Transcript Slide 1

How people and
organisations
influence our
work
Cathy Turland
Healthwatch
Health and Social Care Act 2012
The ‘Consumer Voice’ for HSC
Healthwatch must:
a) Gather the views and experiences of people
b) Make people’s views known to statutory sector
(Local Authority, Hospitals, Social Care etc)
c) Promote and support the involvement of people
in the commissioning (buying in), provision and
monitoring of local services
Healthwatch
d) Recommend investigation or special review of
services via Healthwatch England or directly to
the Care Quality Commission (CQC)
e) Provide information about, and sign-post to,
services, what used to be Patient Advice and
Liaison Services (PALS)
f) Making the views and experiences of people
known to Healthwatch England to help it carry
out its role as national champion
RedbridgeLINk
• Large membership (1,700 individuals &
198 Organisations)
• Diverse and actively involved communities
• RedbridgeLINk to evolve into Healthwatch
Redbridge
• Specific projects to engage with hard to
reach older and disabled people
Consultation in
Redbridge
• Ageing Well in Redbridge
• Two recent consultations to
involve people with
sensory impairments
Project – Dec to May 2012
Ageing Well in Redbridge
• Part of the National Ageing Well Project
• Partnership between RedbridgeLINk and Redbridge’s
Shadow Health and Wellbeing Board
• Older people living in sheltered accommodation identified
as a community with whom organisations have had little
contact
• Consultation has never been a strong feature of
sheltered support and “…the voices of older people with
high support needs are so quiet as to be practically
silent or indistinguishable from the other people who
speak on their behalf”
Joseph Rowntree Foundation 2010
Why Sheltered Housing?
• Older people living in sheltered housing are
the next generation of intensive users of
health and social care services
• Few people living in sheltered accommodation
were members of RedbridgeLINk (or other
voluntary sector organisations)
• We considered them to be one of the most
under-represented and hard to reach groups
in Redbridge
Ageing Well Project
36 schemes
Stakeholder event
3 pilot schemes
Health and wellbeing survey
10 further schemes added (third of
schemes visited in total)
• Responses contributed to the initial
Joint Strategic Needs Assessment
(JSNA) and used in the emerging
Health and Wellbeing Strategy
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Some key findings
1) Local Health Care
GP appointments, hospital care, discharging patients
2) Eating well
Barriers included costs, access, eating alone
3) Equality
Language barriers
4) Engagement
97 year old told us this was the first time anyone
had spoken to her about her feelings in 10 years
5) Exercise
Strong interest in doing more
6) Getting out and about
Barriers: poor mobility, fear of safety, transport cost
and availability
7) Information
Issues about quality, relevance and accessibility.
Value of face-to-face contact
8) Safety and security
Concerns raised
9) Support services
Anxiety at prospect of future ill-health
10) Sheltered Housing
Able to enjoy high level of independence,
importance of staff
Feedback
“I liked the information and was happy
I had an interpreter”
“The event was therapeutic to me as
I could explain how I feel”
“The most useful thing about the event
was knowing about the services available”
“The session was very interesting and brought
specific concerns to the fore”
“This event has made me know
more about life here”
Future challenges:
 Keeping the initiative moving forward
 Funding availability and time constraints
 Training opportunities for volunteers
 Can we expand the essence of this project
to cover Residential Care and Nursing
Homes?
 Identifying routes for engagement and
feedback to HWB and other stakeholders
 Ensuring feedback is two way
Involving and reaching
underrepresented and hard
to reach people
Report - December 2012
Seeing it our way:
What people living in
Redbridge with a visual
impairment told us
Partnership Working
• Action for Blind People
• Redbridge Sensory Services
• Thomas Pocklington Trust
• LINk and the Community and Voluntary
Sector (Redbridge Pensioners Forum,
Age UK Redbridge)
Consultation
• The effects of sight loss
• Access to information and support
• What improvements would you like to
see?
• How to influence decision makers
Issues highlighted:
• The impact of sight loss led to
withdrawal from everyday life
• Barriers to independent living such as access
to information (letters in small print, refusal
to engage by phone, inaccessible premises)
• Poor access to employment support and
Access to Work funding
Positive Outcomes
• Redbridge Vision – a new
user led organisation
• Vision Strategy for Redbridge
Report - January 2013
But can you hear us?
What people living in
Redbridge with a hearing
impairment told us
Partnership
Working
• Action on Hearing Loss
• Redbridge Sensory Services
• Remark!
• LINk and the Community and Voluntary
Sector (Redbridge Pensioners Forum,
Age UK Redbridge)
Consultation
• The effects of hearing loss
• Access to information and support
• What improvements would you like
to see?
• How to influence decision makers
Issues highlighted:
• Hearing loss affects people in different
ways; services need to acknowledge this:
‘One size does not fit all’
• More access to technical support for
hearing aid users
• Professionals need support too
• Support should not be limited to specialist
services
Accessibility:
lessons learned
• People need to take responsibility for
their access requirements
• Hearing loops can be helpful but bring
their own issues
• Inclusion costs; budget appropriately
• Make reports available in various formats
Download, plain text, Large Print, Braille,
audio
Thank You
Any Questions?