1 / 16

Advocacy Project

Advocacy Project. Advocacy in Specialist Services. The Advocacy Project?. Winterbourne taught us lessons about the need for good advocacy for people living in specialist services – everyone at Winterbourne had an advocate

enye
Download Presentation

Advocacy Project

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. Advocacy Project Advocacy in Specialist Services

  2. The Advocacy Project? • Winterbourne taught us lessons about the need for good advocacy for people living in specialist services – everyone at Winterbourne had an advocate • What are the advocacy arrangements for people living in specialist services across the North East? • What needs to happen to ensure all people living in specialist services have good advocacy support?

  3. Involved in the work Inclusion North were commissioned to lead and deliver the work. • The Advocacy Project Steering Group includes: • Judith Thompson • Neil Harrison – Hartlepool Commissioner • Stan Cooke - Family member • Kellie Woodley– Inclusion North • Barry Ingham – Psychologist NTW • Dave norman – Skills for People – TEWV • Pam Lawrence - NEAC

  4. What we started with.. • Scoping with all PCT Commissioners across the North East • Initial Scoping with LA Commissioners • Advocacy Providers

  5. Feedback Commissioners • Expectation of it being commissioned • Monitoring and quality – unsure • Little strategic influence • Statutory advocacy is available for those who qualify • Confusion of advocacy provision by service providers • No measure of quality

  6. Feedback Advocacy Providers • Statutory – IMHA / IMCA (many people fall outside of this remit) • General case advocacy - being cut and patchy • Coming into the area - no support • Access to advocacy – reliant upon staff, little real presence in services • Delivery of advocacy – lots of organisations, little cohesion, little strategic influence and no money for it • Strategic development – working together • Monitoring – not good enough, past good examples, drop ins, asked to monitor the wrong things • Current approach consistently increases demand

  7. Understanding Advocacy ADVOCATES OFSTED COMPLAINTS C.Q.C. P.A.L.S. SELF LEGAL LINKS SAFEGUARDING PEER CITIZEN L.A.D.O. BROKERAGE B.I.A. PARENT & CARERS M.A.P.P.A P.C.P. R.P.R. QUALITY CHECKERS M.A.R.A.C I.S.D. I.M.H.A. CITIZENS LAY ASSESSORS PEER GROUPS I.M.C.A. CRITICAL FRIEND C.O.P WHISTLEBLOWING

  8. SHA Project - do it and prove it! • Develop and define what good self advocacy looks like in specialist services (people must be heard) • Develop and define what a good family empowerment program would look like (families need to be empowered) • Share the Tees Commissioning Advocacy Framework is in a written report (an approach for good commissioning)

  9. Funding is focused Little investment

  10. Focus our Attention Funding continues

  11. Developing Self Advocacy • Some of what people told us – • It’s a tough place to live – should be a relaxing place • Need to be better supported to have a say • People should be involved in choosing and training staff • People should be given better information

  12. Family Empowerment Some of what people told us • Want help to be more involved • Feel they are not always listened to • More information about how to be involved would help • Basic advocacy skills training • Better facilities for families – a room/flat, able to stay over

  13. Tees Commissioning • A Tees wide approach to commissioning advocacy - hub and spoke • Offering a range of Advocacy – including having a presence in services • This is still being produced with the local commissioners

  14. Some Big Messages • Advocacy is everyone’s job – day to day, ‘looking out for’ • Paid advocacy is important but not enough on its own • People want on going support to gain confidence - it’s hard!! • Families want to have the chance to be involved in ALL areas of care

  15. Profession arrogance – who knows best? • Treating people as equals? • Medical model? • Who is responsible? • Is it too difficult? • Does everyone get the same service?

  16. Stronger advocacy project department of health project Share our work nationally - working in partnership with - • National Forum • National families Forum • Housing and Support Alliance

More Related