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Effective commissioning for looked after children

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The need to make efficiency savings whilst still improving ... Universities to carry out an 18 month study of LA and VAA adoption costs. Adoption costs research ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Effective commissioning for looked after children


1
Effective commissioning for looked after children
  • Mary Lucking, Head of Adoption,
  • CIC Division, DCSF
  • Julie Selwyn, Director, Hadley Centre for
    Adoption and Foster Care Studies, Univ of Bristol
  • Claire Lazarus, Regional Lead, CSP

2
Format for the workshop
  • Commissioning Context
  • Sufficiency Guidance
  • Adoption Research how it can help you
  • Discussion
  • Interactive throughout please!

3
What are the Major Commissioning Issues?
  • 1. Where should we put our overall resource to
    best help children and families particularly
    children in need?
  • 2. How do we ensure that services will be
    efficient and effective and improve outcomes?
  • 3. How do we make sure that services deliver
    desired outcomes?

4
CIC - The Commissioning Challenge
  • Increased referrals
  • Increased number of children in care
  • The need to make efficiency savings whilst still
    improving the lives and outcomes for our looked
    after children and young people

5
CIC - The Commissioning Challenge 2
  • Strategic commissioning for CIC - research with
    providers and commissioners suggests the key gaps
    are
  • quality of individual needs assessments
  • strategic needs assessment and demand analysis
  • market management
  • procurement including purchasing and contract
    management
  • adopting a whole systems approach
  • involvement of children and young people in
    placements decisions


5
6
Examples service re-design
  • South West
  • Eastern Region 5

7
Sufficiency Guidance securing sufficient
Accommodation for LAC
  • Discussion document examples of interesting
    practice
  • Sufficiency Guidance itself
  • From April 2010 if they have not already done
    so, local authorities should include in relevant
    commissioning strategies their plans for meeting
    the sufficiency duty
  • From April 2011 Working with their CT partners,
    local authorities must be in a position to
    secure, where reasonably practicable, sufficient
    accommodation for looked after children in their
    local authority area

8
The new sufficiency duty
  • Builds on existing duties eg section 17 of the
    1989 Act and Section 20
  • An explicit new duty on LAs to act strategically
    to address gaps in provision
  • Requires LAs to have regard to the benefit of
    having
  • A number of accommodation providers in their area
  • A range of accommodation capable of meeting
    different needs

9
How to move forward?
  • Existing good practice requirements can best be
    met through a step change in commissioning
    practice
  • Support and maintain diversity of services
    including a focus on early intervention and
    prevention
  • Placing children in area where reasonably
    practicable
  • Supporting the market to deliver more appropriate
    placements and other services locally

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16
Effective commissioning for looked after
children adoption
Dr Julie Selwyn, University of Bristol
17
Adoption context
  • 3,200 (5) children
  • adopted from care in
  • 2008-9.
  • 150 local authorities and 27 third sector
    voluntary adoption agencies (VAAs).

18
Adoption - context
  • When adoption is the right option, children in
    care are placed by LAs with their own adopters,
    or with adopters provided by another LA or a VAA

VAAs adopters
Other LAs adopters
LAs adopters
19
Inter-agency fee
  • The fee charged is called the inter-agency fee.
    Currently the fees are

20
Adoption outcomes
  • More stable placements than foster or residential
    care
  • Most children have good psycho-social outcomes
  • Provides a family for life
  • Less likely to be NEET than those who stay in
    care

21
But...
  • Research suggest that
  • about 1 in every 4 children
  • recommended for
  • adoption are never adopted
  • Nearly all will probably stay in care for the
    rest of their childhood
  • Their outcomes are likely to be poorer than they
    could have been

22
Meanwhile...
  • VAAs say they have a surplus of adopters,
    especially for difficult to place children
  • Some LAs assert VAAs are too expensive, using
    them as a last resort after months of searching
    or not using them at all

23
Better information better decisions
  • Are the assumptions that VAAs are too expensive
    right?
  • DCSF wanted evidence to help commissioners decide
  • It asked Bristol and Loughborough Universities to
    carry out an 18 month study of LA and VAA
    adoption costs

24
Adoption costs research
25
Adoption budgets
  • Mean expenditure 1,876,336
  • Variation in the use of the inter-agency fee-
    1-18
  • Variation in performance - two LAs were three
    times more effective at placing children and four
    times less costly than the poorest performing LA

26
Costs of adoption
  • LAs and VAAs have similar levels of overheads as
    a proportion of total expenditure
  • Different presentation and budget management
    leading to
  • Perceptions that VAAs are more expensive

27
VAAs and LAs
  • Assuming overhead rate of 43 of total
    expenditure, achieving each adoption costs

28
Numbers and characteristics of children
29
Staying in care costs - example
  • Joe is aged 3 and is recommended for adoption by
    the adoption panel
  • But his social worker has trouble finding LA
    adopters and are reluctant to go to a VAA due to
    the perceived cost
  • As Joe gets older, his adoption becomes
    increasingly unlikely

30
Staying in care costs - example
  • Joes stay in care continues. By the time he is
    18, Joe has been in foster care for 15 years
  • The care bill is about 360,000 nearly 10 x the
    actual cost of a VAA adoption

31
Commissioning adoption services- challenges
  • Ensuring sufficient numbers of adoptive
    placements
  • Sustainability
  • Choice

32
Partnership case study
33
The London Borough of Harrow and Coram
partnership
  • Problems identified at LB Harrow
  • transient unstable workforce.
  • workforce lacking in confidence and skills
  • poor adoption performance
  • (only 3 adopted)
  • children not placed or
  • long delays

34
New model
  • A LA partnership with Coram a VAA delivering
    domestic adoption services
  • Focused on achieving better outcomes for children
  • What does the partnership look like?

35
Governance structures
  • Initial three year contract
  • New permanency tracking panel established.
  • Coram working IN the LA
  • LB Harrow remained responsible for its looked
    after children
  • Workforce strategy established

36
Managing internal change
  • Suspicion and fear of new arrangement
  • Issues of accountability and power
  • Major difficulties with access to electronic
    databases and files
  • Affected all parts of the service
  • Workforce strategy established

37
Partnership outcomes
  • Adoption performance
  • improved.
  • Better planning processes and less delay for all
    children.
  • Harrow staff more confident in making decisions.
  • More stable workforce.

38
Questions?
39
What are the barriers to finding timely and
suitable placements effectively?
40
How will you use this research to improve
sufficiency?
41
How can DCSF/CSP help improve local delivery?
42
Can the interagency fee help or hinder effective
commissioning?
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