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Learn about the NHS Long Term Plan, the GM Prospectus, and other strategies in Greater Manchester that aim to improve population health and integrate public services. Discover the importance of personalized care, community involvement, and sustainable financing for health and care integration.
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What’s happening in Greater Manchester and why does it matter to you? (a very short guide!)
NHS Long Term Plan • The NHS Long Term Plan (published 7th January 2019) lays out the path for the NHS over the next decade; • Many of the initiatives in the Plan mirror those underway here – including on population health, integration and digitally-enabled care; • Whilst increases in NHS funding are welcome, it is vital that sustainable financial settlements are agreed for both Social Care and Public Health. Health and Care integration is undermined without this long-term financing; • Although lots on personalised care – there could be more on the role of community groups and organisations – and how they can support people in a non-medical model; • Some mentions of the VCSE in the document – but could have gone further • GM Prospectus gives us opportunity to go beyond the LT Plan in GM.
The GM Prospectus • We want to go beyond other integrated care systems to create a comprehensive population health system based on the capabilities and hopes of our residents; • We want to offer a compelling picture of how the intentions of the NHS Long Term Plan are already being delivered, and can be built upon, in the context of Greater Manchester as a place with a vision which connects the whole of public service, the VCSE, the business sector, academia and civic leadership; • The Prospectus explicitly states: The VCSE sector should be part of the fabric of public services and public services should be delivered with local citizens, businesses and communities. This also means a radical change in the way we commission and partner with communities and the VCSE sector, we work as one across public services and we work as one with communities; • The infrastructure we have in place also provides us with the opportunity to enact a public-service wide response to the ambitions in the Plan. For example, on poor air quality.
Wider National and GM Strategies • National influence: the new NHS long-term plan; the Social Care Green paper; the Government Spending Review in 2019. • The GM Independent Prosperity Review. Guided by an independent panel of economic experts this review is updating GM’s evidence base and is expected to provide the analytical underpinnings for discussions with Government generally and the local industrial strategy specifically over the coming years. • The GM Local Industrial Strategy. This will be a jointly agreed strategy with Government, setting out how GM will maximise its contribution to UK productivity and earnings growth. It is due to be agreed by the end of March 2019. • The Transport Delivery Plan 2020-2025. This sets out our plans for the next five years to deliver the Transport 2040 future vision for “world class connections that support long-term sustainable economic growth and access to opportunities for all” • The White Paper on the GM Public Services Model. This will set out how we will deliver the 6 features of the GM public service model and is expected to be published in Spring 2019.
GM Population Health Plan – Programme Overview £0.5m £1.6m £1.8m £2.1m £0.6m £5.3m £2.4m £1.3m £0.2m £2m £2m £4.5m £2.1m
Person & Community-Centred Approaches (PCCA)
Person and Community-CentredApproaches in Greater Manchester
Sources include: New Care Model sites, NHS England; SCIE NICE; National Voices; TLAP as host to around 50 organisations inc ADASS; Nesta, New Economics Foundation, RSA; Public Health England; The Health Foundation, Kings Fund; All Party Parliamentary Group on ‘Creative Health’; Royal College of General Practitioners; Altogether Better; Academic Institutions including Newcastle University, Sheffield Hallam University, Swansea University, University of Westminster
The building blocks of transformation • Local care organisations coordinate delivery of integrated care in each borough • Boroughs are made up of smaller neighbourhoods - GP practices working with other health and care professionals • Standardisation across hospital sites and more care in the community, closer to home • A single local commissioning function in each borough plus a GM Commissioning Hub • Core characteristics include a focus on the VCSE sector
Example of Neighbourhood Models as part of LCOs Integrated Commissioning: Pooled Health & Social Care Budget Neighbourhoods 30,000-50,000 population within LCO GP Practices
LCO themes • LCO Development Framework agreed by partners in the system • Four Core Themes: • Enable conditions to be managed at home and in the community; • Secure the full range of public service partners to providing early help and prevention • Support individuals and communities to take more control over their own health • Take full responsibility for the management of the health and wellbeing of a defined population.
Public Service Reform (or reform of support and services for the public?)
The 6 Key Features of the Operating Model for all Public Service, Health and Care Organisations in Greater Manchester 1 2 3 • Integrated leadership and governance structures across the system. • Joint decisions making. • Leading for the people and place as opposed to organisation. • All services share the same service delivery footprints. • Resources and Staff are aligned. • One workforce functioning together, unrestricted by role titles or organisational boundaries. • Staff given ‘permission to change the system’ through culture, policy change and supporting structures 4 5 6 • Having a single transformation programme across all disciplines • Bringing multiple delivery models together into a single function • Sharing our financial resource across the system and commissioning to align front-line resources. • Working towards a place-based budget. • Mechanism to remove national policy barriers to integrated working through future devolution. • A single conversation with Government
From Principles to Practice • Our principles have provided the foundation of the Greater Manchester model. • A new relationship between public services and citizens, communities and businesses that enables shared decision making, democratic accountability and voice, genuine co-production and joint delivery of services. • An asset based approach that recognises and builds on the strengths of individuals, families and our communities rather than focussing on the deficits. • Behaviour change in our communities that builds independence and supports residents to be in control. • A place based approach that redefines services and places individuals, families, communities at the heart. • A stronger prioritisation of well-being, prevention and early intervention. • An evidence led understanding of risk and impact to ensure the right intervention at the right time. • An approach that supports the development of new investment and resourcing models, enabling collaboration with a wide range of organisations. • It is now time to move from principles to practice. #GMtogether
Our Role as Leaders • Develop a single unifying philosophy which is optimistic, simple and applies across the place to everyone. • Keep telling this story with illustrations every day to everyone with humility. • Create political and organisational support for a radical new model. • Build a strong, cohesive and high energy team. • Constantly listen harder to residents, to staff to community groups. • Build a demand management not a budget strategy. • Build trust with staff and community to allow them to innovate and for it to be ok to be courageous. • Switch the 80% to investment in people not processes. • Relationships make more difference than structures, projects and pilots. #GMtogether
Other topics • MoU and Accord signed with the VCSE • Representation • Engagement work e.g. Big Alcohol Conversation • Equalities • Workforce • Wider GM programmes e.g. GM Moving More information: ben.gilchrist@actiontogether.org.uk