310 likes | 422 Views
Fylde and Wyre 2030 Vision for Health and Care: Engagement Outcomes and Next Steps. Governing Body Meeting 25 March 2014. Objectives. www.fyldeandwyreccg.nhs.uk. To give stakeholders an opportunity to influence our long-term vision To ensure our priorities are congruent with our partners
E N D
Fylde and Wyre2030 Vision for Health and Care:Engagement Outcomes and Next Steps Governing Body Meeting 25 March 2014
Objectives www.fyldeandwyreccg.nhs.uk • To give stakeholders an opportunity to influence our long-term vision • To ensure our priorities are congruent with our partners • To support the development of the CCG’s communications and engagement strategy and OD plan • To develop the CCG’s ‘public pledges’ • To further develop the Affiliate Scheme • To ensure the CCG is meeting its statutory engagement duties
Engagement approach… e.g. www.fyldeandwyreccg.nhs.uk • Face to face engagement with Fylde, Wyre and Lancashire County councils – OSCs and officers • Presentations to Fylde and Wyre Health and Wellbeing Partnership, PPE Group,GP practice managers, staff and Council of Members • Provider workshop – 27 attendees; GP practice event – 97 attendees • Engagement with schools – 110 children (Kirkham) • Community engagement – listening cafes, focus groups – 320 people • Enquiry line responses – 36 responses • Qualitative engagement and feedback from approximately 1,800 people • Quantitative feedback (MORI) – 1,004 people
Web and social media www.fyldeandwyreccg.nhs.uk • Twitter promotion • Tweets to ‘amplify’ the PR and other messages • 30 Tweets • 3 mentions • 24 retweets • 6 favourited items • Website promotion • Online form for responses • Document to download: • 150 views on the page • 129 unique views – specific ‘traffic’ to the page • Time spent on the page: 1 minute, 37 seconds
Findings www.fyldeandwyreccg.nhs.uk General themes Priority-specific themes Feedback regarding the pledges Ipsos MORI You said, we did Next steps
General themes www.fyldeandwyreccg.nhs.uk • Broad support for the strategy/vision • Services need to be coordinated and integrated • Needs to be more recognition and support for self care and to promote personal responsibility • Information about services and conditions needs to be readily available • Need to recognise that each locality/community is different with different needs • The strategy is strong on the “what” but not on the “how” • Prevention needs to be given greater prominence • Many partners are relied upon but not referenced • CCG will need to demonstrate that people can influence health decisions
General themes - 2 www.fyldeandwyreccg.nhs.uk • Some respondents feel slightly cynical about future promises based on their experiences of the Fylde coast consultation • There is a fear of privatisation and sense that the strategy will open the door to this • Transport provision needs to be a key consideration in all developments • Waiting times need to be improved • Assurance that older/vulnerable people in hospital will be well cared for
Priority service areas www.fyldeandwyreccg.nhs.uk Cancer Children and maternity End of life Learning disabilities Long-term conditions Mental health and dementia Planned care Urgent care
Cancer – key themes www.fyldeandwyreccg.nhs.uk • Agreement that this should be a priority • Concern around a perceived lack of or limited local/community based cancer treatment and care • Query around quality of services and whether they are meeting needs • Post-cancer care is poor • Prevention and early diagnosis need more prominence • Services need to be more joined-up • Need to reflect the role of all professionals (e.g. pharmacies in medicines reviews)
Children & maternity – key themes www.fyldeandwyreccg.nhs.uk • Agreement that this is a priority • Recognition that stopping smoking in pregnancy and improving breast feeding rates are important priorities • Mental health and wellbeing is a key concern for children – and needs to be referenced • Variable experiences around discharge of new mums from hospital • Transition from childhood to adulthood a critical period – services need to be joined-up to support this • Childhood obesity is an issue – not referenced • Self-harming behaviour in children a growing problem – not referenced
End of life care – key themes www.fyldeandwyreccg.nhs.uk • Agreement that this is an important priority • Children’s end of life (EoL)/palliative care services not referenced and are often forgotten • There needs to be more choice for EoL and this needs to be explicitly communicated • Lancashire County Council provides bereavement and related support services – this needs to be referenced/promoted • EoL needs to be discussed wider – schools in particular • Counselling is important • Professional awareness and training in , e.g. GPs, care homes • More information/directory of EoL support should be available • Hospices play a key role and not referenced
Learning disabilities – key themes www.fyldeandwyreccg.nhs.uk • Recognition that this is an important group • Support for people with learning disabilities across all services is variable, lacking knowledge regarding needs • Concern around the transition between childhood services and adult services as needs change and vary considerably • How do we know that services are appropriate and meeting needs?
Long-term conditions – key themes www.fyldeandwyreccg.nhs.uk • Agreement that this is a key priority (“most important issue”) • Need for one-stop shop resource of help/information about conditions and services • Need for better communication between GPs and specialists • Need swifter access to GPs if with a long-term condition • Disease specific themes : • Diabetes/stroke – should be priorities of their own considering scale of problem • Carers – need to have more prominence in the strategy/plan • More information and commissioning of long-term condition-orientated screening services • Epilepsy – NICE comprehensive care plan recommendation – implemented?
Mental health & dementia – key themes www.fyldeandwyreccg.nhs.uk • Agreement that this is an important priority • Services are perceived as poor and inconsistent; out of hours mental health services are variable • Services need to be better integrated • There is a lack of respite care facilities • Counselling services – need more and better access • Psychological support – insufficient psychology services/psychologists • More explanation of services/information about mental health and dementia required • Consider technological solutions for supported living • Support for dementia sufferers and carers is perceived as poor • Will the Harbour be adequate given growing dementia population?
Planned care – key themes www.fyldeandwyreccg.nhs.uk • Agreement that this is a priority – strong support for care in community settings • GP services considered excellent – but can GPs deliver given their pressures? • Sense that some services have been lost due to larger changes to services – or may be in the future • Coordination of services is vital • We need to evaluate services in the community • Will shifting services to the community de-stabilise the hospital(s)? • Ensure a full range of after-care and support in community when discharged from hospital • Services will need to be integrated, avoid duplication and ensure no overlaps • Waiting times for rehab-type services are too long • Progress needed on the rehab beds in Fleetwood
Urgent care – key themes www.fyldeandwyreccg.nhs.uk • Agreement that this is a priority • Perceived as the most important part of the NHS • GP accessibility is variable and is a rationale for using urgent care/A&E • Recognition that the A&E deferral scheme has been successful and needs to continue • Need more information about “what service to use, when and where” • A&E Blackpool – concerns about waiting times, perceived poor service • Feedback that NHS 111 “isn’t working as well as NHS Direct”
Pledges www.fyldeandwyreccg.nhs.uk • Broad support for the pledges (“laudable”) • Need pledges to be commitments rather than aspirations, i.e. avoid “should” and say “will” • Integration of services should be an additional pledge • Pledges should be supported by targets • Updated pledges now part of the document
Telephone survey www.fyldeandwyreccg.nhs.uk • 1,004 telephone interviews between 3 and 17 Feb 2014 • To inform long-term vision and five-year plan • To inform communications and engagement strategy • To set a benchmark to evaluate implementation of strategies • Benchmark results from other studiesto give context
Reputation of the NHS www.fyldeandwyreccg.nhs.uk • 85% – local NHS provides a good service (cf. 77% in Public Perceptions of the NHS) • 78% – national NHS provides a good service (cf. 66% in Social Care Tracker) • Perception of quality directly related to how informed a person is • Good service: ‘No problems’ (35%); Good quality of care (25%); Efficient (20%); Good GP (19%); Good GP access (11%) • Poor service: Poor hospital care (29%); Poor GP access (21%); Wait too long for GP apt (21%); Poor GP service (16%) • 60% have heard of the CCG. BUT only 6% know ‘a great deal’; 17% ‘a fair amount’; 23% ‘just a little’ • 78% heard of health challenges; 42% ‘a fair amount’; 22% have not • Awareness higher from 55-74 year olds and higher social grades
Experiences of coordinated care www.fyldeandwyreccg.nhs.uk 21% have a long-term condition (LTC); 15% are unpaid carers 75% with LTC know who to contact about their care; 42% have a specific health professional 54% have a regularly reviewed care plan; 33% do not 43% have to repeat medical history when they see a health professional; 47% do not
Providing community-based care www.fyldeandwyreccg.nhs.uk • 83% support practices working together to address NHS challenges – 54% ‘strongly support’ • Support higher where people are more satisfied with NHS services (85% cf. 70%), and where people are younger • High support to move end of life care and rehab to community; more caution for tests. Mirrors national research re moving ‘clinical’ services • High support to move post-hospital care, particularly among parents • Strong agreement to give people tools and freedom to manage their condition, and use of new technologies to do this (86%) • 86% agree practices should coordinate care; 74% support idea of practices providing different services based on needs
Communication & engagement www.fyldeandwyreccg.nhs.uk • People with LTC are less satisfied with information provision • 63% likely to speak to a health professional (most trusted = GP; 57% would make an appointment); 45% internet. Very few look at local sources of information, e.g. the media • Older residents more likely to want to talk to a health professional; younger residents more likely to use the internet • High support for using technology for transactional healthcare (e.g. repeat prescriptions), with most support from 16-34 age group • Less support to use technology for more ‘clinical’ services – getting tests online (62%); online consultation (48%) • Over 75s: 28% wouldn’t find any technological applications useful • People with LTC also not as supportive
Choice www.fyldeandwyreccg.nhs.uk • Choice of GP surgery – 92% say it’s important; choice of hospital 88% • People with LTC more likely to want choice of hospital consultant compared to those who don’t (75% cf. 67%) • People generally confident to choose a GP surgery and hospital • 81% think choice of treatment is important, but only 67% feel confident making a choice – need to support patients understand options and pros/cons • People likely to speak to GP re choice (52%), then non-NHS websites (20%); friends/family (19%); NHS websites (13% NHS choices; 11% other; 6% local hospital) • Older people – speak to GP; younger people – websites
Patient access www.fyldeandwyreccg.nhs.uk • Adults with high temp/sore throat out-of-hours – 30% NHS 111; 19% walk-in centre; 7% A&E • Why? Quick advice (20%); don’t know options (18%); repeat what done before (13%) • Child with high temp/sore throat out-of-hours – 34% walk-in centre; 30% A&E; 29% NHS 111 • Why? Quick advice (23%); don’t know options (16%); staff experienced (10%) • Parents more likely to know about options available out-of-hours
You said, we did… www.fyldeandwyreccg.nhs.uk
You said, we did… www.fyldeandwyreccg.nhs.uk
You said, we did… www.fyldeandwyreccg.nhs.uk
You said, we did… www.fyldeandwyreccg.nhs.uk
You said, we did… www.fyldeandwyreccg.nhs.uk
Next steps www.fyldeandwyreccg.nhs.uk • Publish the revised document. • Communicate outcome to those who responded / attended events, and via mass media channels. • Develop action plans based on research findings, e.g. in commissioning plans and revised communications strategy. • Further develop mechanisms to scale-up and systematise engagement to inform CCG decision making, as well as systematising the feedback loop (‘You said we did’). • Involve people as we develop detailed plans.