Publication of Integrated Care - Organisations, Partnerships and Systems

 

The Committee considered the increasing reliance on a range of health and care services, which are mostly public but also provided by non-statutory services (charities, social enterprises, community services and private providers), and expressed concerns about the negative impact if these services and sources of support don’t join up, don’t share information, are not coordinated and fail to put the individual front and centre.

They surmise that whilst there is “not sufficient evidence that integrated care saves money or improves outcomes in the short term, there are compelling reasons to believe it is worthwhile”.

The report explores the development of new integrated ways of planning local health and care services (sustainability and transformation partnerships and integrated care systems) and delivering care (integrated care partnerships and accountable care organisations), arising from the NHS Five Year Forward View. And it concludes that the move towards more integrated, collaborative and placed-based care has been hampered by poor communication and a confusing acronym spaghetti of changing titles and terminology, poorly understood even by those working within the system.

The report quotes RCGP regarding poor STP engagement with GPs tasked with taking an active role in the development of the Plans (now Partnerships):

“228. Local GPs appointed by the Royal College of General Practitioners to act as regional ambassadors in the development and implementation of STPs have “struggled to find a voice or influence on key STP boards.”220 Similarly, allied health professionals (e.g. physiotherapists, occupational therapists, paramedics, speech and language therapists), we heard, have also struggled to find a voice in the leadership of STPs. None of the clinical leads on STP boards come from the ranks of allied health professionals.221”

Regarding STPs, the report states that the 44 partnerships are now at different stages in their journey towards becoming integrated care systems (ICSs). Whilst some areas have made considerable progress in light of these pressures, those furthest behind are struggling with rising day-to-day pressures let alone transforming care. It defines integrated care systems ICSs as more autonomous systems in which local bodies take collective responsibility for the health and social care of their populations within a defined budget and states that a cohort of 10 ICSs, made up of the leading STPs, are making good progress in difficult circumstances.

In what seems to be a helpful nod to recent Londonwide LMCs’ discussions regarding networks vs formal organisations, on p32 the report defines ICSs as:

“94. Integrated care systems are advanced forms of sustainability and transformation partnerships, in which “commissioners and NHS providers, working closely with GP networks, local authorities and other partners, agree to take shared responsibility (in ways that are consistent with their individual legal obligations) for how they operate their collective resources for the benefit of local populations.”76”

Turning to accountable care organisations or ACOs, the report says that there has been much confusion about their benefits and purpose. The ACO model will entail a single organisation holding a 10–15 year contract for the health and care of a large population. The Committee recommend that ACOs, if introduced, should be NHS bodies and established in primary legislation, but only once there is clarity on issues such as whether using an ACO contract to merge services into a single organisation accelerates integration and improves outcomes for patients.

There is a reference on p37 to ACOs delivering primary care services in a way that is consistent with the delivery conducted by existing providers. The language does not rule in or rule out the inclusion of core primary care services in any ACO contract:

“122. NHS England has delayed its consultation pending the outcome of our inquiry and two judicial reviews on the legality of the changes it proposes. The Department of Health and Social Care signalled in its consultation response its intentions to consult again on legal directions to ensure “criteria for an ACO delivering primary medical services (GP services) are consistent with the criteria for existing providers of primary medical services.”98 Once NHS England has implemented a contract, these legal directions will be limited to Dudley and the City of Manchester initially, although other areas may apply to use the contract.99”

The report maintains that transformation remains key to sustainability and calls for the dedicated national financial and leadership support to enable the NHS to transform at pace saying “Too often plans are constrained by the upfront funding needed to make them effective. The NHS is currently in survival mode, with NHS providers struggling to recruit, train and retain staff and balance their books, while maintaining standards in the face of relentlessly rising demand. A long-term funding settlement and effective workforce strategy are essential not only to alleviate immediate pressures on services, but to facilitate the transition to more integrated models of care.”

Finally, the report sets out several areas where the Committee feel legislative change should be considered, including:

  • a statutory basis for system-wide partnerships between local organisations;
  • potential to designate ACOs as NHS bodies, if they are introduced more widely;
  • changes to legislation covering procurement and competition;
  • merger of NHS England and NHS Improvement; and
  • Care Quality Commission’s regulatory powers.

The full conclusions and recommendations for the report can be found here.

Last updated : 19 Jun 2018

 

Flu Feedback (16 Feb 2016)

Londonwide LMCs has been asked to contribute to NHS England London’s 2015/16 Flu Evaluation session on 6th April 2016, giving feedback on the flu immunisation programme for this year.  In...
Read more »

Update: Appraisal Toolkit (16 Feb 2016)

NHS England funding for the use of the Clarity appraisal toolkit has ceased. Although many of you will pay for and continue to use Clarity, we have been asked to...
Read more »

Primary Care Support England – launch of a new online portal (16 Feb 2016)

Primary Care Support England (PCSE) is launching a new online portal. The portal is intended to provide service users with a quick and easy way of ordering and tracking supplies,...
Read more »

November 2015 workforce survey findings (16 Feb 2016)

General practice is responsible for 90% of all NHS activity but receives less than 10% of overall funding. Which makes it all the more concerning that responding to our recently...
Read more »

Patient Online deadline approaching – what you need to know (16 Feb 2016)

The London Patient Online team have asked us to remind practices that they are expected to allow patients access to their coded data within the GP record by 31 March...
Read more »

Family and Friends Test data submission dates and guidance (16 Feb 2016)

  Future submission dates FFT feedback month Submission closure (twelfth working day of the month) January 2016...
Read more »

Apprenticeship update and a first-hand view of what makes it great (16 Feb 2016)

My Apprenticeship –Joel Carmody at St Peter’s Medical Centre, Harrow  We have all heard the horror stories about general practice on the news. The endless waiting times, the further restrictions...
Read more »

GP workforce pressures put care of nearly a million Londoners in jeopardy survey shows (15 Feb 2016)

Almost a million Londoners face losing their GP as the workforce crumbles in the face of staff shortages, warns Dr Michelle Drage, Chief Executive of Londonwide LMCs, following a survey...
Read more »

Annual General Meeting (08 Feb 2016)

Londonwide LMCs’ Annual General Meeting took place on Thursday 28 January 2016 at the LMCs’ offices, Tavistock House South, Tavistock Square, London WC1H 9LH. The formal...
Read more »

Support the BMA's Urgent Prescription for General Practice campaign (05 Feb 2016)

Click on the image to go to the BMA's Urgent Prescription for General Practice campaign page.
Read more »
Next Page »
« Previous Page