Title: Developing Socially Inclusive Practice Eastern Region
1Developing Socially Inclusive PracticeEastern
Region
- Wednesday 19 April 2006Bluntisham
- Tom Dodd CSIP
2Social and Economic Inclusion
- Social and economic EXCLUSION is based on the
reality that a variety of conditions exist and
interact to exclude or leave out people in
many groups and subpopulations in our society. - Economic inequality is frequently associated with
conditions such as racism and vulnerability based
on age, gender, sexual orientation, disability,
and other life circumstances. Therefore, people
experience inequality and get pushed to the
margins of society in many ways.
3Social and Economic Inclusion
- Strategies for Social and economic INCLUSION
focus on these multi-dimensional inequities and
work to close the distance between excluded
groups and the larger society in the following
ways - Economic by reducing gaps in income that create
inequities in the sharing of societys wealth and
that force people into poverty, including many
children. - Spatial by making public space more accessible
to all community members and providing health and
social support services close to where people
live (e.g. community-based services for people
with disabilities rather than institutions far
away from family and friends).
4Social and Economic Inclusion
- Relational by promoting positive relationships
among groups and individuals within communities
and across sectors so that all identify with,
feel they belong to, and are part of the
community (i.e. not isolated or left out for
lack of social connections nor rejected or
alienated by stereotyping and labeling). - Functional/Developmental by recognizing and
valuing the worth and contributions of all
members of the community and investing in the
growth and developmental potential of all people
(e.g. structuring learning/training environments
for street youth in a way that motivates them
and tailors education and training programs to
their learning needs).
5Social and Economic Inclusion
- Participation/Political by ensuring that the
structures and processes are in place so that
everyone has a voice in the planning and
decision- making that affects their quality of
life. - The Social Planning Network of Ontario
- www.closingthedistance.ca/index.jsp
6Dimensions affecting Social Inclusion and their
indicators
- Economic
- Long-term unemployment
- Job insecurity
- Workless households
- Income poverty
- Social
- Breakdown of traditional households
- Unwanted teenage pregnancies
- Homelessness
- Crime
- Disaffected youth
- Social disturbance/disorder
Political Disempowerment Lack of political
rights Low registration of voters Low voter
turnout Low levels of community activity
Alienation/lack of confidence in political
process
7Dimensions affecting Social Inclusion and their
indicators
- Individual
- Mental and physical ill health
- Educational underachievement/low skills
- Loss of self-esteem/ confidence
- Groups / Diversity
- Concentration of above characteristics in
particular groups - Disabled people
- Ethnic minorities
- Elderly etc.
- Locality
- Environmental degradation
- Decaying housing stock
- Withdrawal of local services
- Collapse of support networks
- Concentration/marginalisation of vulnerable
groups - Social Inclusion 2000
8Outcomes
- Measures to reflect on indicators of social
inclusion/exclusion - Talk to commissioners let them know!
- The DH recognises that in implementing policy in
the future, it needs to move away from a system
driven by national targets to one in which - standards are the main driver for continuous
improvements in quality - there are fewer national targets
- there is greater scope for addressing local
priorities - incentives are in place to support the system
and - all organisations locally play their part in
service modernisation. - (DH 2004)
9Agenda for CMHTs?
- Top Ten issues by percentage of respondents who
raised them - Impact of Stigma/lack of understanding of MH
issues 83 - Support to gain employment/overcoming
barriers 72 - Benefits Issues 62
- Lack of social networks/access to social
activities 53 - Access to employment more generally 53
- Lack of self confidence/social withdrawal 52
- Education/awareness raising of MH issues 49
- Employer focussed interventions 48
- Access to recreation leisure/sport/art/libraries
38 - MH symptoms and side effects 34
10Business Case?
- Social Inclusion makes good business sense and
should be an integral part of the organisation.
Social inclusion strategies have to - Form a part of the mission
- Be a part of the vision
- Be accepted by Board of Directors (or equivalent)
- Integrate into policies and procedures
- Include taking action within the organisation
- Be understood and practiced organisationally wide
- An iterative processes accepting never ending
improvement as a concept
11What Helps.
- leadership and planning strong leadership and
local political support effective strategic
planning across sectors and, in particular,
positive working relationships between statutory
and voluntary sector agencies - community involvement active service user groups
at grass-roots level projects which built on
capacity within local communities - staff commitment and enthusiasm to make things
happen - underpinning philosophy of outreach,
rights-based, holistic approaches as opposed to a
focus on symptom reduction and risk management
12Tom.dodd_at_nimhe.wmids.nhs.uk 0788 774 3157
13Group Exercise
- What do we want?
- For first wave sites where to from here? How do
we sustain whats currently happening? What
lessons from this morning - From new sites where do we start
- What can CSIP do to support further developments