Title: Co-production approaches to reducing health inequalities
1Co-production approaches to reducing health
inequalities
- Catriona Ness
- NHS Tayside
2Poverty and Health
Stress Lack of Direction Loss of Hope Learned
Helplessness
Health tends to decline in communities where
levels of interaction are low and where people
feel insecure (Smith Institute 2008)
3Changing roles Traditional service delivery
model
- Planners specify what the services will look
like, procure them and then monitor the services
using targets - Practitioners assess need, ration resources and
deliver services to passive recipients - Users and communities are defined by what they
lack and receive care based on how needy they are
perceived to be
4Changing roles Co-production model
- Planners, Practitioners, Users/Communities
- All three have a role in assessing needs, mapping
assets, agreeing outcome targets, planning
allocation of resources, designing and
delivering services, monitoring and evaluating
impact - Professional and experiential knowledge are
valued and combined, everyones capacity is
developed. - Minimises waste by developing solutions with
users - Can often reduce costs by focusing on person-led
community- involved services, relieving pressure
on expensive specialist services
5Health Equity Strategy Communities in Control
This is primarily a strategy for investing in
community resilience, investing time and effort
in promoting social capital and community
enablement. We will primarily do this by offering
social responses to social problems. In
particular we will support co-production helping
people to plan services and to take back elements
of services which do not need to be delivered by
health professionals so that in total, services
are co-produced by communities and the NHS. This
promotes social capital - the importance of a
connected and caring society - over institutions.
In short we will ensure that our services promote
more patient and community enablement, not more
dependency on the NHS.
6Health Equity Strategy Communities in Control
The challenge is to work with communities, not
to find out what they want and then provide it,
but to enable them to take control and provide
their own solutions. Communities need to be
involved in the delivery of services, behaviour
change initiatives and solutions, as well as in
their design.
7NHS Tayside Health Equity StrategyCommunities
in Control
- Contributing to Health Equity within a
generation - NHS will utilise co-production as a means to
build social capital - Focus energy and resources on early years
- Focus greater effort on behavioural change
- Improve service access to areas of greatest need
but ensure that this builds social capital not
dependency - Agree, with partners, measures of progress
- Build co-ordinated health intelligence
8 Local experience/examples include
- Dundee Healthy Living Initiative
- Healthy Communities Collaborative PK
- - Older People/Teenage Pregnancy
- Healthy Happy Communities Angus
- - Focus on Alcohol
- - Young Families/Healthy Eating
- Time banking - Angus, Perth, Dundee
- Connecting Communities
- Equally Well -Social Prescribing
9Project Example The Family Nurse Partnership
(FNP)
- Changing the World One Baby at a Time
10Remit
- To share talents and skills in a mutually
beneficial way. - To make a positive difference in the local area.
- To promote community spirit.
- To establish and strengthen neighbourliness.
- To build bridges across social groups.
- To build trust in the community.
11 PK Healthy Communities Collaborative
-Community-led Health
Equal and reciprocal partnership comprising
local people and professionals to effect changes
in communities and improve health care and
well-being
12The Benefits of Co-Production to the Healthy
Communities Initiative
- shares skills and workload
- builds community capacity
- promotes community led development
- reduces costs
- maximises efficiency
13Leading by Example
- Cash4Communities Innovation Fund
- 2 million from Endowment Funds
- Community led initiatives
- Enhanced social capital
- Innovative
- Direct or indirect impact on wellbeing
- 1k to 100k awarded.
14Enablers of Innovation Opportunity
- Top level support, strategic buy in
- but light touch
- Passionate, enthusiastic people good at
communicating and inspiring - Start with local people, develop trust respect
- Agility and ability to work around bureaucratic
obstacles
15Challenges
- Culture Change our biggest challenge for NHS and
throughout the public sector - Time to build relationships learn together, plan
together, deliver together - Short term funding pilot-itis
- Courage-Public service leadership needs to learn
to let go and build co-production into
existing services
16- Chaired jointly by NHS Tayside and Scottish
Community Development Centre (SCDC), and funded
by Joint Improvement Team - Aims to be
- A locus for building on existing co-production
activity - A space for learning, debate and development of
ideas and approaches around co-production - A forum for practice exchange, and sharing of
information and resources - And to supporting dialogue around emerging policy
on delivering public services differently and
advancing co-production approaches in Scotland - Members meetings learning events national
conference with JIT website with publications,
resources, networking forum - Sign up now! www.coproductionscotland.org.uk
17 Any Questions