Post on 11-Jan-2016
Health and Well-Being BoardOperational Partnership Board update (3rd Tier)
Learning Disability Partnership Board
15th September 2011
The Aims
• • Make sure that the priorities of Valuing People Now are implemented in Ealing
• People with learning disabilities have the same rights, choices, and opportunities as everyone else
• Bringing together local plans and partnerships
• People with learning disabilities and family carers play an active part in planning, developing and checking services
The structure• Meet 6 times a year including an annual review
day • 4 subgroups focusing on the priority areas of
Valuing People Now– Better Health– Better Housing– Make My Day (employment, day
opportunities, workforce development and hate crime)
– Transition• Carers Together• Power Group
Measuring successLocal level– Subgroups report progress to the
board on an annual basis– Annual review
National level
Partnership Board report
Health Self Assessment• 4 top targets and 25 sub objectives• 3 levels of achievement• Benchmark local progress against the
national framework
Annual Partnership Board Report
• Report on how we are improving services and working toward the 3 priorities in Valuing People Now:
1. Health
2. Housing
3. Employment
• Our report submitted to the Learning Disabilities Observatory in June
• Observatory will collate and publish all reports, statistics, examples of good practice and common themes
Health – The self Assessment process
Health – How well are we doing?Assessment Ratings
Target 09/10 10/11
1. Moving people from long term NHS care
2. Making sure patients with learning disabilities can use the same health services and get as good a service as everyone else
3. Making sure people in NHS services are safe
4. Developing services for those needing more help to be healthy
Health – what is going well• Treat Me Right continue to work with WLMHT
and Ealing Hospital to support them to make reasonable adjustments
• Learning Disability Awareness training• Learning Disability Champions on most wards• Discharge protocols with Ealing Hospital• 353 Health Action Plans• Health Action Plans for young people• Think Healthy event• Easy read information• CQUINS for the hospital and local mental health
services• Exposure group and well women’s group• Hanwell dental surgery and Featherstone Clinic• A Fitness programme in partnership with
Extreme Ability/Active Ealing.
Health – what needs to improve?
• Less than half of GP surgeries in Ealing are signed up to do annual health checks – only 59 completed last year
• No GP representation on health subgroup or the Partnership Board
• Better awareness of needs of patients with learning disabilities in primary care sector
• All new strategies and services need to include the needs of patients with learning disabilities
• More people need to access health screening• Access to data about patients with learning
disabilities – safeguarding, disease register• Transfer of NHS commissioning body –
commissioners will need to understand the needs of people with learning disabilities
Employment – What’s going well
• 70 people in part time paid employment (less than 16 hours)
• 42 people in paid employment (16+ hours)
• 164 people in voluntary work / work experience
• Apprenticeship scheme
• Ealing pathways pre-apprentice programme
• The Future Jobs Fund
• Disability Volunteer Scheme
• Accession social enterprise established as an independent company and is putting proposals to the local authority and West London Mental Health Trust to build local enterprises
Employment – the challenges
• Less jobs• Public sector was one of the
largest employers of people with learning disabilities
• Mainstream Back to Work schemes unlikely to benefit people with learning disabilities
• Less funding available to provide on the job support
Housing – where people live
• In Ealing - 715
• In other parts of London - 60
• Out of London -149
Housing – What’s going well
• New supported living service for people with challenging needs opened in August
• Well established Shared Lives Scheme
• New extra care scheme will offer places to older people with learning disabilities
• 24 more people in supported living• 18 people are living in their own
homes bought though shared ownership scheme
Housing – the challenges• Access to social housing – introduce quota for
direct lets for tenants with learning disabilities
• Including the needs of people with learning disabilities in housing strategies, reviews and housing developments
• Engaging with private landlords
• Some staff in the housing department don’t understand the needs of customers with learning disabilities
• Achieving value for money for residential and supported living placements
Other developments• Day opportunities – planned shift from centre
based to inclusive community based model
• Links with adult learning
• Increasing the number of changing places toilets in the borough
• Improved inter-agency working to support young people in transition
• Over 30 people trained as 3rd party reporters to support people with learning disabilities to report hate crime
• Working with children’s services – approved provider list for play and recreation for children and young people
How can the H&WBB help?
• Support proposals to develop Accession Social Enterprise
• Support inclusion of social capital requirements in procurement process
• Support quota for social housing• Support appointment of a GP
Champion• Support inclusion of needs of
learning disabilities in mainstream strategies and service developments