Www.opm.co.uk Commissioning for personalisation in the round.
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Transcript of Www.opm.co.uk Commissioning for personalisation in the round.
‘Consumerist - . In the first approach the users are patients in need of timely and effective services from the NHS that are personalised to their needs. In the first approach the professionals – medical practitioners – must deploy their knowledge and skills in a timely and effective way to solve a problem for the user. The more that is done in a personalised, considerate and responsive manner the better.
Personalisation - the users are co-producers of the good in question. They are active participants in the process – deciding to manage their lives in a different way – rather than dependent users…. the key is to build up the knowledge and confidence of the users to take action themselves, to self-manage their health without turning to the professionals. The professionals deploy their knowledge to help the users devise their own solutions – smoking cessation programmes, exercise regimes – which suit their needs.’
Source: Charles Leadbeater ‘Personalisation through Participation: a new script for public services’, Demos, 2004
From consumerism to personalisation
Outcomes
Public sector
Contracted Private Sector
Voluntary Organisations
Commercial services - shops, jobs, finance, housing
Adults and children
and their Families
Communities
and
Friends
ORGANISATIONS SERVICE USERS
SOCIAL CAPITAL
Coproduction
Based on: ‘Coproduction in Children’s Services’, Clive Miller and Sue Stirling, OPM, 2004
Personalisation: the key components
Individualised purchasing and coordination of services
Integration of non individually purchased services around individuals
Based on: ‘Putting People First, the whole story’, DH 2008
Personalisation of public and commercial universal services
Building and utilising individual capacity and social capital
Whole life commissioning
Individualised purchasing and coordination of services
Building and utilising individual capacity and social capital
Personalisation of public and commercial universal services
Personalisation: the key components
Sports clubs pro-actively include
Expert patients
Personal budgets and self directed support
Integration of non individually purchased targeted services around individuals
Individualised purchasing and coordination of services
Building and utilising individual capacity and social capital
Personalisation of public and commercial universal services
Personalisation and social capital
Integration of non individually purchased targeted services around individuals
Self care: current role and potential
Source: ‘Coproduction in public services: a new partnership with citizens’, Matthew Horne and Tom Shirley, Cabinet Office, March 2009
Source: ‘Coproduction in public services: a new partnership with citizens’, Matthew Horne and Tom Shirley, Cabinet Office, March 2009
The role of social capital in everyday life
Source: Clive Miller, Social capital, co-production and the delivery of Putting People First: scoping a framework for social capital’, DH August 2009
Individualised purchasing and coordination of services
Building and utilising individual capacity and social capital
Personalisation of public and commercial universal services
Personalisation of universal services
Integration of non individually purchased targeted services around individuals
Well-being Care
Universal services
Targeted services
Current use of the universal - targeted services continuum
Universal services
Universal services
Targeted services Targeted
services
Well-being Care
Universal services
Targeted services
Potential use of the universal - targeted services continuum
Universal services
Universal services
Personalising universal servicesRefocusing
• Non health and social care transformation programmes – make use of wider personalisation or linked initiatives such as Total Place and Respect.
• Ownership – all public and commercial universal services see people who use social care as integral to their customer base
• Targeted services – focus on supporting use of universal services rather than creating substitutes
Service redesign
• Coproduction – work with socially excluded people to identify how they can be supported by the universal service to enable more effective coproduction of outcomes.
• Differentiation – to enable universal services to be directly accessible, affordable and acceptable to a much wider range of people and life styles
• Collaboration – with other universal and other targeted service providers to enable people to easily find a way of using the service that suits their requirements and abilities.
Service organisation
• Community run – where possible enable local people, including those who are socially excluded, to run part or all of any universal service, including budget devolution
• Voluntary and community sector – move away from targeted to universal service provision
Based on: ‘Service Transformation through Market Reshaping’, Report for Department of Health, OPM July 2009
Individualised purchasing and coordination of services
Building and utilising individual capacity and social capital
Integration of non individually purchased targeted services around individuals
Personalisation of public and commercial universal services
Personalisation of non individually purchased targeted services
Personalising preventive, early intervention and re-ablement services
Refocusing
• Whole system access – view prevention and re-ablement as a whole system use of services rather than specific health and social care targeted services
• Self directed support – apply the principles and devolve funding to individuals wherever possible
Service redesign
• Pathways – analyse the typical pathways that people experience and work with them to reshape services and pathways to enable choice and achieve more effective coproduction of outcomes
• Individual control – enable the individual to self assess, make choices and secure the supports that meet their own requirements and resources
• Information – proactively provide information and advice to individuals and carers as soon as possible, and on a continuing basis to enable them to consider support options
Service organisation
• Coordination – ensure the individual rather than a lead professional and the care pathway are at the centre of service coordination.
• Business case – develop a robust business case and funding process to support a multi sector approach
Based on: ‘Service Transformation through Market Reshaping’, Report for Department of Health, OPM July 2009
Individualised purchasing and coordination of services
Building and utilising individual capacity and social capital
Integration of non individually purchased targeted services around individuals
Personalisation of public and commercial universal services
Personalisation through individualised purchasing and coordination of services
Framework contracts
Service personal-isation
Personal budgets
Three key componentsPersonalised: PB holders using direct payments or ISFs, and self-funders purchase personalised services within the framework contract, sometimes using person-centred ‘mini tenders’
Source: ‘Contracting for personalised outcomes’, DH 2009
Personalisation and prevention
Primary prevention
Secondary prevention
Tertiary prevention
Integrated service pathway
Individualised purchasing and coordination of services
Building and utilising individual capacity and social capital
Personalisation of public and commercial universal services
Integration of non individually purchased targeted services around individuals
Personalisation of public and commercial universal services
Personalisation of public and commercial universal services
Building and utilising individual capacity and social capital
Building and utilising individual capacity and social capital
Integration of non individually purchased targeted services around individuals
Individual or community ownership and control – designing, managing, delivering, evaluating; decision making; portable budgets
Individual capacity and social capital – affordable; ability based; developmental and reciprocal; efficient for all
Life centred – whole life; outcomes focused; what ever works; all services and how they are organised and delivered
Information – accessible and timely; pro and interactive
Choice - type of service, provider, staff; cost and quality; when and intensity; support planning and management support; only constrained by genuine risk and legality
Coordinated - with individually relevant services; individually controlled
How do we know the service system is personalised?
Fully personalised
Not personalised
Personal budgets in PbBorough