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Commissioning social care

Commissioning social care. Angela Canning & Cathy MacGregor, 15 March 2012. Social care in Scotland. Commissioning is…. Key message: Strategic commissioning. Councils and NHS boards need to get better at commissioning social care services

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Commissioning social care

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  1. Commissioning social care Angela Canning & Cathy MacGregor, 15March 2012

  2. Social care in Scotland Commissioning social care – CCPS members meeting

  3. Commissioning is… Commissioning social care – CCPS members meeting

  4. Key message: Strategic commissioning Commissioning social care – CCPS members meeting • Councils and NHS boards need to get better at commissioning social care services • This is not just about procuring services from providers • It includes strategic planning: • working jointly with NHS boards and other bodies • involving local communities, service users and carers • involving providers • developing services that achieve good outcomes • planning for the longer term

  5. Key message: Strategic commissioning Commissioning social care – CCPS members meeting • Councils and NHS boards need to get better at commissioning social care services • Commissioning is complex and is made more challenging due to: • reducing budgets • changing demographics • rising demands and expectations • developing policies and legislation on: • integrating health and social care • self-directed support

  6. Key message: Strategic commissioning Commissioning social care – CCPS members meeting • Recommendations: • Develop commissioning strategies • Work collaboratively with other councils and NHS boards • Have professional skills in both procurement and social care commissioning • Train commissioning staff

  7. Key message: Preventative services Commissioning social care – CCPS members meeting • There is a risk of councils not investing in low-level and preventative services • Indications that councils are focussing resources on people who have the most intensive support needs: • 13 councils have tightened their eligibility criteria • 7 councils now charge for services previously free, or have increased charges • home care hours have increased by 74% over the last decade but home care clients receiving less than 4 hours a week have decreased by 41%

  8. Key message: Preventative services Commissioning social care – CCPS members meeting • Councils are targeting their resources at people who need more intensive home care - number of clients (000s)

  9. Key message: Provider involvement Commissioning social care – CCPS members meeting • There is scope to improve provider involvement • Councils and NHS boards do not always involve voluntary and private providers in: • planning which services are needed in the local area • how best to provide them • developing new, more flexible services

  10. Key message: Provider involvement Commissioning social care – CCPS members meeting • There is scope to improve provider involvement • When things are going well… • Providers’ information and expertise are valued • Providers are kept informed and are involved in improvements and developments • When things are not going well… • Providers are seen as outwith the commissioning process • Providers are not engaged and not involved so services are not developed in line with plans

  11. Key message: Provider involvement Commissioning social care – CCPS members meeting • There is scope to improve provider involvement • Focus groups with providers • Things work well when: • Clarity and fairness • Support and feedback • Take account of evidence of quality / performance • Procure to achieve good outcomes • Reasonable timescales

  12. Key message: Provider involvement Commissioning social care – CCPS members meeting • There is scope to improve provider involvement • Challenges for providers: • Consistency of decision-making • Procurement administration • Capacity of providers • Communication, awareness, joint working • Balancing quality and price • Equalities • Assessing long-term implications of procurement decisions

  13. Key message: Provider involvement You sometimes feel that you are going through the motions Arrangements are sporadic and patchy The commissioning process doesn’t do anything to improve quality The impacts for staff are massive There is no communication or information from commissioners The council rarely asks service users Commissioning social care – CCPS members meeting

  14. Key message: Provider involvement Commissioning social care – CCPS members meeting • Recommendations • Maintain good working relationships with providers • Map out current provision - understand quality, effectiveness, costs and challenges for providers • Base decisions about in-house vs external on understanding costs, quality and outcomes • Develop transparent procurement processes

  15. Key message: Managing risks Commissioning social care – CCPS members meeting • More needs to be done to manage the risks to users when a provider closes, including having contingency plans and monitoring providers’ financial health • The risks to users are high • It’s hard to monitor providers’ financial health • In the case of large operators, it’s inefficient for both councils and providers • What would councils do if they found financial difficulties?

  16. Key message: Managing risks Commissioning social care – CCPS members meeting Recommendations: • Contingency plans • Periodic expert assessment of the social care markets • Understanding the financial and business impact of commissioning decisions on providers • Monitor the impact that services have on people’s lives as well as the quality of services

  17. Key message: Involving users/carers Commissioning social care – CCPS members meeting • Users and carers need to be more involved in commissioning • Large majority are happy with services • Most issues raised relate to home care: • Carers feel under pressure to supplement home care • 10 minute visits too short • Time of day of visits • Pushing and fighting to get the services they need • Inflexibility

  18. Key message: Involving users & carers You sometimes feel that you are going through the motions We were told what we could get They help you with anything – you name it and they’ll help you I don’t feel I have control over what I get In my house, I’m the boss Going through a financial assessment has been scary and stressful It has made a great difference – I can get out now Commissioning social care – CCPS members meeting

  19. Key message: Self-directed support Commissioning social care – CCPS members meeting • Councils may need a significant amount of support to implement self-directed support effectively • Users and carers need information, advice and support • Implications include disinvestment in some services • Councils are at very different stages in implementing SDS • They may need support to do so effectively: • low use of direct payments (4,400) • need to develop commissioning skills and capacity • need to improve partnership working with providers • need to improve consultation with users and carers

  20. Audit Scotland Commissioning social care – CCPS members meeting cmacgregor@audit-scotland.gov.uk Tel: 0131 625 1865 Website: www.audit-scotland.gov.uk

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