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Developing NHS Salford Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG)

Developing NHS Salford Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG). Hamish Stedman, Chair. Background. 2002 PCT established Responsible for commissioning all health care Commission primary care dental, general medical and optometry services Provide community services

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Developing NHS Salford Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG)

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  1. Developing NHS Salford Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG) Hamish Stedman, Chair

  2. Background • 2002 PCT established Responsible for commissioning all health care Commission primary care dental, general medical and optometry services Provide community services • 2006 Practice based commissioning launches in Salford 2007PBC Consortium launched • 2010/11 Transforming Community Services • 2013 PCT dis-establishes

  3. NCB responsibilities 2013 Commissioning 2013 • Primary care services( CCGs have a statutory duty to assist and support the NCB for • continuous improvement in the quality of primary medical services. • Pharmaceutical services provided by community pharmacies, dispensing doctors and appliance contractors • All dental services and NHS sight tests • Highly specialised and specialised services ) and high security psychiatric Services • Health services for those detained in prison and other custodial settings • Some services for members of the armed forces and their families, where • registered with Defence Medical Services • Public health services for children aged 0-5, including health visiting and family nurse partnerships • Immunisation and screening programme • Public health services for those in prison or custody • Sexual assault referral services • Child Health Information Systems (CHIS).

  4. Local Authority Responsibilities • the Healthy Child Programme for school-age children (including school nurses) • sexual health services (excluding contraceptive services provided under the GP • contract and HIV treatment) • public mental health services • local programmes to promote physical activity, improve diet/nutrition and • prevent/address obesity • drug misuse and alcohol misuse services • tobacco control, including stop smoking services and prevention activity • NHS health checks • local initiatives to prevent accidental injury, including falls prevention local initiatives to reduce seasonal mortality.

  5. CCG Responsibilities • Emergency and urgent care • Ambulance services and out-of-hours services, for anyone present in their geographic area. • Community health services • Maternity services • Elective hospital care • Rehabilitation services • Urgent and emergency care including A&E, ambulance and out-of-hours services • Older people’s healthcare services • Healthcare services for children • Healthcare services for people with mental health conditions • Healthcare services for people with learning disabilities • Continuing healthcare • Abortion services • Infertility services • Wheelchair services • Home oxygen services • Treatment of infectious diseases

  6. Steps to development. • All Salford GPs signed up to CCG. • Shadow Board Developed. • Decision on model and functions. • Draft Constitution (including aims and principles). • Developing plans for communication, equality and diversity and future commissioning. • Authorisation process including Stakeholder evaluation (partners and the public). • Operational by April 2013.

  7. Authorisation • Six domains • Professional and clinical focus • Engagement with patients, carers and their communities • Clear and credible plans • Constitutional and governance arrangements • Collaborative arrangements for commissioning • Develop great individual and collective leadership

  8. Principles/Key Drivers • Preventing people from dying prematurely. • Enhancing quality of life for people with long-term conditions. • Helping people to recover from episodes of ill health or following injury. • Ensuring people have a positive experience of care. • Treating and caring for people in a safe environment and protecting them from avoidable harm.

  9. Principles/Key Drivers • To improve health and reduce health inequalities. • To improve the quality of services we offer our patients. • To improve equity of services available. • To improve the health and wellbeing outcomes achieved by our patients. • To embrace the principles of cost-effectiveness and improve value for money in order to ensure we deliver an overall balanced budget.

  10. Comments and Challenges • Commissioning is here to stay • Dispersed commissioning responsibilities Different budgets Different accountabilities Who holds the ring? • No decision about me without me Individual vs population Need vs want (Walk in Centres) • Public as advocates (Self and system?) • Healthier Together

  11. Commissioning Plans • JSNA • Business planning cycle Alignment • 5 year plan • Operating framework • Plan on a page

  12. Commissioning Plans • Engage all people as citizens (rather than just as consumers) across the whole health and social care system . . . and beyond. • Ensure involvement activity is accessible and responsive to all local citizens in their diversity (including those who are most often excluded or marginalized). • Achieve an optimal balance of control between citizens and organisations, with clear and transparent accountability. • Establish an integrated and coherent system that engages effectively with all community and organisational structures • Ensure effectiveness both in reflecting the voices of citizens and communities and in influencing policies, decisions and service provision that affect their lives

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