, the
CCG, councillors and officers
• Chaired by the Leader of the Council
• The H&WBB has a responsibility to
produce a Health and Wellbeing
Strategy
Why have a health and
wellbeing strategy?
• Strategy is based on the Joint Strategic
Needs Assessment of the assets and
needs of local people
• Focuses on a small number of key
areas where partnership working could
make a major difference
• Lays out outcomes for agencies to work
to achieve
• Does not replace other agreed
strategies
• Once agreed, progress will be
reviewed regularly by the Board
What’s in the strategy
• Initial thinking from a board seminar
• Draft discussed at H&WBB, Kingston CCG,
now on CCG and council websites
• Overview of Kingston and overall
principles
• Four main themes:
1. Mental health
2. Older people/long term conditions
3. Socially excluded disadvantaged
groups
4. Children and young people
Mental health
• High spend but outcomes do not reflect this
Desired outcomes include:
- Improved physical and mental health for
people with MH problems
- Co-ordination and support for people with
MH problems in the community
- Integration between specialist/primary care
- Simple referral and care pathways for
alcohol/drugs
- Modernised care for older people
Older people and people
with long-term conditions
• Older people and people with long -term
conditions are major users of services
Desired outcomes include:
- Improved information and advice
- Empowerment of people with long term
conditions
- Addressing risk factors for long-term
conditions
- Improved local activities/support
- Greater availability of rehabilitation
Addressing the needs of socially
excluded and disadvantaged groups
• There are wide variations in health
within Kingston
Desired outcomes include:
- Reduce the gap in life expectancy for
disadvantaged communities whilst
improving outcomes for all
- Engage and empower disadvantaged
communities so that their lifestyle
becomes more focused on health
- Strengthen the involvement of
disadvantaged groups in service
redesign to avoid exclusion
Children and young people
• Child health influences health in adulthood
so action has long term benefits
Desired outcomes include:
- Good quality antenatal care/ screening
- Achieve immunisation targets
- Reduce childhood obesity
- Increased provision for children with
complex needs
- Early identification and intervention
with high risk behaviours
For discussion
• Are there any key priorities for joint
action that we have missed?
• Of the four priorities identified, is
there an order of importance?
• Within the priorities are there
outcomes we need to add?
• Do you have any other comments
about the strategy?
• How can we maintain your involvement
in the strategy in the future?
Kingston at Home
Julia Gosden, Project Lead
Pre-proposal
ideas testing
How we currently work
Planning & buying
Planning &
healthcare
delivering
social
care
Delivering
services
Delivering
services
Kingston at Home – future
Planning & buying
health & social care
Delivering
services
Delivering
services
Delivering
services
Today’s focus
Home & community care improvements
- discuss ideas, so we can include your
views as we develop proposals.
Emphasis on increasing the amount of
treatment, care & support that is
provided at home.
Why we need to change
People live longer (Kingston over 65s – top
25% in England; 14% increase 2009-18)
54% of spend on older people = residential
care (Kingston - high referrals)
Over 75s form 34% of emergency admissions
but their stay is longer - 56% of bed days
Financial challenges - no change not
an option
Evidence
• We know people want more coordinated
care that gives them control over their own
health and helps them to live independently
• Evidence from other areas demonstrates
that that this approach works – is better for
patients and more cost effective
Kingston at Home – What?
• More treatment at home
• More community support & activities
• Especially after an illness, accident or
other incident to help people:
 Get better
 Stay well
 Remain independent
Kingston at Home – How?
• Focus on rehabilitation & reablement
= better value & better for patients
• Transfer funding & resources
• Join-up health, social & voluntary
care services
• Prevention of high-dependency
What this really means
INCREASED
DECREASED
INDEPENDENCE
RESIDENTIAL
placements &
unnecessary
hospital
admission
via more home
& communitybased services
& support
Some examples
• Single point of access with quick
referral response
• Teams that are integrated across
council and NHS
• Multidisciplinary assessment/case
management
• Greater use of technology e.g.
sensors and alarms
Some examples
(continued)
• Reduced discharge from
hospital to residential care
• Increased home based
rehabilitation
• Community beds for short term
support
• Social care personal budgets
for service users
Kingston at Home – Future
• More people-focused – asking,
listening, informing others
• Whole-person approach – all
health, physical fitness, safety,
emotional wellbeing & daily needs
• Reduce hospital visits, length of
stay, re-admissions & referrals
into long-term care
How can we best support people to
stay living at home?
Questions
• What do you think of our ‘joined-up’
vision to help support people at home
rather than residential care or hospital?
• What are the positives/negatives?
• What types of care and support would
your ideal home service include?
• What factors should we bear in
mind when developing proposals?
Feedback on this forum
Your feedback on this
forum
• What could be improved?
• What did you think of the format/venue?
• Do you support quarterly meetings?
• If you would like us to meet with your patient
group or organisation let us know
Please note you can complete feedback forms
that have been left on each chair, including any
further questions, and we will respond to you.