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Workshop Aims. Present key themes of NHS White PaperIdentify key questions to facilitate discussionProvide opportunity to discuss key issues in relation to CAMHSDocument points for inclusion in regional response to White Paper. White Paper: In a Nutshell. Patients at centre of NHSGreater focus o
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2. Workshop Aims Present key themes of NHS White Paper
Identify key questions to facilitate discussion
Provide opportunity to discuss key issues in relation to CAMHS
Document points for inclusion in regional response to White Paper
3. White Paper: In a Nutshell Patients at centre of NHS
Greater focus on clinical outcomes
Shift in power toward health professionals
80bn transferred to GP consortia
Bureaucracy reduced / autonomy increased
all NHS Trusts to become NHS Foundation Trusts
Increased choice and competition in the NHS
4. Liberating the NHS Key themes
Liberate NHS from excessive bureaucratic and political control
Power to be given to frontline clinicians and patients
NHS values upheld
Decentralisation and significant reduction in size of DH
Responsibility for health improvement transferred to LAs Questions
What will transferring power to frontline clinicians mean for CAMHS?
What are the risks / opportunities for CAMHS of LAs having the lead role in public health? AIMS
~ To liberate the NHS from excessive bureaucratic and political control
~ To create a patient-focused NHS, achieving outcomes that are among the best in the world
Government believes that current commissioning arrangements
~ Have been too remote from the patients they are intended to serve
~ Have been beset by political interference and micromanagement with a rhetoric of PCTs being free to reflect local health priorities but the reality of having to pursue targets and Ministerial demands.
NHS values: available to all, free at the point of use, and based on need, not the ability to pay
DH to have more strategic focus on improving public health, tackling health inequalities and reforming adult social careAIMS
~ To liberate the NHS from excessive bureaucratic and political control
~ To create a patient-focused NHS, achieving outcomes that are among the best in the world
Government believes that current commissioning arrangements
~ Have been too remote from the patients they are intended to serve
~ Have been beset by political interference and micromanagement with a rhetoric of PCTs being free to reflect local health priorities but the reality of having to pursue targets and Ministerial demands.
NHS values: available to all, free at the point of use, and based on need, not the ability to pay
DH to have more strategic focus on improving public health, tackling health inequalities and reforming adult social care
5. Putting patients and the public first Key themes
Patient focus, choice and shared decision-making: no decision about me, without me.
More information for patients (as part of information revolution)
Patients to rate services provided
New national consumer champion, HealthWatch
LINks to become local HealthWatch organisations Questions
What does shared decision-making mean for CAMHS?
What impact will choice have on local strategic planning?
What information will CAMHS users need to help them make good choices?
How do we ensure that these reforms dont result in a two tier system of haves (informed / able to express needs) and have-nots? Choice of GP, choice of provider, choice of consultant-led team, choice of treatment for some MH servicesChoice of GP, choice of provider, choice of consultant-led team, choice of treatment for some MH services
6. Improving healthcare outcomes Key themes
Government to set out key outcomes
Focus on clinical outcomes (not processes) and patient-reported outcomes
Role of NICE to be expanded to develop quality standards for social care
Providers paid according to tariffs, performance and quality incentives
includes CAMHS PbR Outcomes Framework
to help patients, public and Parliament understand how NHS is doing
to allow SoS to hold NHS Commissioning Board to account
to help drive improvements in health outcomes
BUT
no development of current outcomes thinking
focused on acute care
little about mental health (nothing on CAMHS)
accountability tool so partnership working excluded
Commissioning contracts and financial incentives to take NICE standards into account
Contractual penalties for providers delivering poor quality care
Future payment structure to include CAMHS PbR
Incentives to reduce avoidable readmissions
Quality measures linked to payment ie CQUIN expanded
Commissioning contracts and financial incentives to take NICE standards into account
Contractual penalties for providers delivering poor quality care
Future payment structure to include CAMHS PbR
Incentives to reduce avoidable readmissions
Quality measures linked to payment ie CQUIN expanded
7. NHS Outcomes Framework Acknowledges that NHS has found it more difficult to collect and understand the experience of child than adult patients (nationally co-ordinated surveys).
Want to investigate the possibilities for measuring children's (and their parents' or carers') experiences of their care in a sensitive and appropriate way.Acknowledges that NHS has found it more difficult to collect and understand the experience of child than adult patients (nationally co-ordinated surveys).
Want to investigate the possibilities for measuring children's (and their parents' or carers') experiences of their care in a sensitive and appropriate way.
8. Improving healthcare outcomes Each domain
An overarching outcome indicator
Specific improvement areas
where evidence suggests better outcomes possible
Supporting quality standards (NICE) Questions
What would you want to see in the Outcomes Framework for CAMHS?
What incentives would serve to drive quality improvement in CAMHS?
What can CAMHS contribute to discussions around Patient Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs) and childrens experience of their care?
How can the Outcomes Framework support partnership working? Overarching indicator eg mortality amenable to healthcare
Specific improvement areas eg cancer stroke and heart disease
Overarching indicator eg mortality amenable to healthcare
Specific improvement areas eg cancer stroke and heart disease
9. Autonomy and accountability Key themes
Commissioning:
GP consortia
NHS Commissioning Board
Every NHS Trust to become a foundation trust
Focus on competition and role for any willing provider
Monitor: economic regulator for NHS
Care Quality Commission: quality inspectorate across health and social care NHS Commissioning Board
leadership on commissioning for quality improvement
promoting public and patient involvement and choice
ensuring development of GP consortia and holding them to account
commissioning certain services
allocating and accounting for NHS resources Governments vision
~ Providers will be free from control by hierarchical management and instead subject to effective quality and economic regulation
~ Clinically led commissioning, payment by results and choice will drive improvements in quality beyond essential regulatory standards
~ Monitor will be an economic regulator responsible for regulating prices, promoting competition and supporting service continuity.
Unclear quite how everything will fit together: Monitor, GP consortia, HealthWatch etc
80bn of taxpayers money will be transferred to GP consortia so that
~ redesign of patient pathways and local services will be clinically led
~ based on dialogue with hospital specialists and local people
Commissioners free to buy services from any willing provider so providers will compete to provide services
PCTs to support emerging consortia
Governments vision
~ Providers will be free from control by hierarchical management and instead subject to effective quality and economic regulation
~ Clinically led commissioning, payment by results and choice will drive improvements in quality beyond essential regulatory standards
~ Monitor will be an economic regulator responsible for regulating prices, promoting competition and supporting service continuity.
Unclear quite how everything will fit together: Monitor, GP consortia, HealthWatch etc
80bn of taxpayers money will be transferred to GP consortia so that
~ redesign of patient pathways and local services will be clinically led
~ based on dialogue with hospital specialists and local people
Commissioners free to buy services from any willing provider so providers will compete to provide services
PCTs to support emerging consortia
10. Commissioning responsibilities GP consortia:
elective hospital care and rehabilitative care
urgent and emergency care
most community health services
mental health
learning disability services NHS Commissioning Board
primary medical services
other family health services (eg dentistry, community pharmacy)
national and regional specialised services
maternity services
prison health services Specialised Services National Definitions Set:
~ specialised mental health services (all ages) Tier 4 CAMHS and forensic
~ specialised services for childrenSpecialised Services National Definitions Set:
~ specialised mental health services (all ages) Tier 4 CAMHS and forensic
~ specialised services for children
11. Autonomy and accountability Key questions
What are the commissioning risks for CAMHS?
Tier 1 with LAs
Tier 2 / 3 with GP consortia
Tier 4 with regional commissioning
Do GPs have sufficient knowledge and understanding of CAMHS to commission this well?
Which elements of CAMHS could / should not be commissioned by GP consortia?
How should GP consortia engage patients and the public in commissioning CAMHS?
12. Local Democratic Legitimacy Key themes:
LAs to lead on local health improvement and prevention activity
LAs to create Health & Wellbeing Boards
join up commissioning of local NHS, social care and public health
LAs to lead on JSNAs
LAs to commission local HealthWatch Key questions:
Should Health & Wellbeing Boards only focus on adults?
How do the proposals fit with the current duty to co-operate through childrens trusts?
What would further incentivise integrated working in CAMHS? Local HealthWatch to become the Citizens Advice Bureau for health and social care
- ie wider responsibility for complaints advocacy and supporting individuals to exercise choice and control
Functions of health and wellbeing boards
Primary aim: to promote integration and partnership working across the NHS, social care, public health and other local services and improve democratic accountability
To assess the needs of the local population and lead the statutory joint strategic needs assessment
To promote integration and partnership across areas, including through promoting joined up commissioning plans across the NHS, social care and public health
To support joint commissioning and pooled budget arrangements, where all parties agree this makes sense
To undertake a scrutiny role in relation to major service redesign.Local HealthWatch to become the Citizens Advice Bureau for health and social care
- ie wider responsibility for complaints advocacy and supporting individuals to exercise choice and control
Functions of health and wellbeing boards
Primary aim: to promote integration and partnership working across the NHS, social care, public health and other local services and improve democratic accountability
To assess the needs of the local population and lead the statutory joint strategic needs assessment
To promote integration and partnership across areas, including through promoting joined up commissioning plans across the NHS, social care and public health
To support joint commissioning and pooled budget arrangements, where all parties agree this makes sense
To undertake a scrutiny role in relation to major service redesign.
13. Cutting bureaucracy & improving efficiency Key themes
Abolition of PCTs and SHAs
Unnecessary quangos abolished
Changes will lead to significant disruption and loss of jobs
Efficiency savings of 20 billion, including significant (up to 45%) reductions in NHS management costs
greater competition
renewed focus on QIPP
Government will not bail out commissioners who fail Questions
How might greater competition between providers impact on CAMHS?
How can CAMHS contribute to the QIPP agenda?
14. Timetable Health Bill: Autumn 2010
Public Health White Paper: late 2010
Further consultations: late 2010
Every GP a member of a 'shadow' consortium by 2011/12
NHS Commissioning Board and Health & Wellbeing Boards established by April 2012
Monitor established as economic regulator by April 2012
Allocations for 2013/14 made directly to GP consortia in late 2012 (by which time SHAs and PCTs will be formally abolished)
GP consortia take full financial responsibility and fully operational from April 2013.