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/OJHOSC16042026
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Apologies for Absence and Temporary Appointments Minutes: Apologies for absence were received from Councillor Judith
Edwards. |
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Declarations of Interest - see guidance note on the back page Minutes: Councillor Garnett declared a personal interest as an employee of the University of Oxford, Primary Health Care Department. Barbara Shaw declared a personal interest as Chair of Healthwatch Oxfordshire (HWO) and as a Patient Safety Partner at Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust (OUH). Sylvia Buckingham declared a personal interest as a Patient Safety Partner and a Trustee of Healthwatch Oxfordshire. The Chair declared her standing interest as an employee of a national epilepsy and sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP) charity. No further declarations were made. The Committee NOTED the declarations of interest. |
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Minutes of the previous meeting Minutes: The Committee considered the minutes of the meeting held on 29 January 2026. The Committee AGREED that: the minutes of 29 January
2026 be amended, where necessary, following checking against the meeting
recording to capture aspects of what a member of the public raised regarding
eyecare services; and that the final amended version be treated as a true and
accurate record once those checks had been completed. |
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Speaking to or Petitioning the Committee 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 present a petition must be submitted no
later than 9am ten working days before the meeting. Requests to speak must be submitted no later than 9am
three working days before the meeting, i.e. Monday 13 April 2026. Requests should be submitted to the Scrutiny Officer at omid.nouri@oxfordshire.gov.uk
AND 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: Three members of the public had registered to address the Committee. Dr Andrew Johnson (retired Consultant Surgeon): Dr Johnson spoke on maternity services at Horton General
Hospital; due to technical issues he could not join live, so a written
statement was read to the Committee. He said removing consultant-led maternity in 2016 reduced local access and reassurance for families, and raised concerns about capacity and quality at the John Radcliffe, citing a CQC “requires improvement” rating. He argued workforce pressures could be mitigated by reinstating a consultant-led Horton unit using rotational staffing from the John Radcliffe, noting similar models elsewhere. The Committee NOTED that maternity services remained an ongoing focus of the Committee’s scrutiny work. Joan Stewart (Keep Our NHS Public): Ms Stewart said long waits and limited theatre capacity at Oxford Eye Hospital persisted, with reliance on leased theatres and constrained consultant availability. She warned delays were driving patients to the independent sector, undermining NHS training, workforce sustainability and financial viability. She also raised concerns about a lack of data on A&E presentations with complications after independent-sector surgery, arguing this reduced transparency and effective contract management. The Committee was asked to continue scrutinising eye care services and to investigate further. Jane Southworth (Member of Public): Ms Southworth described being moved onto an unexplained
“virtual clinic” pathway at Oxford Eye Hospital despite longstanding glaucoma
and awaiting surgery, with no in-person ophthalmologist and scans reviewed
remotely weeks later. She said criteria and safeguards were unclear, the model
was difficult for older/frail patients, and she requested Eye Hospital senior
managers attend a future Committee meeting to explain the changes and the
impact on the hospital’s teaching role. In response, the Chair thanked Ms Southworth and confirmed that the Committee took these concerns seriously. The Committee NOTED the public representations. |
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Response to HOSC Recommendations The Committee has received Acceptances and Responses to recommendations made as part of the following item(s): 1. Oxfordshire Neighbourhood Health Plan. 2. Adults Autism and ADHD Services The Committee is recommended to NOTE the responses. Additional documents:
Minutes: The Committee considered written responses received to previous recommendations issued by the Committee, including responses relating to:
The Committee NOTED the responses to previous
recommendations. |
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The Chair will provide a verbal update on relevant issues since the last meeting. A request for information has been submitted on behalf of the Oxfordshire Joint Health Overview and Scrutiny Committee seeking assurance regarding the timeliness and oversight of Learning from Lives and Deaths of people with a learning disability and autistic people (LeDeR) reviews. The request was for a brief written update from the Integrated Care Board to the Committee covering: 1. Current performance against NHS England LeDeR Key Performance Indicators (including completion timescales) and the current backlog position. 2. Governance and accountability: where LeDeR sits in Oxfordshire/Thames Valley quality governance; and how learning/actions are tracked to completion. 3. Capacity and resilience of the LeDeR function (local area contact/reviewer capacity; Quality Assurance arrangements). 4. Recovery actions and milestones for bringing timeliness back on track (if applicable), and evidence of impact from learning. The Buckinghamshire, Oxfordshire, and Berkshire West Joint Health Overview Scrutiny Committee (BOB JHOSC) convened its last meeting on 17 March 2026. Given the establishment of a new Thames Valley Integrated Care Board (ICB) with a new geography, a proposal will be submitted to all the local authorities within the new ICB boundaries to formally dissolve the BOB JHOSC and to establish a new Thames Valley JHOSC. A letter was sent to the Chief Executive and Chair of Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust on behalf of the Committee in relation to maternity services. The letter includes a request for clarification regarding errors in the data submitted in the report to the Committee on maternity services. This letter can be found in the agenda papers for this item. A HOSC report containing recommendations on maternity services was submitted on behalf of the Committee to Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust. This can be found in the agenda papers for this item. Given that there remains one vacant cooptee post on the Committee, a formal recruitment exercise will be initiated, with the aim of recruiting a third co-optee member of the Committee by the next meeting in June. The Committee is recommended to NOTE the Chair’s update having raised any relevant questions. Additional documents:
Minutes: The Chair
provided a comprehensive verbal update on activity since the Committee’s
previous meeting in January.
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Mental Health Motion from Council The purpose of this item is to address the Mental Health
Motion passed by Oxfordshire County Council at its meeting on 9 December 2025.
Oxfordshire County Council passed a motion requesting that the Health &
Wellbeing Board (HWB) invite the Health Overview & Scrutiny Committee
(JHOSC) to investigate and report on how mental health services provided by
Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust and wider system partners are addressing the
rising prevalence and impact of poor mental health among adults and children in
Oxfordshire. The wording of the motion agreed was as follows: “This Council being deeply concerned by the impact of
poor mental health on adults and children in the County asks the Health and
Wellbeing Board to request the Health Overview and Scrutiny Committee to
investigate and report back to them and to the County Council on how Mental
Health services provided by Oxford Health and other organisations are tackling
this issue. Such an investigation of issues needs to include
addressing accessibility to services including: · Prevention · Assessment · Therapeutic
support · Medication · Emergency
intervention such as "sectioning" · Inpatient beds How these issues impact on other public services such
Community Safety, Public Health, Housing, Schools, Fire and Rescue and the
Police also needs to be assessed and understood. Most of all poor mental health
impacts on individuals, families, and communities around the County and this
must be addressed. Council requests that the outcome of the investigation be
sent to the appropriate Secretaries of State.” The Oxfordshire
Joint Health Overview Scrutiny Committee is RECOMMENDED to: a) NOTE the request from the Health and Wellbeing Board for the Committee to undertake scrutiny of adults and childrens mental health services as outlined in the wording of the motion detailed in paragraph 3. b)
AGREE that the Committee will continue
its scrutiny of adults and children's mental health as outlined in its work
programme, and that it will report back within its annual report to Council,
details of the adults and children's mental health scrutiny undertaken Minutes: The
Committee considered a report by the Health Scrutiny Officer relating to a
motion passed by Oxfordshire County Council at its meeting on 9 December 2025.
The motion requested that the Health and Wellbeing Board invite the Joint
Health Overview and Scrutiny Committee to investigate and report on how mental
health services provided by Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust and wider system
partners were addressing the rising prevalence and impact of poor mental health
among adults and children in Oxfordshire. The Chair
outlined the context to the motion, explaining that it had been debated late in
the Full Council agenda and had received cross‑party support, reflecting
the shared recognition of the scale of mental health need locally and
nationally. She advised that, due to time constraints at Full Council, it had
not been possible for the Committee to explain that substantial scrutiny of
children’s emotional wellbeing and mental health services had already been
completed in November 2025, resulting in a detailed report with multiple
recommendations, the formal response to which was still awaited. The Chair
explained that the Committee’s agreed work programme already included scrutiny
of adult and older adult mental health services, scheduled for the current
meeting, including consideration of transition issues between children’s and
adult services. She therefore proposed that the Committee formally note the
request arising from the Full Council motion, reaffirm its existing and ongoing
scrutiny of mental health services across the age spectrum, and incorporate its
findings into its next Annual Report to Council. The Chair
confirmed that mental health was already a recurring theme across the
Committee’s work programme, and that future scrutiny items, including sessions
with the ambulance service and other providers, would provide further
opportunities to explore system‑wide impacts. She further proposed that,
as part of its formal response to the motion, the Committee could write to the
Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, summarising key findings from
its scrutiny of children’s and adult mental health services and highlighting
relevant national context. Following
discussion, the Committee indicated that it was content with this approach. The
Committee AGREED to:
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Adult and Older Adult Mental Health Services in Oxfordshire Dan Leveson (Director of Places and Communities, Thames Valley Integrated Care Board) and Rob Bale (Chief Operating Officer for Mental Health and Learning Disability, Oxford Health NHSFT) have been invited to present a report with an update on Adult and Older Adult Mental Health Services in Oxfordshire. The Committee is invited to consider the report, raise any questions and AGREE any recommendations arising it may wish to make. Additional documents:
Minutes: Dr Lola Martos (Consultant old age psychiatrist and Clinical Director
Oxfordshire, BaNES, Swindon & Wiltshire Mental
Health Directorate, Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust); Catherine
Sage (Associate Director, Adult & Older Adult Mental Health and
Partnerships Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust); Dr Rob Bale (Consultant
Psychiatrist and Chief Operating Officer for Mental Health and Learning
Disability Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust); Jess Wilshire (Chief Executive,
Oxfordshire Mind); Matthew Tait (Executive Delivery Officer, Thames Valley
ICB); Karen Fuller (Director of Adult Social Care, Oxfordshire County Council);
and Bhavna Taank (Head of Joint Commissioning Live Well); were invited to
attend in order to present a report with an update on Adult and Older Adult
Mental Health services in Oxfordshire. The Chair
welcomed the officers and set out the context for the item, noting that it
formed part of the Committee’s agreed work programme and responded directly to
the motion passed by Full Council in December 2025, requesting further scrutiny
of mental health services. The Oxford
Health NHS Foundation Trust (OH) Chief Operating Officer for Mental Health and
Learning Disability outlined the national and local context, explaining that
adult mental health services continued to experience sustained increases in
demand, rising clinical complexity, and significant workforce pressures.
Referrals to adult mental health services had increased year‑on‑year,
with a growing proportion of people presenting with complex trauma, co‑existing
substance misuse, neurodivergence and social needs such as housing instability.
These pressures had affected flow through services and contributed to
challenges in meeting waiting‑time expectations in some pathways. The
Associate Director for Adult and Older Adult Mental Health and Partnerships
provided further detail on community services and access. The Community Mental
Health Transformation Programme had been central to current service redesign
and aimed to strengthen multidisciplinary working, improve access, and embed
voluntary and community sector support within neighbourhood‑based models.
While investment had supported the development of new roles such as peer
support workers, officers noted that recruitment and retention of experienced
mental health professionals, including nurses and consultant psychiatrists,
remained challenging and continued to place pressure on teams. Members
queried waiting times for assessment and treatment, particularly for adults
with serious mental illness and for older adults accessing memory services and
dementia pathways. The OH Consultant Old Age Psychiatrist and Clinical Director
acknowledged that demand for older adult mental health services, including
memory assessment, had increased substantially, reflecting demographic change
and greater awareness. She advised that this had led to longer waits in some areas, but emphasised that work was under way to streamline
diagnostic pathways, strengthen links with primary care, and ensure that people
received meaningful support while awaiting formal diagnosis. The Committee explored the operation of crisis services, including crisis resolution and home treatment teams. Officers explained that crisis services were under sustained pressure, with high demand and increasing acuity, but that the Trust remained committed to supporting people safely in the community wherever possible. The Executive Delivery Officer for the Integrated Care Board highlighted the importance of system‑wide coordination, noting ... view the full minutes text for item 21/26 |
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Update on the development of the All-Age Autism Strategy Karen Fuller (Director of Adult Social Care, Oxfordshire County Council) has been invited to present a report on the ongoing development of an All-Age Autism Strategy for Oxfordshire. The Committee is invited to consider the report, raise any questions and AGREE any recommendations arising it may wish to make. PLEASE NOTE: The report for this item is to follow and will be published as an addenda. Additional documents:
Minutes: Karen Fuller (Corporate Director - Adult Social Care); Bhavna Taank
(Head of Joint Commissioning – Live Well – Housing, Education and Social Care);
Dee Nic Sitric (Chief Executive- Autism Champions and
Expert by Experience); and Matthew Tait (Executive Delivery Officer, Thames
Valley Integrated Care Board); attended to present and discuss the draft All‑Age
Autism Strategy for Oxfordshire and the strategy’s ongoing development. The Chair
introduced the item by noting that the strategy remained in draft and that the
Committee welcomed the opportunity to provide scrutiny at this stage of its
development prior to its sign off at the Health and Wellbeing Board. The
Corporate Director – Adult Social Care described the strategy as having been
“on quite a journey” and stressed that, while it remained draft, it represented
a significant shift in approach and language. The strategy had been co‑produced
across multiple organisations and that the drafting process had required
repeated pauses, reflection and revision, particularly where language and
framing risked reinforcing a deficit narrative. The Chief
Executive of Autism Champions and Expert by Experience provided a detailed
account of lived experience and, critically, the lived experience of
participating in co‑production itself. She described co‑production
as a term that was frequently used but often misunderstood,
and explained that meaningful co‑production required autistic
people and the autistic community to be involved from the beginning and
throughout delivery, rather than being consulted at the end. The experience of
attending and waiting through an extended agenda had been anxiety‑provoking
even though she had supportive “anchors” in the room and prior experience of
attending. Small acts of reassurance (such as being approached and acknowledged
in a supportive manner by the Health Scrutiny Officer), constituted practical
“reasonable adjustments” and were often more impactful than large, formal
interventions. The Chief
Executive of Autism Champions and Expert by Experience then addressed the
broader content and direction of the strategy. She described autism as
frequently “invisible” in ways that made system engagement harder, noting that
autism could not be reliably inferred by appearance and that autistic
presentation varied widely across individuals. She described the challenge of
engaging key stakeholders and seldom‑heard voices, particularly non‑speaking
autistic people, emphasising that engaging non‑speakers required time,
relational practice and specialist expertise that were often difficult to
secure within tight drafting timetables and constraints. A
significant part of the discussion focused on the difficulty of system
engagement during the strategy’s development. The Chief Executive of Autism
Champions and Expert by Experience explained that securing the right
stakeholders “in a room” had been extremely difficult and described this as a
recurring barrier, despite some successful engagement activity. A major
engagement session at the King’s Centre had attracted high attendance from
autistic people and which had been led effectively by autistic members of the
working group, but she stressed that engagement remained one of the hardest
aspects of delivery because the system often struggled to understand or
prioritise autism as a cross‑cutting issue. The Committee ... view the full minutes text for item 22/26 |
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Healthwatch Oxfordshire Update Veronica Barry (Executive Director, Healthwatch Oxfordshire) has been invited to present the Healthwatch Oxfordshire Update report. The Committee is invited to consider the Healthwatch Oxfordshire update and NOTE it having raised any questions arising. Minutes: Veronica
Barry (Executive Director, Healthwatch Oxfordshire) was invited to present the
Healthwatch Oxfordshire Update Report. Healthwatch’s
ongoing statutory role in gathering and representing patient and public
experience across Oxfordshire’s health and social care system was explained to
the Committee. Healthwatch’s continued engagement with a range of partnership
boards and system forums was also highlighted. Members
noted the publication of a number of recent
Healthwatch reports and pieces of community research. These included a report
on experiences of musculoskeletal services, which
identified persistent concerns around communication, appointment availability,
cancellations, referral pathways and waiting times, alongside some positive
feedback once care was accessed. The Committee noted that recommendations had
been issued and that responses had been received from commissioners and the
provider. The
update also highlighted community research activity, including work
with the Sunrise Multicultural Centre in Banbury on cancer awareness and
barriers to access, and engagement with rural communities as part of wider work
on health inequalities. Members noted that these findings were intended to
complement formal system performance data. The
Committee received an update on Enter and View activity, including visits
to Katharine House Hospice and Ashurst Ward at Littlemore Hospital, and the
publication of an Enter and View report relating to St Leonard’s Ward at
Wallingford Community Hospital. Members noted that all reports, including
provider responses, were publicly available. Healthwatch
Oxfordshire also reported on recent and forthcoming public engagement
activity, including a March 2026 webinar on
Oxfordshire’s work as a Marmot Place and a planned webinar providing an
opportunity for public input into the Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust
strategy. Members
noted recurring themes from Healthwatch intelligence, including difficulties
accessing GP and dental services, administrative barriers, and challenges
navigating complaints processes. It was also noted that some forthcoming
Healthwatch reports would be published after the local elections in line with
Purdah guidance. The Committee NOTED
the Healthwatch Oxfordshire Update. |
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Health Visitor Services in Oxfordshire Ansaf Azhar (Director of Public Health, Oxfordshire County Council) and Emma Leaver (Chief Operating Officer- Community Health Services, Dentistry & Primary Care, Oxford Health NHSFT) have been invited to present a report on Health Visitor Services in Oxfordshire. The Committee is invited to consider the report, raise any questions and AGREE any recommendations arising it may wish to make. Additional documents: Minutes: Donna Husband (Head of Public Health Programmes – Start Well – Public
Health, Oxfordshire County Council); Mark Chambers (Head of Children’s
Community Services Community Health Services, Dentistry and Primary Care
Directorate | Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust); Emma Leaver (Chief Operating
Officer for Community Health Services, Dentistry & Primary Care, Oxford
Health NHS Foundation Trust); and Taylor Nicola (Senior Clinical Lead for
Public Health) were invited to present a report on Health Visitor Services in
Oxfordshire. Officers
outlined the extent of organisational change following the establishment of the
integrated 0–19 Children’s Community Public Health Service, which had brought
together health visiting, school nursing, and related services within locality‑based
teams operating under a single point of access. This model had been informed by
learning from the COVID‑19 period, evidence on widening inequalities
across Oxfordshire, and the County’s commitment to the Marmot principles. Members
questioned reported performance against mandated contacts, particularly delayed
new birth and early years reviews, and sought clarity on how such delays arose
and how risks were mitigated. The statutory window for new birth visits was
extremely narrow and that apparent “misses” often reflected legitimate clinical
and social circumstances, including prolonged hospital stays, overlapping
midwifery involvement, parental choice to stay with family out of county, or
non‑attendance at clinic appointments. Officers
stressed that recorded performance metrics did not fully reflect the extent of
follow‑up activity undertaken by teams. Examples were provided of
families who had initially failed to attend scheduled appointments but were
subsequently followed up through home visits, enabling practitioners to assess
both the child and the home environment. The Committee was reassured that
delayed contacts did not equate to withdrawal of support and that persistence,
professional curiosity, and escalation were embedded in practice. Members
expressed concern that families who did not engage might be those most at risk,
particularly in more deprived or vulnerable circumstances. Officers described
clear escalation policies, including structured records review, checks against
GP and safeguarding databases, and liaison with other universal and specialist
services. Health visitors did not work in isolation but as part of
multidisciplinary arrangements designed to ensure that no child became
“invisible” to services. The
Committee explored arrangements for transition from maternity to health
visiting care. Officers described close operational integration with midwifery
services, including daily birth notifications, shared vulnerability scoring,
and regular local and strategic meetings. The introduction of improved digital
systems was noted to have strengthened information flow, although challenges
remained around county borders, private births, and families moving shortly
after delivery. Members were
advised that vulnerability assessments were dynamic rather than static and were
reviewed throughout the antenatal and early postnatal period, enabling
proactive targeting of additional support where risk increased. Officers
clarified that reported data focused on face‑to‑face contacts, even
where telephone contact or hospital‑based engagement had occurred,
creating a risk that activity was under‑represented in headline figures. Members referred to sections of the report describing increasing acuity, safeguarding activity, and complexity within caseloads, and questioned how this was ... view the full minutes text for item 24/26 |
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The Committee is recommended to AGREE to the proposed work programme for its upcoming meetings. Minutes: The
Committee considered its Forward Work Programme. The
Committee AGREED the proposed Forward Work Programme for the June 2026
meeting, and to delegate authority to the Chair and Health Scrutiny Officer to
make necessary adjustments to the programme should circumstances require
changes between meetings. |
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Actions and Recommendations Tracker The Committee is recommended to NOTE the progress made against agreed actions and recommendations having raised any questions. Minutes: The
Committee NOTED the Actions and Recommendations Tracker. |