1 / 16

Primary Care Networks an overview

Primary Care Networks an overview. 3 December 2018 – paper 4 City Locality 13.12.18. This is a combination of slides from NHS E and CCG. Further information will be expected in the NHS 10 year plan Terminology - neighbourhoods/clusters/Primary Care Networks. Recent National Push.

shumaker
Download Presentation

Primary Care Networks an overview

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Primary Care Networksan overview 3 December 2018 – paper 4 City Locality 13.12.18

  2. This is a combination of slides from NHS E and CCG.Further information will be expected in the NHS 10 year planTerminology - neighbourhoods/clusters/Primary Care Networks

  3. Recent National Push • Ten Year Plan: highly likely to place a big emphasis on primary care network working • Refreshing NHS Plans 2018-19: every practice encouraged to be part of a primary care network • NHS England’s Review of the Quality and Outcomes framework (July 2018): may be a ‘working at scale’ version of QOF • NHS England Primary Care Network Reference Guide (Draft August 2018)

  4. A NHS E working definition • Enable the provision of proactive accessible, co-ordinated and more integrated primary and community care • Formed around natural communities based on GP registered lists • Often serve populations of around 30,000 – 50,000 patients. • Small enough to still provide personal care but large enough to have deeper impact by collaboration • Collaboration between practices and others in the local health (community and primary care) and social care system • Platform for providers of care being sustainable into the longer term

  5. Progress so far in Oxford City • Neighbourhoods defined within Locality plans

  6. Primary care maturity matrix

  7. NHSE Proposed PCN Benefits • For patients: • More joined up services • MDT/holistic care • Focus on prevention • For practices: • Greater resilience • Free up GP time • For the system: • Co-operation across organisational boundaries • Driving a more population-focussed approach • Strengthening of primary care and less need to default to hospital

  8. Funding details • Non-recurrent sum available through OCA partners to develop Primary Care Networks • likely £600k for Oxfordshire • Some via STP to CCG and some via local regional NHS E team • 100% practice coverage expected

  9. Requirement for funding • This may include determining: • current maturity of each neighbourhood • population needs • how to develop the integrated care teams (including CMHTs) • how care may be delivered to meet the needs of the local population • (including prevention and mental health) as well as align with system priorities.

  10. Primary care maturity matrix

  11. Next steps • Firm up Primary Care Network formations • Agree Network names • Each network to agree current maturity (using maturity matrix)

  12. Primary care maturity matrix

More Related