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Stakeholder panel overview
1. Integrating Care in Eastern Cheshire
Stakeholder Panel 5
Monday 20 July 2015
Sally Rogers, Chair
Caring Together Stakeholder Forum
2. Integrating Care in Eastern Cheshire
Aims of today’s event
• Keeping you informed
• Responding to your feedback from last event
• Showcasing achievements of integrated care
• Your chance to shape the future development
of integrated care
• And tell us if we’re realising the Caring
Together ambitions
3. Integrating Care in Eastern Cheshire
Agenda
• Introduction Sally Rogers, Chair, Caring Together Leadership Forum
• IV Diuretics in the Community Dr Julie Walker, Advanced Specialist Nurse Practitioner,
East Cheshire NHS Trust; Bollington resident Ken Gratton
• Working Together Louise Rycroft, Care Co-ordinator, Priorslegh Medical
Centre
• Dementia Reablement Service Tom Hewitt, Senior Contracts Officer, Cheshire East
Council
• Discussion Groups All
• Break
• Cheshire East Substance Misuse Service Joanne Rowe, Harm Reduction Lead Nurse, Cheshire and
Wirral Partnership NHS Foundation Trust; service user David
Penney
• Integrating a Falls Prevention Service Dianne Hutter, Trustlink Manager, Peaks & Plains Housing
Trust
• Launching Life Links Cheshire East Dominic Anderson, Deputy Chief Executive – Services and
Development, and Helen Davies, Life Links Project Leader,
Peaks & Plains Housing Trust
• Discussion Groups All
• Final Thoughts and Close Sally Rogers, Chair, Caring Together Leadership Forum
4. Integrating Care in Eastern Cheshire
Housekeeping
• Refreshments are served in the room
• Ask if you need anything
• Please keep your phones on silent
• No fire alarms are expected
8. Integrating Care in Eastern Cheshire
Sheila’s Story
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z21yJFVOIw8
9. Integrating Care in Eastern Cheshire
Progress so far
• Lots of planning completed
• Now entering implementation stage
• Lots of “small” changes already made
• Today’s event gives flavour
• Big changes to come
10. Integrating Care in Eastern Cheshire
Discussion groups
• What did you like about the new
approach to care?
• What next?
• Which ambitions are these services
achieving?
Editor's Notes
We’ve responded to feedback from Panel 4 in March by devoting today’s event to real-life examples of how joined-up care is improving people’s lives and making work more rewarding for health and social care professionals.
We’re grateful to our partners for preparing today’s presentations. The case studies will be interspersed by discussion sessions that will influence the way partners commission ansd provide joined-up care in the future.
We’re grateful to our partners for preparing today’s presentations. The case studies will be interspersed by discussion sessions that will influence the way partners commission and provide joined-up care in the future.
Caring Together will give people the support and information they need to take the best possible care of themselves and live independent, healthy lives. The joining up of care will ensure that health and social care providers work effectively together across organisational boundaries, managing care plans co-designed with the service user. Integrated care will focus primarily on people with long-term conditions, recognising that 20 per cent of people consume 70 per cent of health and social care resource. Joined-up care will reduce avoidale hospital admissions.
1. Governance structure and split between providers and commissioner;
2. Workstreams update, specifically mentioning progress made with community and ICT – Integrated Digital Care record
3. New Director for leading the work - Fleur’s arrival (who will be presenting the year ahead later on);
4. New public facing documents – specific focus on the vision and the integrated care system slides – are the two slides we have included as part of your presentation.
Copies of the document will be handed out on the day to delegates.
Caring Together will realise eight ambitions, each of which is underpinned by statements of what improved care will mean to the service user. The programme’s vision, values, ambitions and quality standards were all co-authored with the public.
This diagram shows how service providers will work together to give joined-up care that achieves the Caring Together ambitions and supports the empowered person.
Our four-minute video is based on a real story and shows how joined-up care is already helping people with long-term conditions to live independently at home. We’re grateful to the members of the public and clinicians who helped us make it.
Mention the work streams, governance structure, development of integrated care model, publication of public-facing documents, inclusion of Caring Together “shadow” measures in contracts awarded by commissioners for 2015/16.
Lots of important changes have already been made, not always as a direct consequence of the Caring Together programme but always in line with the Caring Together ethos. Examples include the development of integrated care teams working out of GP practices; the twinning of practices with local care homes; the care co-ordinators working across Bollington, Poynton and Disley; the falls service led by Peaks & Plains.
Big changes to come include STAIRRS, the Cheshire Integrated Digital Care Record, implementation of the risk stratification tool.