Transcript Document

Mental health and social care
commissioning
Andrea Wright, Head of Social Care
Maureen Begley, Commissioning
Manager
How commissioning operates in
mental health
• Head of service and commissioning manager lead on
strategic commissioning
• NCC funds NSFT (S75 agreement) to provide a social work
service for working age adults with mental health needs.
NSFT staff lead on micro commissioning for individuals and
have day to day responsibility for the management of the
care budget
• NCC retains overall responsibility for the purchase of care
budget (POC) and the management of services under block
contracts/ Service Level Agreements
• Under the interim S75 agreement for 2013/14 we are
looking at NSFT taking over more responsibility for budget
management
How the NCC cash is spent
£9.6m Purchase of care (gross)
• £6.42m in care homes
• £477k supported living
• £1.2m domiciliary care etc
• £1.5m day care etc
Currently forecasting an overspend of £2.15m
£ 4.8m Service agreements (gross with NHS and SP £):
• £430k Information advice and advocacy
• £1.9m Short term/specialist care home places
• £1.85m Supported living and floating support
Purchase of care 2013/14
Mental health purchase of care trends
- service users and spend
Admissions to care homes continue to
rise
Norfolk unit costs for care homes
compared
What is affecting commissioning
• Increasing demand
• National drivers
• Local drivers including commissioning changes
across health and social care
Increases /changes in demand
• General population growth
• More young people with complex needs
• Increasing needs of people already
receiving service as they get older
• Increasing customer expectation e.g. to
live in the community
• Section 117 and Ordinary Residence
issues
National and local drivers
• Discussions on revisions to national social care
eligibility criteria
• Impact of Francis Inquiry into Mid Staffs hospital –
expectation of culture change underpinned by CQC
• http://www.vodg.org.uk/members/vodg-publications.html
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Recovery as a focus
Personalisation
Peer support and experts by experience
National and local Strategic objectives/ performance
indicators: To increase the use of Personal Budgets,
Carers assessments, numbers of mental health clients
in stable accommodation and in employment
What we have been doing in
commissioning
• De-commissioning preventive services and moving services
off block contracts e.g. QUEST day opportunities
• Re-commissioning in key areas – Information, Advice and
Advocacy; Carers; Self directed support (support planning,
employment support); IMCA/IMHA; community mental
health support services
• Re-negotiating block contracts under the open book
process
• Improving the management of placements in residential
care and supported living through the panel process
• AMHPs can now commission 7 day respite placements
Improved Advocacy
• Advocacy funding supported by contracts with
clear outcomes
• Re-commissioned the mental health advocacy
service to have a greater emphasis on self service
and welfare rights
• Re-commissioning the IMCA/ IMHA service with
higher targets
• Re-negotiated the Appropriate Adult service
contract – looking at increased demand for
service to all 17 year olds and out of hours
service
Norfolk wide
commissioning initiatives at present
• Market position statement 2011 being updated –
providers will be asked to feedback this autumn
• Work on cost of care between NCC and NIC. Desk
top exercise to update information which will also
draw on the findings of national benchmarking
• Continuing health care. Joint work (NHS/NCC) to
develop new specification and bandings working
with NIC to involve providers
• New contract for community services e.g. day
care, which are not CQC registered co-produced
with providers
More Choice
• Norfolk working to the themes in ‘Think Local
Act Personal’
• All who want a personal budget will have one
– progress has been slower in mental health
but is a key performance indicator
• Market will increasingly respond to provide
services that meet individual needs
• Range of services are becoming available to
meet changes in service demand
Supported Living/Residential Care
• All residents in residential care have been reviewed
• NSFT looking at dedicated teams to work with care
homes/residents
• Continue to maximise use of short term supported
living /care homes that focus on rehabilitation
• Planning with Housing Providers and Social Landlords
and families.
• Planning with Residential Providers – diversification
• Looking at innovation – what will support moves out of
care homes/ maintain people in the community
Market Management
• Capture and encourage innovation in response
to personal budgets and supporting people in
the community
• Will be looking at progression and outcomes
evidence
• Use of Assistive Technology
Next Steps
• To work with providers around the shift from care homes and to increase
the Supported Housing options available. In particular to revise supported
living standards and create a clear accreditation scheme for providers
around supported living.
• This work will be undertaken with the DAAT which is working on
implementing the recommendations of the recent review of Tier 4
services around residential care and supported housing for people with
dual diagnosis, and meeting the needs of people coming out of detox
closer to home
• Further develop community services to prevent hospital admissions and
care home placements, this will include development of personal
assistant/ domiciliary care services which can meet the needs of people
with mental health needs
• To tender supported living schemes provided by the third sector in central
Norfolk in 2014