Belinda Wadsworth from Age UK presented: Policy Prorities of Older People. What is important to older people and how you can help to make this a reality in your local area.
Belinda Wadsworth - Leadership Academy PresentationNMJones
The document discusses priorities for older people and how local governments and organizations can work to address them. It identifies key priorities for older people based on research, including transport, care, health, income, and communities. It recommends that local actors find out older peoples' priorities, take an ambitious and strategic approach to delivering services with older people at the heart of planning, and look for new opportunities under reforms to better support independence, respect, and quality of life for older populations.
A partnership between local organizations in Cheshire East aims to support the nearly 5,000 people over age 65 living with dementia in the region through an online peer support site called DemenShare.com. DemenShare.com provides information, raises awareness, and facilitates social support networks to help address the growing challenge of dementia, which costs the UK economy £23 billion per year. Since launching in October 2010, the site has attracted over 400 registered users and thousands of visitors who spend an average of six minutes accessing resources.
The document discusses challenges faced by Black and Minority Ethnic (BME) services in supporting BME service users. It argues that the focus on cultural differences is incomplete and that discussions also need to include cultural "sameness". It questions whether the BME sector is still needed given changes in the NHS. The document provides suggestions for the BME sector, including clarifying service models, collecting evidence on health outcomes and economic impacts, and focusing on quality assurance. It emphasizes developing an understanding of how services achieve outcomes in order to improve support for those with cultural "sameness".
The document summarizes a workshop on health partnerships held at the THET Annual Conference in London on October 25, 2017. It discusses several principles of effective partnerships, including addressing country needs, transparency, ownership, communication, and flexibility. It also highlights the importance of monitoring, evaluation, and learning from partnerships. The document then provides an example of the Mbarara Epilepsy Project, a partnership between Uganda and the UK that trains local health workers and village teams to diagnose, treat, and educate people with epilepsy in their communities. It discusses challenges faced and lessons learned from this collaborative model.
The Ageing Well Programme aims to support local authorities in developing good places for older people to live as populations age. It provides intensive support to 6 councils per region, including peer reviews, leadership training, and help developing local solutions. The program involves older people to understand priorities and opportunities, promotes prevention and volunteering, and takes a whole-system, place-based approach to issues around care, housing, and community support.
The Ageing Well Programme aims to support local authorities in preparing for an aging society by developing places where older people can live well. It provides intensive support to 6 top-tier councils in each region, including peer reviews, leadership training, and help developing local solutions. The program involves older people to understand their needs and priorities, takes a whole-system approach, and promotes prevention, volunteering, and community engagement to support independent living for older adults.
Supporting local authorities to develop good places to grow olderlocalinsight
The Ageing Well Programme aims to support local authorities in developing good places for older people to live as populations age. It provides intensive support to 6 councils per region, including peer reviews, leadership training, and help developing local solutions. The program involves older people to understand priorities and opportunities, promotes prevention and volunteering, and takes a whole-system, place-based approach to issues around care, housing, and community support.
The role of DPULOs - presentation from CCIL CEO Lynne TurnbullRich Watts
Presentation given by Lynne Turnbull - CEO of Cheshire CIL and a Strengthening DPULOs Programme Ambassador - at a recent Capita conference on the role of DPULOs.
Belinda Wadsworth - Leadership Academy PresentationNMJones
The document discusses priorities for older people and how local governments and organizations can work to address them. It identifies key priorities for older people based on research, including transport, care, health, income, and communities. It recommends that local actors find out older peoples' priorities, take an ambitious and strategic approach to delivering services with older people at the heart of planning, and look for new opportunities under reforms to better support independence, respect, and quality of life for older populations.
A partnership between local organizations in Cheshire East aims to support the nearly 5,000 people over age 65 living with dementia in the region through an online peer support site called DemenShare.com. DemenShare.com provides information, raises awareness, and facilitates social support networks to help address the growing challenge of dementia, which costs the UK economy £23 billion per year. Since launching in October 2010, the site has attracted over 400 registered users and thousands of visitors who spend an average of six minutes accessing resources.
The document discusses challenges faced by Black and Minority Ethnic (BME) services in supporting BME service users. It argues that the focus on cultural differences is incomplete and that discussions also need to include cultural "sameness". It questions whether the BME sector is still needed given changes in the NHS. The document provides suggestions for the BME sector, including clarifying service models, collecting evidence on health outcomes and economic impacts, and focusing on quality assurance. It emphasizes developing an understanding of how services achieve outcomes in order to improve support for those with cultural "sameness".
The document summarizes a workshop on health partnerships held at the THET Annual Conference in London on October 25, 2017. It discusses several principles of effective partnerships, including addressing country needs, transparency, ownership, communication, and flexibility. It also highlights the importance of monitoring, evaluation, and learning from partnerships. The document then provides an example of the Mbarara Epilepsy Project, a partnership between Uganda and the UK that trains local health workers and village teams to diagnose, treat, and educate people with epilepsy in their communities. It discusses challenges faced and lessons learned from this collaborative model.
The Ageing Well Programme aims to support local authorities in developing good places for older people to live as populations age. It provides intensive support to 6 councils per region, including peer reviews, leadership training, and help developing local solutions. The program involves older people to understand priorities and opportunities, promotes prevention and volunteering, and takes a whole-system, place-based approach to issues around care, housing, and community support.
The Ageing Well Programme aims to support local authorities in preparing for an aging society by developing places where older people can live well. It provides intensive support to 6 top-tier councils in each region, including peer reviews, leadership training, and help developing local solutions. The program involves older people to understand their needs and priorities, takes a whole-system approach, and promotes prevention, volunteering, and community engagement to support independent living for older adults.
Supporting local authorities to develop good places to grow olderlocalinsight
The Ageing Well Programme aims to support local authorities in developing good places for older people to live as populations age. It provides intensive support to 6 councils per region, including peer reviews, leadership training, and help developing local solutions. The program involves older people to understand priorities and opportunities, promotes prevention and volunteering, and takes a whole-system, place-based approach to issues around care, housing, and community support.
The role of DPULOs - presentation from CCIL CEO Lynne TurnbullRich Watts
Presentation given by Lynne Turnbull - CEO of Cheshire CIL and a Strengthening DPULOs Programme Ambassador - at a recent Capita conference on the role of DPULOs.
Csear 2010 public sector sustainability and accountingstrathclyde
This document summarizes a presentation on public sector sustainability and accounting given at the University of Nottingham. It discusses how institutional contexts impact public sector organizations' ability to achieve sustainability goals. Key points discussed include how public sector organizations are politically and democratically controlled to provide public goods and services. The document also notes the challenges of sustaining services when delivered by for-profit sectors and the need to conceptualize public sector organizations from a sustainability perspective. It concludes that developing sustainable accounting practices for the public sector must reflect its unique context and mission, rather than being driven by private sector models.
Zimbabwe Independ Professional AdvocacyGEORGE MURENA
ZIPA-PHCP Advocacy Service aims to offer Zimbabwean people the opportunity to express their own needs and wishes and have these respected. By helping people to make informed choices we enable them to maintain as much control as possible over their own lives.
The document discusses the role of the voluntary, community and social enterprise (VCSE) sector in supporting health and wellbeing. It notes that the VCSE sector has expertise in reaching groups experiencing health inequalities. However, funding challenges from significant budget cuts and a shift to contract-based funding have impacted the sector. The document calls for greater recognition of the value provided by smaller VCSE organizations, investing in those promoting equality, and developing services through co-production between statutory and community organizations.
The document discusses challenges in providing sustainable water services at scale in developing countries. It notes that 30-40% of water systems fail, wasting financial investments. It analyzes reasons for failures like an infrastructure focus rather than service delivery, lack of long-term support, and poor coordination. The document calls for a new paradigm centered on a service delivery approach with principles-based interventions at various levels to achieve sustainable services at scale.
The document discusses challenges in providing sustainable water services at scale in developing countries. It notes that 30-40% of water systems fail, wasting financial investments. It analyzes reasons for failures, such as an infrastructure focus rather than a service delivery approach. The document advocates adopting principles for policy, financing, planning, and coordination across local, national and international levels to establish long-term sustainable water services.
Providing Sustainable Services at Scale (IRC & Aguaconsult)IRC
The document discusses challenges in providing sustainable water services at scale in developing countries. It notes that 30-40% of water systems fail, wasting financial investments. It analyzes reasons for failures like an infrastructure focus rather than service delivery, lack of sector capacity building and support, and poor coordination. The document advocates adopting a service delivery approach with principles like clear roles, planning, learning, appropriate technology, long-term support and oversight to achieve sustainable services at scale.
The presentation was a workshop at Evolve 2014: the annual event for the voluntary sector in London on Monday 16 June 2014.
The presentation was chaired by Shane Brennan, from Age Concern Kingston and looks at the changing context of public service commissioning.
Find out more about the Evolve Conference from NCVO: http://www.ncvo.org.uk/training-and-events/evolve-conference
Find out more about NCVO's work on volunteering: http://www.ncvo.org.uk/practical-support/volunteering
The document discusses key questions around the healthcare business model in the 21st century UK. It questions who the customers are for social enterprises and what constitutes an effective healthcare business model. It explores issues like personalization of care, fully engaging patients, and the challenge of relating needs to markets within a shared risk framework. The central problem addressed is how to develop sustainable business and service models that work with customers to meet their needs through innovative and authentic approaches.
Community-driven development (CDD) aims to improve the well-being and empowerment of poor communities by providing direct grants and facilitation for community decision making, implementation, and review of projects. CDD is one response to the problem of how to effectively reach large numbers of poor people where state institutions are weak. The document outlines Australia's support for CDD and presents a change model showing the inputs, intermediate results, and longer term outcomes expected from CDD programs. It also acknowledges risks and assumptions that influence whether CDD achieves its goals of poverty reduction, inclusion, and accountability.
This document provides information about an organization called ServiceReform that is working to improve public services through more integrated care. It summarizes that ServiceReform is working in 13 places across the UK, representing 22% of the population, to redesign person-centered care through multi-agency provider networks. The goal is to empower individuals through community support systems and enable independent living, with care coordinated through general practitioners.
The Day Job v Transformation: Creating change capacity (2015)Grant Fitzner
What is driving demand for local government services? How can local government create change capacity, and what skills and competencies will its workforce need to do so?
These are the questions Antony Page and I posed to a group of senior leaders in 2015 attending a Local Government Chronicle Summit. Their responses are in the annex.
Allied health professions as agents of change and reshaping care E33 (2#2)Sophie40
Falls among older people are a major public health issue in Scotland, costing the healthcare system an estimated £471 million per year. Falls can have serious physical, psychological, and social consequences for older individuals, including loss of independence and increased dependence on family or health services. Targeted interventions based on multifactorial risk assessments have been shown to help prevent falls. The National Falls Programme in Scotland aims to reduce falls and harm from falls by establishing integrated falls prevention and management pathways across all local health and social care partnerships by 2014.
Challenging social injustice in adults' social health and care serviceCANorfolk
Belinda Schwehr from the legal advice charity CASCAIDr shares her and CASCAIDr’s perspectives on key issues and developments in relation to adults’ health and social care services.
The Social Services and Wellbeing Bill heralds a quiet tide of innovationwalescva
The Social Services & Well-being (Wales) Bill aims to improve social care outcomes for people in Wales through major legislative changes. The bill introduces a prevention and early intervention focus, with duties on local authorities to provide services that enhance community well-being. It emphasizes person-centered assessment and eligibility criteria. The bill promotes co-production of services, citizen participation, and new models of community-led and integrated health and social care. It seeks to deflect people from acute services and invest in communities to support individuals' well-being.
This document discusses the importance of planning for long term care. It notes that as people live longer, the likelihood of needing long term care increases. Paying for long term care out of pocket can deplete retirement savings. The document defines long term care as assistance with daily living for those with chronic illness or cognitive impairment, which can be provided at home, adult day care, assisted living facilities or nursing homes. It emphasizes that planning ahead, through insurance or government programs, can help pay for long term care costs that are expected to rise significantly in the future. Options discussed include traditional long term care insurance and life and long term care combination plans.
This document raises concerns over proposed budget cuts to youth services in Ireland from 2008-2011. It asks for a review of all youth funding and highlights key areas of need. The document notes that while mainstream education is projected to increase by 24% over this period, funding for youth and community relations will only increase by 3.9%, leading to a real reduction of over 10%. It suggests areas for funding priorities to be reconsidered, and outlines important contributions of youth work to education, health, community relations, and family support.
Dr Mary Keys A Policy Approach to Embedding Rights in Mental Health Serviceslegislation
The document discusses Ireland's Vision for Change mental health policy and issues with its implementation. It describes the case of Dave, who was discharged from a psychiatric hospital to a nursing home instead of supported housing as outlined in the policy. It raises concerns about re-institutionalization and a lack of community mental health services. Legal action may be possible if rights or agreements are breached, but courts are reluctant to direct spending. Immediate changes are needed to properly oversee implementation at a local level and ensure the rights and needs of people with mental health issues are upheld.
Behaviorism is a learning theory that focuses on observable behaviors and how the acquisition of new behaviors is based on environmental conditions. Some key representatives include B.F. Skinner who developed operant conditioning, Ivan Pavlov who researched reflex systems, and John B. Watson who emphasized the role of environment over innate factors. Krashen developed theories of second language acquisition including the acquisition-learning distinction, the natural order hypothesis, the monitor hypothesis, the input hypothesis, and the affective filter hypothesis.
The document outlines a vision to improve outcomes for older people while reducing costs through more integrated health and social care services. It proposes that savings from reducing unnecessary secondary and long-term care (A) can be reinvested in alternative community services (B) and prevention (C) to create an overall reduction in expenditure (Y). Specific strategies mentioned include diverting people from acute care through expanded community services, long-term focus on health and well-being, and streamlining management to better support integrated working. Contact information is provided for further discussion.
Csear 2010 public sector sustainability and accountingstrathclyde
This document summarizes a presentation on public sector sustainability and accounting given at the University of Nottingham. It discusses how institutional contexts impact public sector organizations' ability to achieve sustainability goals. Key points discussed include how public sector organizations are politically and democratically controlled to provide public goods and services. The document also notes the challenges of sustaining services when delivered by for-profit sectors and the need to conceptualize public sector organizations from a sustainability perspective. It concludes that developing sustainable accounting practices for the public sector must reflect its unique context and mission, rather than being driven by private sector models.
Zimbabwe Independ Professional AdvocacyGEORGE MURENA
ZIPA-PHCP Advocacy Service aims to offer Zimbabwean people the opportunity to express their own needs and wishes and have these respected. By helping people to make informed choices we enable them to maintain as much control as possible over their own lives.
The document discusses the role of the voluntary, community and social enterprise (VCSE) sector in supporting health and wellbeing. It notes that the VCSE sector has expertise in reaching groups experiencing health inequalities. However, funding challenges from significant budget cuts and a shift to contract-based funding have impacted the sector. The document calls for greater recognition of the value provided by smaller VCSE organizations, investing in those promoting equality, and developing services through co-production between statutory and community organizations.
The document discusses challenges in providing sustainable water services at scale in developing countries. It notes that 30-40% of water systems fail, wasting financial investments. It analyzes reasons for failures like an infrastructure focus rather than service delivery, lack of long-term support, and poor coordination. The document calls for a new paradigm centered on a service delivery approach with principles-based interventions at various levels to achieve sustainable services at scale.
The document discusses challenges in providing sustainable water services at scale in developing countries. It notes that 30-40% of water systems fail, wasting financial investments. It analyzes reasons for failures, such as an infrastructure focus rather than a service delivery approach. The document advocates adopting principles for policy, financing, planning, and coordination across local, national and international levels to establish long-term sustainable water services.
Providing Sustainable Services at Scale (IRC & Aguaconsult)IRC
The document discusses challenges in providing sustainable water services at scale in developing countries. It notes that 30-40% of water systems fail, wasting financial investments. It analyzes reasons for failures like an infrastructure focus rather than service delivery, lack of sector capacity building and support, and poor coordination. The document advocates adopting a service delivery approach with principles like clear roles, planning, learning, appropriate technology, long-term support and oversight to achieve sustainable services at scale.
The presentation was a workshop at Evolve 2014: the annual event for the voluntary sector in London on Monday 16 June 2014.
The presentation was chaired by Shane Brennan, from Age Concern Kingston and looks at the changing context of public service commissioning.
Find out more about the Evolve Conference from NCVO: http://www.ncvo.org.uk/training-and-events/evolve-conference
Find out more about NCVO's work on volunteering: http://www.ncvo.org.uk/practical-support/volunteering
The document discusses key questions around the healthcare business model in the 21st century UK. It questions who the customers are for social enterprises and what constitutes an effective healthcare business model. It explores issues like personalization of care, fully engaging patients, and the challenge of relating needs to markets within a shared risk framework. The central problem addressed is how to develop sustainable business and service models that work with customers to meet their needs through innovative and authentic approaches.
Community-driven development (CDD) aims to improve the well-being and empowerment of poor communities by providing direct grants and facilitation for community decision making, implementation, and review of projects. CDD is one response to the problem of how to effectively reach large numbers of poor people where state institutions are weak. The document outlines Australia's support for CDD and presents a change model showing the inputs, intermediate results, and longer term outcomes expected from CDD programs. It also acknowledges risks and assumptions that influence whether CDD achieves its goals of poverty reduction, inclusion, and accountability.
This document provides information about an organization called ServiceReform that is working to improve public services through more integrated care. It summarizes that ServiceReform is working in 13 places across the UK, representing 22% of the population, to redesign person-centered care through multi-agency provider networks. The goal is to empower individuals through community support systems and enable independent living, with care coordinated through general practitioners.
The Day Job v Transformation: Creating change capacity (2015)Grant Fitzner
What is driving demand for local government services? How can local government create change capacity, and what skills and competencies will its workforce need to do so?
These are the questions Antony Page and I posed to a group of senior leaders in 2015 attending a Local Government Chronicle Summit. Their responses are in the annex.
Allied health professions as agents of change and reshaping care E33 (2#2)Sophie40
Falls among older people are a major public health issue in Scotland, costing the healthcare system an estimated £471 million per year. Falls can have serious physical, psychological, and social consequences for older individuals, including loss of independence and increased dependence on family or health services. Targeted interventions based on multifactorial risk assessments have been shown to help prevent falls. The National Falls Programme in Scotland aims to reduce falls and harm from falls by establishing integrated falls prevention and management pathways across all local health and social care partnerships by 2014.
Challenging social injustice in adults' social health and care serviceCANorfolk
Belinda Schwehr from the legal advice charity CASCAIDr shares her and CASCAIDr’s perspectives on key issues and developments in relation to adults’ health and social care services.
The Social Services and Wellbeing Bill heralds a quiet tide of innovationwalescva
The Social Services & Well-being (Wales) Bill aims to improve social care outcomes for people in Wales through major legislative changes. The bill introduces a prevention and early intervention focus, with duties on local authorities to provide services that enhance community well-being. It emphasizes person-centered assessment and eligibility criteria. The bill promotes co-production of services, citizen participation, and new models of community-led and integrated health and social care. It seeks to deflect people from acute services and invest in communities to support individuals' well-being.
This document discusses the importance of planning for long term care. It notes that as people live longer, the likelihood of needing long term care increases. Paying for long term care out of pocket can deplete retirement savings. The document defines long term care as assistance with daily living for those with chronic illness or cognitive impairment, which can be provided at home, adult day care, assisted living facilities or nursing homes. It emphasizes that planning ahead, through insurance or government programs, can help pay for long term care costs that are expected to rise significantly in the future. Options discussed include traditional long term care insurance and life and long term care combination plans.
This document raises concerns over proposed budget cuts to youth services in Ireland from 2008-2011. It asks for a review of all youth funding and highlights key areas of need. The document notes that while mainstream education is projected to increase by 24% over this period, funding for youth and community relations will only increase by 3.9%, leading to a real reduction of over 10%. It suggests areas for funding priorities to be reconsidered, and outlines important contributions of youth work to education, health, community relations, and family support.
Dr Mary Keys A Policy Approach to Embedding Rights in Mental Health Serviceslegislation
The document discusses Ireland's Vision for Change mental health policy and issues with its implementation. It describes the case of Dave, who was discharged from a psychiatric hospital to a nursing home instead of supported housing as outlined in the policy. It raises concerns about re-institutionalization and a lack of community mental health services. Legal action may be possible if rights or agreements are breached, but courts are reluctant to direct spending. Immediate changes are needed to properly oversee implementation at a local level and ensure the rights and needs of people with mental health issues are upheld.
Behaviorism is a learning theory that focuses on observable behaviors and how the acquisition of new behaviors is based on environmental conditions. Some key representatives include B.F. Skinner who developed operant conditioning, Ivan Pavlov who researched reflex systems, and John B. Watson who emphasized the role of environment over innate factors. Krashen developed theories of second language acquisition including the acquisition-learning distinction, the natural order hypothesis, the monitor hypothesis, the input hypothesis, and the affective filter hypothesis.
The document outlines a vision to improve outcomes for older people while reducing costs through more integrated health and social care services. It proposes that savings from reducing unnecessary secondary and long-term care (A) can be reinvested in alternative community services (B) and prevention (C) to create an overall reduction in expenditure (Y). Specific strategies mentioned include diverting people from acute care through expanded community services, long-term focus on health and well-being, and streamlining management to better support integrated working. Contact information is provided for further discussion.
Ageing Well - Vicki Sellick presentation to the Leadership AcademyNMJones
Vicki Sellick from the Young Foundation presents: "Innovation: Ideas for applying the Big Society ethos to older people's services and how to think differently to find more effective ways of delivering services.
The document discusses predictive case modelling in social care and health. It describes how predictive models can identify high-risk patients using their medical history to help avoid costly hospital admissions. The document outlines how predictive models are developed using years of patient data and validated on separate data. It also discusses how predictive risk scores can be used to target intensive case management programs at those most likely to benefit.
This document provides an index and problem solver for principles of managerial finance. It contains solutions and calculations for topics such as bond and stock valuation, financial statements, time value of money, and capital budgeting. The index lists these topics and the problem solver provides numerical examples and step-by-step calculations for concepts like basic bond valuation, book value, price/earnings ratio, and net present value.
Julia Skelton, director of professional operations at the College of Occupational Therapists, gave this presentation on the "Future model/focus for
Occupational Therapists working in
Social Care" at NAIDEX Conference April 2011.
The document contains notes from an emergency budget action planning meeting discussing various topics related to health and social care, grants, youth and service user involvement, community development, rural services, promoting local services, influencing funding reviews, personalization and direct payments, and the role of small to medium VCS organizations in delivering public services. Actions were identified for many topics around improving partnership, communication, involvement, and representation across sectors.
The document summarizes key issues and opportunities for public health in the changing post-transformation NHS landscape. It discusses the implications of smaller local government, comprehensive spending reviews, and the localism agenda. It emphasizes building partnerships with stakeholders like clinical commissioning groups and health and wellbeing boards. It also provides recommendations for public health professionals to understand local trends, demonstrate how their work addresses local government priorities, and make the financial case for preventative interventions through clearly outlined returns on investment.
Workshop - Health and wellbeing boards & strategiesSWF
The document discusses statutory health and wellbeing boards and strategies. It provides information on the current health partnerships and how the Health and Social Care Bill will impact them. It outlines the scope and strategic role of statutory health and wellbeing boards, including their membership, involvement of community/voluntary sectors, and joint health and wellbeing strategies. It also discusses the various ways the community/voluntary sector can engage with and influence commissioning boards and public health services.
Bubble Enterprises 5th Annual Enterprise and Mental Health ConferenceBubble Enterprises
The document summarizes the agenda for the 5th Enterprise & Mental Health Conference on June 18, 2010. It lists the panelists and presenters for the entrepreneurs panel and social enterprise panel. It also provides an overview of the topics that will be discussed, including social enterprises like Altogether Positive and Bubble Cafe that support mental health communities. It outlines Stockport's experience with personal budgets and self-directed support to promote independence. Finally, it discusses the Strategic Health Authority Mental Health Improvement Programme's work to promote enterprise for mental health.
2 Barnet LINk presentation 2011 Mathew KendallFlourishing
The document provides an overview of adult social services in Barnet, including the challenges they face, the services they provide, who they support, how eligibility is determined, and their vision for the future which focuses on prevention, personalization, and partnerships.
Personalisation represents a radical reform of social care that promotes independence, choice, control, and self-directed support for individuals. Vista, a user-led organization for people with sight loss, has prepared for personalisation by mapping its current services against the four quadrants of personalisation, developing a new strategy to expand its services and influence, and considering how to diversify its funding sources beyond local authority contracts. The true meaning of personalisation is putting people first and transforming services through attitudinal change to focus on individuals as customers and citizens rather than just service users.
This document outlines a presentation on partnerships between health services and citizens advice bureaus. It discusses how socioeconomic factors strongly influence health and health inequalities. Advice services can help address many of these issues like debt, benefits, housing, and employment to improve mental health and financial stability. Tools are presented to evaluate client outcomes and demonstrate the impact of advice on health, including improved well-being after receiving help. Barriers to partnership with health services and how to effectively engage with commissioners using local evidence are also covered.
The document discusses several options for self-directed support within care planning, including direct payments that give individuals money to meet assessed social care needs, improving choice and control. It advocates for a recovery-focused approach emphasizing strengths over deficits and combating stigma. Finally, it outlines some areas for action, such as commissioning options that facilitate community-based support and ensuring care coordinators and payments support services are well-informed and supported.
Heléna Herklots, Services Director Age UK - Opening plenary about occupational therapy challenges and rewards as people get older. COT Annual Conference 2010 (22-25 June 2010)
This event, held in Sheffield Town Hall in 28 May 2015, looked at what health and care could look like in 2020 in Sheffield and considered some of the challenges the system faces.
131031 child protection and out of home care in dk gjGeert Jørgensen
This document provides an overview of the child protection system and out-of-home care in Denmark. It discusses the Structural Reform of 2007 which consolidated municipalities and changed governance of social services. It also describes the legislative requirements for protecting children at risk, including early intervention and multidisciplinary cooperation. Finally, it outlines the new Supervision Reform which establishes regional supervision centers to approve all social services using a new Quality Model focused on outcomes.
The document provides information about the Healthier City and Hackney Fund, which has allocated £500,000 total to three funding streams: Healthy Activities (up to £60,000 each), Healthy Ideas (up to £20,000 each), and Healthy Next Generation (up to £8,000 each). The funding will support projects addressing priority health issues like workforce health, childhood illness management, healthcare access for homeless individuals, and recovery from injury/illness. Applications are due in two stages, with initial recommendations in February 2019 and final decisions in April 2019.
This document provides a practical agenda for policymakers and local authorities to better target public services to individuals' needs. It focuses on five domains: 1) Using data segmentation and sharing to gain deeper insights into diverse population needs; 2) Designing services around individuals rather than predefined models; 3) Examples of personalizing services in practice; 4) Mainstreaming preventative approaches; and 5) Effective partnerships. The report aims to point to achievable innovations that can be replicated across localities to improve commissioning and service integration without major structural reforms or new resources.
Liam Hughes Ageing Well leadership academy presentationNMJones
Local councils in England are taking on new responsibilities for public health as part of health system reforms. This will include promoting healthy aging. The document discusses six things councils can do to support health and reduce inequalities, including addressing social determinants, behaviors, care integration, oversight, resilience and civil society. It emphasizes the importance of partnerships through health and wellbeing boards to develop strategies based on community needs assessments. Good outcomes will require a whole-system, council-wide approach focusing on assets as well as needs of the local population including older residents.
Public presentation on what the future integration of health and social care may look like in Kent, based on the principles of Kent County Council\'s medium term plan, Bold Steps for Kent.
Directors of communications from 15 Swedish county councils visited London to learn more about the health and care system in England.This presentation is from this visit.
NHS Improving Quality planned and hosted the study tour as a result of close links with Jönköping, one of the councils represented in the delegation. Our guests learned about the important role of communications specialists in transforming healthcare in England, and the leading role NHS Improving Quality has taken in engaging and mobilising staff at scale and pace.
During the study tour it became obvious that many of the challenges and opportunities we face in our health and care system mirror those in Sweden, in particular issues such as emergency care, obesity and smoking, patient safety and working with the media. This was a fantastic opportunity for NHS Improving Quality to strengthen alliances at an international level and share ideas and approaches, and we hope to build on this in the future
The document discusses the establishment of a Health and Wellbeing Board in Leicestershire County Council to promote integration between health and social care services. It outlines the board's purpose and statutory responsibilities. The board has identified 8 initial priorities related to public health issues like smoking, obesity, and care for older people. It is currently in a shadow period to engage stakeholders and refine its substructures before becoming a statutory committee.
Similar to Ageing Well Leadership academy - Belinda Wadsworth presentation (20)
The document discusses aging populations in disadvantaged urban areas, using Manchester, England as a case study. Manchester has an aging population due to economic decline in the 1970s-1980s. Its aging population faces higher rates of poverty, illness, and disability than other areas. Initiatives in Manchester aim to make it a more age-friendly city and address inequalities faced by older residents, through programs focused on health, social activities, community involvement, and mainstreaming aging issues. The Manchester approach coordinates local networks and partnerships across sectors to improve quality of life for older citizens.
The document discusses Michael Young's work shaping the UK welfare state and founding over 60 social organizations. It then outlines 10 practical ways to encourage social growth and innovation through the "Big Society" initiative, such as giving communities more rights and tools to solve local issues, supporting social enterprises, and using the leadership of older adults. Bureaucracies often resist innovation and risk, so the public sector must connect users and volunteers with strategic networks to successfully innovate at a local level.
Scrutiny leadership and the ageing well agenda: Susan WilliamsNMJones
The document discusses the challenges of an aging population and the need for leadership and policies to support aging well. It outlines Trafford Council's Over 50s Strategy, which was developed in partnership with older residents. The strategy focused on engagement, prevention, inclusion and challenging ageism. As a result, Trafford saw improved health, safety, social participation and service access for older residents.
Alan Hatton-Yeo Ageing Well masterclass presentationNMJones
Alan Hatton-Yeo is the Chief Executive of the Beth Johnson Foundation. This is his presentation to the Ageing Well Masterclass about the value of intergenerational working.
The document discusses asset-based community development and empowering seniors. It advocates shifting from a needs-based approach focused on deficiencies to an asset-based approach that recognizes the skills, knowledge, and contributions of community members, including seniors. An asset map created by residents of Ballinacurra Weston, Ireland is presented as an example to catalogue the gifts, talents, and resources of the community that can be leveraged for local development. The document also discusses the importance of inclusion, co-production between community members and agencies, developing local capacity, and empowering citizens rather than treating them as clients.
Gill Bull Ageing Well Masterclass presentationNMJones
Sutton's approach to behavior change, the Big Society initiative, and smarter services focuses on enabling residents to make smarter choices by working with them and providing incentives rather than mandates. Key programs include Smarter Travel Sutton, which encourages alternative transportation through community events and education. Sutton is also testing more localized control of transportation projects and health services as part of its Big Society partnership with the UK government. Overall, Sutton aims to transform services and cut costs while maintaining resident satisfaction through customer-led reviews of each department.
Ageing Well - Cllr Susan Williams Leadership Academy PresentationNMJones
Councillor Susan Williams from Trafford MBC looks at Local LEadership scrutiny in a complex world - including the 'must knows' in preparation for an ageing society.
Ageing Well - Phil Swann Presentation Leadership AcademyNMJones
The document discusses the core methodology of a place-based approach to public services that was piloted in Bournemouth, Dorset and Poole in the UK. The approach aimed to improve outcomes while reducing costs through greater collaboration, community engagement, and a focus on place. The pilot concluded it was possible to achieve these goals but faced challenges including organizational barriers, maintaining momentum over time, and ensuring buy-in across geographical boundaries.
Ageing Well - Sue Warr Leadership Academy PresentationNMJones
The Dorset POPP program aims to promote health, independence, and well-being for older people in Dorset through community development. It receives funding from the Department of Health and local authorities. The program employs community development workers, wayfinders, and leaders to create social activities and support services. It has connected over 53,000 older people to services and activities. The program works to create supportive communities where older people can live in their own homes and feel socially integrated, contributing, secure, and in good health.
The document discusses transforming care systems to provide more universal services, community support, health services, and welfare assistance. It addresses using personal budgets and procurement more efficiently, challenges around affordable choice, and the potential role of the third sector and social enterprises in providing "creative care" focused on outcomes and costs.
This document discusses predictive case modelling in social care and health. It describes how predictive models can identify high-risk patients and help manage their care proactively. The document outlines key elements of developing predictive models, including using large amounts of patient data to identify risk factors and predict future costs and health events. It also discusses how model outputs can be used to target interventions and allocate resources.
The document discusses 31 ways to reduce costs in social care, including reablement/intermediate care, telecare and equipment, direct payments, reducing residential care use, and increasing citizen contributions. It also outlines models from the University of Birmingham and Oxford Brookes University focused on promoting healthy lifestyles, screening, falls prevention, and partnership working to reduce demand for social care and reliance on institutional care. The document argues for a new social care model that keeps people out of social care through lower demand, focuses on non-institutional crisis interventions and health/social care interdependence.
This document discusses the relationship between housing and health, and innovative housing options for older adults. It notes that home modifications can prevent costly falls and injuries, delay entry into residential care, and reduce hospital readmissions. The document then addresses perceived challenges for organizations in providing housing and care, including developing a future vision, addressing sustainability concerns, and fostering innovation. It also discusses the health drivers for good quality housing, an aging population's changing needs and preferences, and general facts about older adults' living situations.
This slide is special for master students (MIBS & MIFB) in UUM. Also useful for readers who are interested in the topic of contemporary Islamic banking.
it describes the bony anatomy including the femoral head , acetabulum, labrum . also discusses the capsule , ligaments . muscle that act on the hip joint and the range of motion are outlined. factors affecting hip joint stability and weight transmission through the joint are summarized.
This presentation includes basic of PCOS their pathology and treatment and also Ayurveda correlation of PCOS and Ayurvedic line of treatment mentioned in classics.
Macroeconomics- Movie Location
This will be used as part of your Personal Professional Portfolio once graded.
Objective:
Prepare a presentation or a paper using research, basic comparative analysis, data organization and application of economic information. You will make an informed assessment of an economic climate outside of the United States to accomplish an entertainment industry objective.
Executive Directors Chat Leveraging AI for Diversity, Equity, and InclusionTechSoup
Let’s explore the intersection of technology and equity in the final session of our DEI series. Discover how AI tools, like ChatGPT, can be used to support and enhance your nonprofit's DEI initiatives. Participants will gain insights into practical AI applications and get tips for leveraging technology to advance their DEI goals.
How to Build a Module in Odoo 17 Using the Scaffold MethodCeline George
Odoo provides an option for creating a module by using a single line command. By using this command the user can make a whole structure of a module. It is very easy for a beginner to make a module. There is no need to make each file manually. This slide will show how to create a module using the scaffold method.
How to Build a Module in Odoo 17 Using the Scaffold Method
Ageing Well Leadership academy - Belinda Wadsworth presentation
1. Policy Priorities for Older People Belinda Wadsworth Strategy Adviser – Local and Regional Policy, Age UK Leadership Academy - Coventry 20th February 2011
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5. What is important to older people? Transport Care Ageism Pavements Hospital Care The younger generation Public Toilets Finance/Income Housing Employment/Training Health Fuel prices Cheques Consumer Issues Older people tell us they are concerned about…