Venue: Room 2&3 - County Hall, New Road, Oxford OX1 1ND. View directions
Contact: Scrutiny Team Email: scrutiny@oxfordshire.gov.uk
Link: video link https://oxon.cc/PEO18092025
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Apologies for Absence and Temporary Appointments To receive any apologies for absence and temporary
appointments. Minutes: Apologies were received from Cllr Snowdon (substitute: Cllr
Sargent) and Cllr Edosomwan. In the absence of Cllr Snowdon, Cllr Overton, Deputy Chair, took the Chair. |
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Declaration of Interests See guidance note on the back page. Minutes: There were none. |
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The Committee is recommended to APPROVE the minutes of the meeting held on 26 June 2025 and to receive information arising from them. Minutes: The minutes of the meeting held on 26 June 2025 were APRROVED
as a true and accurate record. |
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Petitions and Public Address Members of the public who wish to speak on an item on the
agenda at this meeting, or present a petition, can attend the meeting in person
or ‘virtually’ through an online connection. Requests to speak must be submitted no later than 9am
three working days before the meeting, i.e. 15/09/2025. Requests should be submitted to the Scrutiny Officer
at scrutiny@oxfordshire.gov.uk. If you are speaking ‘virtually’, you may submit a written
statement of your presentation to ensure that if the technology fails, then
your views can still be taken into account. A written copy of your statement
can be provided no later than 9am on the day of the meeting. Written
submissions should be no longer than 1 A4 sheet. Minutes: There were none. |
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Oxfordshire Adults Safeguarding Board Annual Report Karen Fuller, Director of Adult Social Services, Dr Jayne Chidgey-Clark, Independent Chair of Oxfordshire Safeguarding Adults Board, and Steve Turner, Strategic Partnerships Manager – Adult Social Services, have been invited to present the Oxfordshire Adults Safeguarding Board Annual Report. The Committee is asked to consider the report and raise any questions, and to AGREE any recommendations it wishes to make to Cabinet arising therefrom. Minutes: Dr Jayne Chidgey-Clark, Independent Chair of Oxfordshire
Safeguarding Adults Board, Karen Fuller, Director of Adult Social Services,
Victoria Baran, Deputy Director of Adult Social Care, Steven Turner, Strategic
Partnerships Manager – Adult Social Services and Lorraine Henry, Head of
Safeguarding MH DOLS, were invited to present the Oxfordshire Adults
Safeguarding Board (OSAB) Annual Report and answer the Committee’s questions. The Director of Adult Social Services introduced the annual
safeguarding adults report by emphasising its significance as a system-wide
document, highlighting the collaborative work across the health and care system
in Oxfordshire regarding safeguarding, and noting that while the report was
being presented to the committee, it reflected the efforts of multiple
partners. She stressed the importance of oversight for safeguarding the
county’s most vulnerable adults The Independent Chair detailed the board’s four strategic
aims: improving frontline practice across all sectors, enhancing preventative
work to stop abuse before it occurs, assuring the quality of safeguarding
through monitoring referrals and service improvements, and learning from both
safeguarding adult reviews and audits to inform future practice, including
sharing good practice across the county. She also described the board’s
multi-agency composition, the alignment of subgroup work plans to strategic objectives,
and the importance of robust governance and partnership working The Committee raised the following questions and comments
about the OSAB Annual Report: ·
Members sought clarification on the term
"desired outcomes” in the safeguarding report, specifically questioning
whether outcomes were assessed based on what individuals themselves requested
or desired. The Deputy Director explained that safeguarding was tailored to the
individual’s wishes, focusing on what outcomes they want to achieve, rather
than imposing solutions. Early discussions were held with the person, or their
deputy if needed, to guide the team’s work by these goals, often prioritising
risk reduction while respecting personal choices. Officers added that desired
outcomes were tracked through case file audits and ongoing collaboration with
partners to ensure feedback genuinely reflected individuals’ experiences. ·
The definition of self-neglect within the
safeguarding context, specifically asking whether it referred to individuals
whose care needs were unmet due to physical incapacity or to those who, despite
having the physical ability, were unwilling or unable to meet their own care
needs, possibly due to mental health issues. It was clarified that self-neglect
can result from multiple causes, but in safeguarding contexts, it generally
refers to individuals who consistently decline assistance or intervention,
sometimes without being aware of their own deterioration. If an individual was
open to receiving care but had not been referred, the usual assessment process
applied rather than initiating safeguarding procedures. Safeguarding measures
were implemented when individuals continually refuse support, involving a
multi-agency strategy to engage them and establish ongoing relationships aimed
at meeting their needs. · The causes of high staff turnover in adult social care, whether the reasons were consistent with national trends or if there were specific factors unique to Oxfordshire, and how these were identified and addressed. The Director of Adult Social Services reported that staff turnover in Oxfordshire’s adult social care was consistent ... view the full minutes text for item 24/25 |
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Age Well Update on Supporting Older People in Oxfordshire Karen Fuller, Director of Adult Social Services, Ian Bottomley, Deputy Directo of Integrated Commissioning Health, Education and Social Care (HESC), and Isabel Rockingham, Interim Head of Joint Commissioning – Age Well, have been invited to present an Age Well Update on Supporting Older People in Oxfordshire. The Committee is asked to consider the report and raise any questions, and to AGREE any recommendations it wishes to make to Cabinet arising therefrom. Additional documents: Minutes: Karen Fuller, Director of Adult Social Services, Ian
Bottomley, Deputy Director of Integrated Commissioning Health, Education and
Social Care (HESC), and Cheryl Huntbach, Local Area Coordinator, were invited
to present the Age Well Update on Supporting Older People in Oxfordshire and
answer the Committee’s questions. The Deputy Director introduced Age Well by noting
Oxfordshire’s growing population of 137,000 older people, with most not
receiving formal services. He stressed the council’s aim to help seniors live
independently through preventative measures like the Oxfordshire Way. By
addressing loneliness, isolation, and inactivity, and focusing on community
services and system planning, the council had reduced care home admissions and
enabled more older people to stay at home. The Local Area Coordinator outlined the adoption of local
area coordination in Oxfordshire, one of eleven regions using the Australian
model. She described the coordinators' strengths-based, person-centred
approach, their ongoing support without strict referral criteria, and their
role as community connectors. The Local Area Coordinator illustrated its
benefits with an example of an older resident who became more active locally
after coordinator support, showing how early intervention can reduce reliance
on formal care. The Committee raised the following questions and comments
related to the Age Well update: ·
How the original areas with a local area
coordinator were selected for expansion and why only two further areas were
added, despite the initial success. The Deputy Director of Integrated
Commissioning HESC and the Local Area Coordinator stated that new areas were
selected based on public health data identifying locations with deprivation and
need within Oxfordshire. The process also considered local interest and the
capacity to participate, with recruitment panels that included residents. The
decision to expand into two additional areas was influenced by programme costs
and the requirement for financial viability. Local area coordination may
continue to expand where it was assessed as effective, but resource constraints
and existing local interventions meant a countywide rollout was not pursued at
that time. ·
What the definition of rurality was and how it
was considered in the deployment of local area coordinators, how the impact of
these coordinators was measured, and what the potential was for expanding the
model to other highly deprived areas in Oxfordshire. The discussion recognised
that some areas lack community resources and could benefit from local area
coordination. The Deputy Director of Integrated Commissioning HESC noted
rurality was considered, but area selection focused mainly on need and deprivation,
with no single definition for rurality. Impact was measured using both
quantitative data and qualitative stories, though attributing outcomes to
coordinators remains complex due to overlapping services. It was emphasised
that new coordinators should complement, not duplicate, existing interventions
such as Age UK and Brighter Futures. Any expansion of the model will depend on
resources, proven impact, and strong partner collaboration to maximise
effectiveness and avoid duplication. · The Committee discussed the variations in loneliness among individuals living alone in rural and urban areas, as well as the ways in which strategies like social prescribing respond to these issues. The Deputy ... view the full minutes text for item 25/25 |
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Committee Forward Work Plan The Committee is recommended to AGREE its work programme for forthcoming meetings, having heard any changes from previous iterations, and taking account of the Cabinet Forward Plan and of the Budget Management Monitoring Report. Minutes: The Committee AGREED the proposed work programme. |
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Committee Action and Recommendation Tracker The Committee is recommended to NOTE the progress of previous recommendations and actions arising from previous meetings, having raised any questions on the contents. Minutes: The Committee NOTED the action and recommendation tracker. |
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Responses to Scrutiny Recommendations Attached is the Cabinet response to the People Overview and Scrutiny Committee report on Co-Production in Adult Social Care. The Committee is asked to NOTE the response. Minutes: The Committee NOTED the Cabinet responses to the Co-production in Adult Social Services recommendations. |