Integration of health and social care: A social work perspective.

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Integration of health and social care: A social work perspective

Transcript of Integration of health and social care: A social work perspective.

Page 1: Integration of health and social care: A social work perspective.

Integration of health and social care: A social work perspective

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Outline

• Make my perspective clear

• Look at the drivers for change

• Ask questions about professionalism

• Summarise the research evidence

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My perspective • Registered social worker

• Practice and management background, including partnership working

• “Late onset academic”

• Part-time secondment to GCU

• Involved in inter-professional education

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Would we have started from here?

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Drivers for change• Demographics (more over 65’s than under 15’s)

• Improving outcomes

• Personalisation

• Putting leadership at the heart

• “Perhaps most ambitiously, it is about establishing a public service landscape in which different public bodies are required to work together” (Scottish Government, 2013)

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Drivers for changeMoney

• £4.5 billion on health and social care for over 65’s

• Emergency admissions £1.4 billion • 7% spent on care at home

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Scottish Government position (Feb 2013)

• Intention to legislate, including for outcomes• Political accountability• Financial • “It is therefore our intention, as respondents have

suggested, to legislate for a duty on Health and Social Care Partnerships to ‘engage with and involve’, rather than merely to ‘consult’ local professionals”

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Lessons from England

• Integration needs to start from a focus on those who use services

• Crucial importance of leadership

• Policy should be tight on ends and loose on means

• Integration takes time to achieve

• Importance of evaluation

(Ham and Oldham, 2009)

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Professionalism

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Petch review

• Social services for adults have delivered major achievements – de-institutionalisation – greater choice and control by the individual

• At the same time there has been recognition of key areas such as needs of carers and dementia

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Petch review (2)

• repeat and emergency hospital admissions

• enduring issues at the boundaries between systems, most notably between hospital and community

• a strong body of evidence demonstrating that structural integration between health and social care does not deliver.

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Different or the same?

(Hudson, 2007)12

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Old or new?

(Hudson, 2007)13

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Old or new?

(Petch, 2011)14

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(Petch, 2011)

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ReferencesHam, C. and Oldham, J., 2009, “Integrating health and social care in England:

Lessons from early adopters and implications for policy, Journal of Integrated Care, vol. 16, no. 6., pp. 3-9.

Hudson, B., 2007. Pessimism and optimism in inter-professional working: The Sedgefield Integrated Team. Journal of Interprofessional Care, 21, 1, 3-15.

Petch, A., 2011, An evidence base for the delivery of adult services, IRISS, Glasgow.

Scottish Government, 2013, Integration of adult health and social care in Scotland consultation: Scottish government response, Edinburgh, Scottish Government.