1 / 13

Clinical commissioning and the voluntary and community sector

Clinical commissioning and the voluntary and community sector. Louise Edwards Commissioning Development team. A system focused on improving outcomes. Robust economic regulation and quality inspection. Clinically-led commissioning & payment for results. Enhanced local voice.

von
Download Presentation

Clinical commissioning and the voluntary and community sector

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. Clinical commissioning and the voluntary and community sector Louise Edwards Commissioning Development team

  2. A system focused on improving outcomes Robust economic regulation and quality inspection Clinically-led commissioning & payment for results Enhanced local voice Empowered professionals working in autonomous providers Informed patients exercising choice Summary of NHS reforms

  3. Parliament Funding Accountability Department of Health Reformed NHS has lots of new structures that are supposed to look like this.. NHS Commissioning Board Monitor (economic regulator) Care Quality Commission licensing contract Local Authorities local partnership GP Commissioning Consortia Providers accountability for results Local Health Watch Patients and Public

  4. But it might look and feel more like this to you for a while!

  5. These reforms are all about putting clinicians in the driving seat… In essence, it’s about putting accountability for decision making in the hands of those who commit resources.

  6. And with that accountability comes high public expectations National IPSOS MORI/DH survey 2010 73% of respondents said they were satisfied with the NHS as a national service 76% of respondents voiced pessimism in relation to the challenges facing the NHS in future years. 47% believe that NHS is understaffed. 75% of respondents feel that NHS spending should be protected. Where are the trade offs in here??

  7. Do you know who your local clinical commissioning group is? • In the North West we currently have 48 Clinical Commissioning Groups (CCG) that cover the geographical patch, all of whom have been approved as Pathfinders. • The majority of the consortia have broad alignment with Local Authority boundaries and have representation on local Health and Wellbeing Boards alongside other key local stakeholders.

  8. ‘Authorisation’ of clinical commissioning groups will set the pace for their development between now and 2013 Phase 3 ‘Authorisation’ Summer 2012- April 2013 The Pole represents the apparatus required to support effective trajectory and scale the challenge (i.e. the business support) Phase 2 ‘Development path’ Now – Summer 2012 The Bar represents the aggregation of evidence required from all domains (i.e. the size of the challenge) The CCG Phase 1 ‘Configuration’ October – December 2011 The Pre-Authorisation Timeline (i.e. the track) H1 H2 H3 = the standards required to demonstrate Domain Capability H4 = the final authorisation stage following validated evidence of fitness for purpose

  9. What does all this mean for the voluntary and community sector?

  10. We know that all this change makes planning very difficult A huge number of voluntary organisations are currently delivering health related outcomes that are funded from within the health system – mainly through PCTs. Many of these organisations are looking to deliver more services but are currently struggling to come to terms with what clinical commissioning will mean for them. Planning in the sector is proving incredibly difficult in the current environment with so many uncertainties and organisations are struggling to make sense of how clinical commissioning will evolve.

  11. VSNW/Regional Voices/NHSNW workshops November 2010-now Over the course of the last 8 months we’ve brought together a range of voluntary and community sector organisations to consider how the sector might respond to the commissioning reforms in the NHS. Brought together national voluntary organisations to explore potential role of sector in commissioning support (i.e. support to the new clinical commissioning groups) and to decide best way for an informed dialogue between commissioners and voluntary sector. Department of Health national workshop July 2011

  12. What are the themes emerging from these workshops? New landscape is confusing for voluntary sector and we might lose really valuable assets if we’re not careful – NHS and DH need to help vcs interpret new landscape and make sense of it GPs don’t necessarily understand distinct contribution of vcs– hearts and minds awareness raising needed based on GP reality, not moral high ground How might vcsorganisations work together and with other sectors to make themselves easier to commission – 3 ‘c’s for voluntary sector = collaboration, competition and co-opetition

  13. Questions for today’s workshop • Do the three themes resonate with you? • What might be the practical ways DH/NHS can help vcs interpret new NHS commissioning landscape and make sense of it? • Do you have experience of working with clinical commissioning groups, or GPs? How has that been? • How might we enable and encourage vcsorganisations to collaborate in order to grow their share of the market?

More Related