33 Overview of Integrated Care Programme
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12.30 pm
To provide the Committee with assurance of smooth transfers of care, capacity and demand management.
1.20pm LUNCH
Minutes:
The Chair said that this was a first draft of what could
become a more performance monitoring report over the course of the municipal
year. This report would inform the Committee of how the system was designed and
would constantly evolve to ensure smooth transfers of care, capacity
and demand management.
The Chair invited Cllr Tim Bearder (Cabinet Member for Adult
Social Care), Karen Fuller (Corporate Director for Adult Social Care), Lily
O’Connor (Director of Urgent Care, Oxfordshire CCG), Ben Riley (Oxford Health),
Sam Foster (Oxfordshire University Hospital), David Duran (South Central
Ambulance Services) and Penny Thewlis (Age UK Oxfordshire).
These points were highlighted during
the debate:
·
93.3% of social care in the County has been
rated good or outstanding as of 3rd May this year, which was
encouraging. Nevertheless, there were huge challenges coming ahead, if they
were not properly funded, with a whole host of new statutory responsibilities
because of the new care reforms that had come forward.
·
Habits of the population had changed massively
in the way how they want to access healthcare which put a pressure on ambulance
services. All of
the providers were committed in joint working to provide exemplary healthcare
to the population, such as new clinical modules, new booking and referral
standard for patient’s care, partnership working for developing new and
innovative service with collaborative working not just with health providers
and commissioners but also with voluntary sector.
·
Digital system was one of the challenges that
the partnership would be looking to improve.
For example, a 999 call would be received by one service/team which
would not necessarily be shared with other primary and secondary care providers
(such as GPs, etc). There was an ongoing
work to merge these systems into a single portal.
·
The biggest part of the programme would be
focused on prevention and assessing people at their homes in
order to reduce the length of time patients spend in bed.
·
On a point of how this would link with Community
Strategy – a lot of what has been presented and discussed today was part of the
Community Strategy as the Strategy was much bigger and would be presented at
one of the future Committee meetings.
The conversation held today was about the partnership working and
proposed pilots for better provision of healthcare.
·
More detailed data in terms of patients’
feedback would be available by the end of the year (6 monthly data).
·
Pathway 1 where patients require additional
support to return home; Oxfordshire have performed below the national average
due to challenges with workforce pressures which have resulted in pick up rate
from bed-based care below expected levels.
·
There would be an additional funding that we
would be given to GPs in order to coordinate the
communication between secondary care and the GPs.
· In terms of carers in a need of urgent care at the hospital – instead of taking person who has been cared for to the hospital because their carer had fallen, a dedicated team would stay ... view the full minutes text for item 33