Making a Song and Dance about Child Safety: Policy, Partnerships and Advocacy Karen Saunders Senior...

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Making a Song and Dance about Child Safety: Policy, Partnerships and Advocacy Karen Saunders Senior Public Health Manager Department of Health West Midlands

Transcript of Making a Song and Dance about Child Safety: Policy, Partnerships and Advocacy Karen Saunders Senior...

Page 1: Making a Song and Dance about Child Safety: Policy, Partnerships and Advocacy Karen Saunders Senior Public Health Manager Department of Health West Midlands.

Making a Song and Dance about Child Safety:

Policy, Partnerships and Advocacy

Karen SaundersSenior Public Health Manager

Department of Health West Midlands

Page 2: Making a Song and Dance about Child Safety: Policy, Partnerships and Advocacy Karen Saunders Senior Public Health Manager Department of Health West Midlands.

Policy Links and Opportunities

Page 3: Making a Song and Dance about Child Safety: Policy, Partnerships and Advocacy Karen Saunders Senior Public Health Manager Department of Health West Midlands.

Regional Strategy

Children’s Health and Health Inequalities in the West Midlands Key facts include:

• For children aged 1 – 4 years, fire and flames and pedestrian injuries cause the highest death rates

• For children aged 5 – 14 years, pedestrian injuries are the most frequent type of injury causing death

• For adolescents aged 15 – 19 years, injuries as vehicle occupants are the most frequent type of injury causing death

• www.gos.gov.uk/497745/docs/37

Page 4: Making a Song and Dance about Child Safety: Policy, Partnerships and Advocacy Karen Saunders Senior Public Health Manager Department of Health West Midlands.

Regional Health and Wellbeing Strategy

http://www.wmra.gov.uk/uploadfiles/file/WMRA_Health&WellBeing.pdf

• First Public Health Strategy for the West Midlands. • For all organisations and groups with a role to play in

improving the health and wellbeing of the population and reducing inequalities

• Reflects and builds upon national and regional policies for improving health and reducing

• inequalities• Informed by Local Area Agreements• Accidents is a priority throughout.

Page 5: Making a Song and Dance about Child Safety: Policy, Partnerships and Advocacy Karen Saunders Senior Public Health Manager Department of Health West Midlands.
Page 6: Making a Song and Dance about Child Safety: Policy, Partnerships and Advocacy Karen Saunders Senior Public Health Manager Department of Health West Midlands.

Data and Information

• www.wmpho.org.uk/

Page 7: Making a Song and Dance about Child Safety: Policy, Partnerships and Advocacy Karen Saunders Senior Public Health Manager Department of Health West Midlands.

Good News – Regional Progress

• The latest data on child injury shows some improvement in the region

• Of particular note are a 17% reduction in hospital admissions for transport accidents (202 fewer admissions)

• 4% reduction in admissions for falls (165 fewer admissions)

• 11% reduction in admissions for poisonings (106 fewer admissions)

• All are significantly lower than the previous year 2005/6

Page 8: Making a Song and Dance about Child Safety: Policy, Partnerships and Advocacy Karen Saunders Senior Public Health Manager Department of Health West Midlands.

Partnerships - Reducing Childhood Injuries - Everyone has a Part to Play

Partnership working has always been a key feature of effective action to safeguard children and young people. This links closely with the need for clear

leadership. In its Framework for Delivery, the Accidental Injury Task Force (2002) recognised that:

• “...it will not be possible to deliver national targets on reducing accidents unless there is a more integrated approach to accident prevention”.

This requires:• “more direct linkage to larger programmes, better

coordination and clearer leadership at national and regional level.”

Page 9: Making a Song and Dance about Child Safety: Policy, Partnerships and Advocacy Karen Saunders Senior Public Health Manager Department of Health West Midlands.

Advocacy in the West Midlands (1)

• The West Midlands has one of the highest rates of unintentional injuries in children.

• The Department of Health West Midlands has been working to address this issue in a number of ways.

• Following the success of a major conference in July 2006 and a workshop event in November 2007, a number of clear priorities were identified by stakeholders and practitioners in order to:– highlight the issue of child injury– reduce inequalities, and– promote regional and local potential for prevention

• The priorities included:– shared learning and good practice– better training and ‘signposting’ of the cross-cutting

connections and partnership opportunities– support for developing more effective communications and

community engagement

Page 10: Making a Song and Dance about Child Safety: Policy, Partnerships and Advocacy Karen Saunders Senior Public Health Manager Department of Health West Midlands.

Advocacy in the West Midlands (2)

• “Advocating Child Safety” has been developed by the Department of Health West Midlands and the Child Accident Prevention Trust as a practical resource and partnership working tool to support these priorities through advocacy and action.

• The aim is to build on the progress already being made in the Region by:– extending awareness of childhood accidental injury – signposting key sources of information, evidence and guidance,

including the wider cross-cutting links and connections – sharing first hand experience and practice– providing support for capacity building, networking and community

engagement– facilitating partnerships for prevention and behaviour change

Page 11: Making a Song and Dance about Child Safety: Policy, Partnerships and Advocacy Karen Saunders Senior Public Health Manager Department of Health West Midlands.

Transferability (1)

• While the focus of the resource is on current opportunities and practice in the West Midlands, the wider context for much of this work includes national policy drivers for improved child safety and wellbeing, reduced health inequalities and the increasing need to recognise and work through multi-agency activity

• By mapping connections, the guidance will inform greater awareness, potential partnerships and more effective delivery through the local performance framework

• The nature and varied settings of injury prevention means that this is a dynamic process.

• New policy developments and research, emerging evidence and fresh opportunities for collaboration will create new milestones and standards for success.

• When it comes to reducing childhood accidental injury - with its heavy personal, family, community and economic costs - everyone has a part to play.

Page 12: Making a Song and Dance about Child Safety: Policy, Partnerships and Advocacy Karen Saunders Senior Public Health Manager Department of Health West Midlands.

Transferability (2)

• “Advocating Child Safety” is a living document which can be personalised and updated to add value to local initiatives and strategy development

• At the end of each section there is a FACTFILE to help you to plan further action based on your own priorities, local networks and key contacts

• The final section of this resource gives further reading and space to add new information, contacts, references for local developments

Page 13: Making a Song and Dance about Child Safety: Policy, Partnerships and Advocacy Karen Saunders Senior Public Health Manager Department of Health West Midlands.

The Ingredients of Success (1)

The Healthcare and Audit Commissions have identified: “the main components of an effective approach to the delivery of better

outcomes” as:• clear, consistent, ambitious and measurable objectives• relevant, reliable and up-to-date information• consistent focus across the NHS and Government, and joined

up working at local level• putting the evidence of ‘what works’ into practice• resources, capability and capacity• commissioning for local need• clear accountabilities for commissioning and delivery

Are we choosing health?Healthcare Commission and Audit Commission, July 2008

Page 14: Making a Song and Dance about Child Safety: Policy, Partnerships and Advocacy Karen Saunders Senior Public Health Manager Department of Health West Midlands.

The Ingredients of Success (2)

“My experience is that action on major public health problems only happens when they capture public attention and remain in the spotlight, putting pressure on everyone –

individuals, communities, services, researchers, government – to find solutions.”

Sir Liam Donaldson, Chief Medical Officer

On the State of Public Health, July 2007

www.dh.gov.uk/publications

Page 15: Making a Song and Dance about Child Safety: Policy, Partnerships and Advocacy Karen Saunders Senior Public Health Manager Department of Health West Midlands.

Take Your Partners – Making the Most of Local Networks

“Improving health and reducing health inequalities will only be achieved by primary and community health services working with other organisations. Our health and lifestyle choices are

influenced by a wide range of factors rooted in local communities, including how we develop in school, the quality of social care when we need it, access to leisure facilities and the

quality of our environment including housing, transport, planning and amenities. Primary and community health services will need

to work ever more closely with local authorities and develop innovative partnerships with third sector and independent sector

organisations to forge common goals for improving the health and well-being of communities.”

NHS Next Stage Review: Our vision for primary and community careDepartment of Health, July 2008www.dh.gov.uk/en/Publicationsandstatistics?publications/PublicationsPolicyAndGuidance/DH_085937See also: www.ournhs.nhs.uk/west-midlands-sha/