Transcript Slide 1
Sally Cornfield
Public Health
2012
Launched Regionally in January 2012
The initial stages of the work programme included:
Gaining an understanding of the agendas, policies and challenges
effecting people with Learning Disabilities (LD)
Developing an understanding of the relationship between obesity and
LD
Understanding the challenges of maintaining a healthy weight for
people with LD
Developing knowledge of the programmes of work and effective practice
happening already to tackle obesity within this specific group.
At it’s heart is the “Valuing People Now” vision
(2009)
“All people have the right to leave their lives like any others, with the
same opportunities and responsibilities, with the right support to
make this possible and be treated with the same dignity and respect”
Promote and support prioritisation of the needs of
people with LD to inform effective commissioning
and delivery of specialist and community services to
aid weight management
Strengthen commissioning processes and advise on
the standards expected of providers when delivering
services
Aid the local prioritisation of services that maximise
opportunities for people with learning disabilities,
their carers and families to be supported to maintain
a healthy weight
The Charter provides a framework for developing
effective practice, meeting service user’s expectations
and a common set of values to aid commissioning.
Learning Disability
◦ Includes the presence of:
a significantly reduced ability to understand new or
complex information, to learn new skills (impaired
intelligence)
a reduced ability to cope independently (impaired
social functioning)
which started before adulthood, with lasting effect on
development
About one person in three with a LD is obese
compared to one in five of the general population
Less than 10% of adults with LD in supported
accommodation eat a balanced diet, with an
insufficient intake of fruit and vegetables
Carers generally have a poor knowledge about
public health recommendations on dietary intake
People with more severe LD and people living in
more restrictive environments are at increased risk
of inactivity
The rate of Type 2 Diabetes in people with LD
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Implementation of the Charter will:
Improve practice relating to the commissioning and delivery of weight
management and related services for people with learning disabilities, their
carers and families
Standardise the services offered to people with learning disabilities, their
carers and families regarding weight management
Advise on the standards that are expected when commissioning and
delivering services to people with learning disabilities to support them in
maintaining a healthy weight
Action Plan -Five Priority Areas:
Local Policy Development
Research
Training
Alignment of Joint Priorities
Profile
Charter Element
People with
Learning
Disabilities
Family and
Friend
Carers
Service
Deliverers –
Workforce
including paid
Carers
Full Charter Document
Target Audience
Service
Deliverers Management
Public Health, NHS,
Social Care
Commissioners &
Contract Managers
Public Health,
NHS, Social Care
Strategic
Management
x
x
x
Commissioning Checklist
x
x
x
Commissioning &
Contracting statements
(contained in the Full
Charter document)
x
x
x
Easy read Charter
Document – “What you
can expect from services”
Workforce guide to the
Charter
x
x
x
Training & Resources
To consider reviewing elements of social care resources
ensuring that they are updated and standardised to provide
quality support to these professionals.
To develop a list of (local) resources available to support
professionals working with people with LD to enable cross
fertilisation of training and support opportunities through
professionals being able to access resources that are currently
not easily found within their own professional domain.
To recognise the training and support requirements of staff
involved in data collection and ensure that these are met to
improve the robustness of data.
Consultation
To explore the support needs of people with LD and how they
would like to be provided with information or support in making
healthier lifestyle decisions. Ensure that this is embedded into
the West Midlands approaches to making reasonable
adjustments to services.
Networking
To consider developing a LD health network, that can provide
peer support, expertise, shadowing/ mentoring opportunities
and advice between professionals as and when it is needed. This
may include a ‘skills swap shop’ approach to generic training
and induction programmes.
Data – Primary Care
To improve local data to provide demographic information that
includes disability and distinguishes between physical disability, LD
and limiting chronic health conditions.
To maximise the opportunities that the LD Health Checks provide
for data collection and analysis to aid service planning.
GP practices to implement systems to monitor the number of
people with LD who are overweight/obese and those referred/
involved in practice and community based weight management/
physical activity/healthy eating services.
Data – CCG / Local Authority / Public Health
To identify opportunities to facilitate discussions on data collection
with Local LD Partnerships as part of the on-going commitment to
the “Valuing People Now” assessments
Data – Public Health / Local Authority
To develop systems to determine the number and type of
organisations providing physical activity, healthy eating and
weight management services for people with LD to enable gap
analysis to be undertaken.
Commissioners should include data collection for LD and Obesity
within service specifications and commissioning contracts
Commissioning
Consider rolling out the NHS West Midlands CQIN relating to the
coding and flagging of LD within provider trusts to incorporate
weight management related data linked to LD status
To consider developing a suite of resources for professionals to
help them apply their current topic expertise and experience i.e.
visual handouts suitable for people with LD, tips and pointers on
how to help people with LD, evidence summary of what works,
lesson plan, presentation pack, recipes and interactive activities.
To consider developing the resources suggested above in
collaboration with the information sources that professionals
most frequently use, including: Change4Life, British Heart
Foundation, NHS Choices and Mencap, as this is likely to increase
awareness and use of existing and new resource.
To consider developing training or resources that provide
professionals with generic information on LD, working with adults
and children with learning disabilities, and how to adapt main
stream services to maximise the engagement of adults and
children with LD.
To work together to establish a core criteria for the local delivery
of training relating to LD, healthy eating, physical activity and
weight maintenance.
To investigate the potential for LD read coding to be linked to
chronic conditions through QOF so that data extraction queries
can include cross referencing of patients with a LD who are
overweight/obese at consortia and practice level to aid service
planning and development.
Regional Support
To support the roll out of the Equality Metrics Framework in the
West Midlands localities with physical activity and obesity
included within the healthy living indicators.
To adopt data collection as a key strand within the peer review
process for “Valuing People Now” in the West Midlands
Valuing People Now and the Valuing People Now Summary report on
progress (2010)
The NHS White Paper, Equity and excellence: Liberating the NHS
(2010) Healthy Lives,
Healthy People: Our strategy for public health in England (2010)
Social Care White Paper 'A vision for adult social care: Capable
communities and active citizens’
Public Health White Paper; Healthy Lives, Healthy People (2010) and
the healthy Lives Healthy People update and way forward document
published in July 2011.
No Health Without Mental Health Strategy (2011)
The Quality, Innovation, Productivity and Prevention (QIPP) agenda
Forthcoming Green Paper on Special Educational Needs and
Disability
Healthy Lives, Healthy People: A call to action on obesity in England
The 2011 update for the UK Physical Activity Guidelines
Services launched in 2006 (Weight Watchers)
2012 – 8 services
LD clients accessing these services
?? Success
?? what, if any reasonable adjustments are
required
?? appropriate rate of weight loss
?? outcome measures other than weight
Slimmers Kitchen - NICE
Public Health & Health Access Service Timeline
of Partnership
Dec 2008
Learning Disabilities Training
Sept 2010 Closing the Gap Bid
Dec 2010
Launched ‘Learning Disability Slimmers Kitchen’ (LDSK)
Foundation Programme
Jan 2011
First 12wk LDSK programme
Apr 2011
Health Access Service Counterweight (CW) Training
Sept 2011 LDSK Evaluation
Jan 2012
SHA Learning Disability & Obesity Charter Launch
Feb 2012
First 15wk LDSK programme & 6wk Carers Training
Programme
Organisation/Partnerships (O/P) sign up to embed the charter
and its principles into practice at a leadership level
(O/P) inform partners, contractors
that they are signed up to the
Charter and will be embedding the
principles within commissioning/
delivery mechanisms
(O/P) inform staff that they are signed up to the
Charter and will be embedding the principles
within commissioning / delivery mechanisms.
Provide staff with the Charter annexe, which
documents what they can expect
(O/P) action plan how they will embed the
appropriate actions within their work
Commissioners within (O/P) to
embed the use of the
“Commissioners Checklist” into
commissioning systems to
support effective contracting
Commissioners to use
commissioning statements for
specific services within
commissioning specifications
and contracting
Deliverers of services should use the
commissioning statements to develop their
services to meet commissioners and service
user’s needs. This could be as part of
developing service tenders or service
improvement plans
(O/P) should monitor the implementation
of the Charter actions / checklists/
commissioning statements / service
improvement statements and identify the
outcomes for service users