1 / 11

Connecting Families Worcestershire

Connecting Families Worcestershire. Connecting Families – what is it?. A whole system response in overcoming challenges that prevent/delay positive outcomes for children & families Focus on prevention and recovery to help families thrive

zenda
Télécharger la présentation

Connecting Families Worcestershire

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Connecting FamiliesWorcestershire

  2. Connecting Families – what is it? • A whole system response in overcoming challenges that prevent/delay positive outcomes for children & families • Focus on prevention and recovery to help families thrive • Builds on and ‘adds value’ existing good practice seen within Stronger Families and other similar models of inter-agency working (e.g. Locality working in Redditch)

  3. Connecting Families – what is it? Underpinning principles/factors: • Preventative and community resilience work is crucial in sustaining long term change • Better utilisation of assets forms an essential part of the solution to build stronger neighbourhoods • Information, advice and support to families is essential • Thinking/acting family and joining up work with adults and children is crucial in improving outcomes • Systemic solutions to remove duplication & repetition, develop a customer centric system, prevent and meet demand with reduced resources.

  4. Connecting Families - Redditch • Opportunity to challenge / test different ‘whole system’ approach in one defined area of Worcestershire • Solutions need to be transferable to all areas and include support to individuals (e.g. single adult households) Why Redditch? • Builds on existing locality working model • Borough Council own housing stock and run WCC funded early help services • Appetite for real change

  5. What are the key challenges? • Continued rise in demand on social care • Areas of concerns within health e.g. disproportionate A&E visits of young people with drug/alcohol misuse • Reduction in resources across the public sector • Collective understanding/use of need and demand information across public sector • Lack of robust cost benefit analysis to support decision making • Individual service/organisation response to managing demand = duplication/repetition of effort and lack of sustainable change e.g. if Stronger Families funding stopped what would happen?

  6. Success measures What would success look like? • reduction of rent arrears • improved school attendance and school readiness • reduction in dependency on benefit • reduction in demand on specialist services (social care and health) • improved mental health and well-being (children and adults) • reduction in anti-social behaviour/crime inc.domestic violence • increased young people who are in education, employment or training • reduce family debt and improve management of household finances • Reduce workless households • Reduce drug and alcohol dependency • Improved community well-being and resilience • reduction in health inequalities • improved cost benefit analysis and quantifiable reduction in spend * Measures in bold will be used in the Transformation Challenge Award cost benefit analysis

  7. So what does this mean? In practice it could mean: • Changing the way some services are delivered/commissioned • Implement an integrated service design, pooled budgets, common systems (e.g. assessments / IT, needs identification), integrated team delivery and management (shared property) However, don’t jump to solution until we: • Quantify challenges across the system (outcomes, financials) • Conduct a function analysis across services to identify common practice, duplication, repetition • Refine scope – what’s in and out • Cost benefit analysis – ‘as is’ and then ‘to be’ • Review business processes, property, IT, info sharing, needs identification

  8. What do we need to do now? • Political and/or senior officer sign up to ethos, principles and practicalities of Connecting Families • Leadership is crucial in driving change • Better understand change agendas across the public sector – seek opportunities for join up and areas which need be out of scope • Allocate £40K of partnership resource (currently assigned to ChS) to help facilitate thinking and drive change • Agree how this could be best used? System thinking workshops? Project co-ordination?

  9. Transformation Challenge Award • Invited to bid for some funding (£1million)15/16 to add value to Connecting Families proposals • Closing date 5pm on 1st October 2014. • Opportunity to introduce/test an integrated locality team using additional resources – whilst re-modelling base resources to sustain team longer term • Opportunity to create short term additional capacity to drive forward change

  10. Structure of TCA bids • Strategic case • Financial case • Economic case • Commercial case • Management case • Objectives • Rationale • Wider aims • Financial impact • Funding • Additionality • Economic impact • Wider benefits • Delivery model • Providers • Contracts • Governance • Timescales • Risks CBA tool

  11. The CBA model • Costs • Capital • Revenue • In Kind • Economic Case • Net Present Public Value • Value for Money Benefit Cost Ratio Cost Benefit Analysis Tool • Outcomes • Need • Engagement • Impact • Deadweight • Lag and drop-off • Financial Case • Net Present Budget Impact • Financial return on investment • Payback period Cashabilityassumptions • Expected to use tool as part of bid – opportunity to adopt across organisations

More Related