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The Changing Policy Context: Coming out of transition

The Changing Policy Context: Coming out of transition. Presented by David Hunter Professor of Health Policy and Management 12 th July 2013. A Little History. History tells us that local government played the greatest historical role in the sanitary revolution

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The Changing Policy Context: Coming out of transition

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  1. The Changing Policy Context: Coming out of transition Presented by David Hunter Professor of Health Policy and Management 12th July 2013

  2. A Little History History tells us that local government played the greatest historical role in the sanitary revolution during Britain’s rapid industrialisation • Improved housing • Cleared nuisances • Introduced gas lighting • Provided public bathing and washing facilities • Infectious disease control through MOH

  3. Public Health and the NHS: a difficult relationship While the NHS claimed from the outset to give high priority to the promotion of health…in reality this aspect of the service was never more than weakly developed, notwithstanding claims to the contrary, habitually made in ministerial speeches. Charles Webster (1996)

  4. Local Government: public health’s natural home Many people in local government believe it is their organisations, rather than health authorities, that are public health authorities. Tony Elson (1999)

  5. The Main Determinants of Health

  6. New Public Health System (1) A tale of two parts • Return of public health locally to local government • Creation of Public Health England at centre

  7. New Public Health System (2) Key drivers • ‘Centralisation has failed’ • Localism at heart of new system: principle of subsidiarity • Professional ownership and leadership • More nudge, less shove

  8. Making it Happen (1) • Transfer of DsPH to local government (April 2013) • Health and Wellbeing Boards • Health and wellbeing strategy, including JSNA • Ring-fenced budgets (first 2 years)

  9. Making it Happen (2) • ‘Health premium’ • Clinical Commissioning Groups • Creation of Public Health England • NHS England • Public health outcomes framework

  10. Public Health Outcomes Framework 4 domains • Improving wider determinants of health • Health improvement • Health protection • Health care public health and preventing premature mortality

  11. Progress with Health & Wellbeing Boards (1) • Face considerable challenge to do things differently and overcome tribalism • Clarity needed about what HWBs want to achieve: risk of distraction, focus on NHS acute hospitals reconfiguration issues • Central-local tension with HWBs caught in the middle • Risk of re-badging previous partnership arrangements

  12. Progress with Health & Wellbeing Boards (2) • Diversity to be expected – need to capture the learning • Risk of another layer adding to an already complex architecture and increasing transaction costs • Tough leadership challenge – do they come more complex or wicked?

  13. Strengthening the Evidence Base • NICE public health guidance being given a makeover to be more local government facing • Relationship between NICE and PHE • NIHR School for Public Health Research (SPHR)

  14. NICE’s Public Health ‘Offer’ • Evidence reviews, briefings, guidance, quality standards, other evidence based outputs • Accreditation of other public health guidance producers • Methodological leadership and support on optimal ways of reviewing and appraising evidence • QOF for public health

  15. NIHR SPHR (1) • ‘Soft’ launch 18 April 2012: www.nihr.ac.uk • School is made up of 8 academic institutions, including Fuse (www.fuse.ac.uk) • £20 million over 5 years

  16. NIHR SPHR (2) • Narrowing gap between users and suppliers of research • Increasing evidence base for effective public health practice: applied research • Undertaking applied translational research • Considering local public health needs and evaluating innovative local practices with the potential for wider benefit

  17. Known Unknowns • Changing nature of DPH role • Impact of ring-fenced public health budget • How effective HWBs will be • Nature of links to CCGs • Future of public health workforce in NHS • Sector led improvement • Relationship between LG and PHE

  18. More Known Unknowns • What is the nature of the ‘support’ to be provided by Public Health England? • A more evidence-informed culture in local government – role of NICE, PHE and others • Balance between tackling SDH and addressing the ‘nudge’ agenda: where does Marmot figure?

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