1 / 15

Integration of Care Co-ordination model within GIRFEC in the Scottish Borders

Integration of Care Co-ordination model within GIRFEC in the Scottish Borders. Dawn Moss Nurse Consultant Vulnerable Children & Young People. There’s so much to tell you…. A bit about the Borders The development of Care Co-ordination The need to change GIRFEC in the Borders Challenges

lucius
Download Presentation

Integration of Care Co-ordination model within GIRFEC in the Scottish Borders

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Integration of Care Co-ordination model within GIRFEC in the Scottish Borders Dawn Moss Nurse Consultant Vulnerable Children & Young People

  2. There’s so much to tell you… • A bit about the Borders • The development of Care Co-ordination • The need to change • GIRFEC in the Borders • Challenges • Transition of moving Care Co-ordination into the Integrated Assessment Framework

  3. Scottish Borders • Population children & young people: 25,441 (23%) • Borders with Lothian, Dumfries & Galloway & Northumberland • NHS Borders Children & Young People’s Health Network • Scottish Borders Council – Integrated Children’s Services (Social Work and Education) • Integrated Assessment Framework

  4. In the beginning… • Referral criteria: • Children with complex needs needing coordination of care and services • Team around the child • Independent chair • Focus on child’s progress • Child and parents views • Action Plan • Key worker role v key point of contact

  5. A few years along the road… • Achieving aim of reducing duplication by ensuring that care is delivered in a consistent and co-ordinated way, with effective interagency working and sharing of information • Increasing numbers of referrals • Breadth of referrals • Evidence of good practice and multi professional working • Extend chairing role to other professionals

  6. Pausing for thought… • Is Care Coordination meeting the needs of children, young people and their and families? • Are actions agreed within meetings followed through? • Audit 2009 (parental and professional questionnaire)

  7. What professionals told us • 57% response rate (53 returned from health, education, social work & voluntary sector) • 77% thought Care Co-ordination was useful • 81% said they had been able to carry out agreed actions • Only 12 of the 53 respondents gave a definite commitment to chairing future meetings • Only 15% were certain the Care Co-ordination would still be needed once IAF was fully implemented with 62% saying they didn’t know • 32% felt Care Co-ordination could be improved

  8. What parents told us • 53% response rate (21 returned) • 76% knew who their named key worker was • 29% said that all of the actions agreed at the meeting had been followed thought whilst 38% felt that ‘most’ of them had whilst 5% felt ‘none’ of them had “Get rid of it or make sure it does what it is supposed to do and co-ordinate!”

  9. Reach for the stars • GIRFEC • Integrated Assessment Framework • Introduced to one locality in 2008 • Full implementation in Feb 2010 • Support from across the organisation and from all partner agencies • Integrated Children’s Services

  10. GIRFEC in the Borders • Tools to support the IAF process launched in February 2010 across all services (e.g. documentation, guidance, training) • Report to Children’s Reporter’s • Programme of training and workshops • Quality audit • Locality and central procedures and processes are being rewritten to incorporate IAF structures - including the Child Protection Guidelines • Learning from the Highland Pathfinder and links to the GIRFEC Scottish Government team

  11. Achievements • Common integrated assessment used by all agencies • Shift to locality structures to enable better-informed, more localised, timely decision-making • Information Sharing Protocol agreed between all agencies working with children, young people and families • Agreed process for obtaining and renewing consent within IAF • IAF process includes requirement for recording views of children, young people and families • All professional groups are supported to take on the Lead Professional role where indicated

  12. What - no problems? • Documentation • IT- knowledge, skills, systems, etc, etc • Role of chairing meetings – issues of skills and confidence • Locality v central services • Children with complex health needs – where are they in this new world?

  13. Onwards… • Transition of moving Care Co-ordination into Integrated Assessment Framework • No new referrals to Care Coordination since June 2010 • Team around the Child • Meetings Around the Child • Child’s Plan – outcome focused • Supporting staff

  14. To infinity and beyond How is IAF different to Care Co-ordination? • Shared language • Consent and information sharing • Building confidence in taking decisions and removing barriers to timely decision-making • Focus on outcomes - SHANARRI • Core documentation for health visiting, CCN Team, CAMHS

  15. Good luck!

More Related