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Strategy template 2014/15 – 2018/19 20th June 2014 1 Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning: Hardwick CCG and North Derbyshire CCG Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning Five Year Strategic Plan (2014/15 – 2018/19) Developed with the support of local stakeholders including: 2 NORTHERN DERBYSHIRE UNIT OF PLANNING VISION ‘Get the best possible outcome for our patients with the limited resources that we have’. The strategic vision for the North Derbyshire Unit of Planning is a health and care system which focuses on prevention of ill-health and disease, reduces health inequalities and provides high quality integrated care that enables people to retain independence for as long as possible supported by their local community. Where required services will be responsive, safe, caring and provide a good experience of care still within the local community in the majority of cases. Where exceptionally more urgent, emergency or specialised services are required these will be accessed easily and people will be supported to return to their local community as quickly as possible. OUR AMBITIONS DELIVERED THROUGH THE FOLLOWING INTERVENTIONS Overseen through the following governance arrangements: Reduce by 489 the number of years of life lost by the people of Northern Derbyshire from treatable conditions (e.g. cancer, stroke, heart disease, respiratory disease, liver disease). Improve by 5% the quality of life of the people in Northern Derbyshire living with one or more long term condition. Existing system wide structures: o Adult Care Board o Health and Well Being Board o Children’s Trust Board o Joint Commissioning Co-ordinating Group Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning structures (under review): st o 21 Century Transformation Programme Board o Internal CCG governance structures o Urgent Care Working Group Reduce the number of avoidable hospital admissions by 1905 over the next 5 years through improving the quality of primary and community care and people’s ability to selfmanage. Measured using the following success criteria: Reduce the proportion of people reporting a poor experience of inpatient care by 6% The health and wellbeing of the Northern Derbyshire population will be maximised and health inequalities reduced Material changes in patient outcomes across the 7 outcomes ambitions All organisations within the health economy will meet their financial targets year on year Robust planning, assurance and early warning arrangements support no/limited regulatory scrutiny. Reduce the proportion of people reporting a very poor experience of primary care by 11%. Achievement of the improving outcomes ambitions will be used as the key set of measures to determine whether the above criteria have been met. ENABLERS Prioritisation IM & T 3 Not one size fits all Estates Commitment to work together Commissioning & Contracting Learning as we go Workforce 7 day working Governance System values and principles: Person centred Flexibility Constructive challenge Partnership working Services within resources Section Two | Key lines of enquiry (KLOE) The following table template asks key lines of enquiry and contains space for the organisation to add their responses. Segment Submission details Key Line of Enquiry Which organisation(s) are completing this submission? Organisation response This strategic plan template is submitted by: Hardwick CCG Scarsdale Nightingale Close Newbold Chesterfield Derbyshire S41 7PF North Derbyshire CCG Scarsdale Nightingale Close Newbold Chesterfield Derbyshire S41 7PF It should however be noted that this plan has been developed in partnership with the following local organisations and as such synergies with plan submissions across the health sector will be seen: 4 Chesterfield Royal Hospital NHS Foundation Trust Derbyshire County Council: Health and Wellbeing Board Adult Care Services Public Health Supported by: Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response Supported by: Derbyshire Community Health Services NHS Trust Derbyshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust Derbyshire Health United (Out of Ours and 111 services) East Midlands Ambulance Service NHS Trust North Derbyshire Voluntary Association In case of enquiry, please provide a contact name and contact details Hardwick CCG Andy Gregory Chief Officer Email: [email protected] Tel: 01246 514076 North Derbyshire CCG Joanne Ross Head of Strategic Planning and Performance Email: [email protected] Tel: 01246 514222 a) System vision What is the vision for the system in five years’ time? The Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning has been Derbyshire heavily involved in developing the Derbyshire Integration Strategy: Integration Strategy and the vision for Derbyshire, as articulated in the Better Care Fund Plan, which focuses Derbyshire Accord on achieving a seamless health and care service. Doc.pdf The Derbyshire Integration Strategy (attached) aims to describe the desired vision for the Derbyshire health and care system by 2018/19. The Better Care Fund Plan for Derbyshire is based on this strategy. The direction of travel is to place the local person at the centre of our actions so that all services will be personcentred. The Derbyshire system will work in 5 Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response Supported by: partnership with the people needing care and their families and carers and provide care as close to the person’s home as possible and when appropriate support them to access the right care away from home. Above all the aim wherever possible and appropriate is to encourage people to self-care with the support of their community before they come into contact with or need public services. The health and care system in Derbyshire pursues this goal in a time of challenge and flux. The national challenges to the NHS and Local Government are well understood and include the impact of the ageing society, rise of long-term conditions, increasing patient expectations, increasing costs of providing care, limited availability of productivity gains and constrained public resources. In addition we have local challenges and drivers for change. In Northern Derbyshire there is a multiplicity of providers with overlap, duplication and fragmentation leading to frequent patient hand offs between providers. Patient and public engagement has told us that there is a lack of joined up services locally which has a negative effect on patient outcomes. Patients are falling through the gaps between services and struggling with organisational boundaries, geographical boundaries and generic standardised services which are not personalised around the patient. Underpinning the Derbyshire vision is the strategic vision for the Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning, which is clear and definite: get the best possible 6 Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response Supported by: outcome for our patients with the limited resources that we have. It is recognised that in order to better meet the needs of our people, within the resources we have available, requires major changes to the way in which care is provided. The Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning envisages a health and care system which focuses on prevention of ill-health and disease, reduces health inequalities and provides high quality integrated care that enables people to retain independence for as long as possible supported by their local community. Where required services will be responsive, safe, caring and provide a good experience of care still within the local community in the majority of cases. Where exceptionally more urgent, emergency or specialised services are required these will be accessed easily and people will be supported to return to their local community as quickly as possible. The following statements have been developed in consultation with the public to describe the vision from a patient’s perspective: 7 Services will feel seamless and coordinated The person will be treated as an individual The person will be supported to live independently and encouraged to self-care where appropriate Any care required will be discussed and agreed in partnership with the person The person will be cared for in their own home or as close to home as their condition allows Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response Supported by: Where acute need or specialism is required it will take place as quickly and safely as possible. Fundamentally the needs and wishes of the individual will be at the centre of care delivery and planning at all times. To direct the changes required, a statement of ‘what good looks like’ for the future system in five years’ time has been defined. Fundamentally we want the system to keep people: Safe and healthy – free from crisis and exacerbation At home – out of social and health care beds Independent – managing with minimum support In order to reduce the demand for reactive episodic care we will: Continue to improve the impact of primary prevention Better meet the needs of people who require complex ongoing care Eliminate unwarranted variation in access to care When episodic care is needed: 8 The right care will be provided in the right setting by the right people Care will be provided efficiently through improved care pathways Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response The overall implications for the system include: Supported by: Delivering integrated care at scale to proactively support the needs of the ‘top 20%’ c. 80,000 people Shifting care out of bedded services and into team based community care Aligning the system to work differently – beyond existing organisation/professional Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning boundaries. System Plan The statement of ‘what good looks like’, the headline changes to the system and how we propose to deliver these changes are summarised in the attached ND UoP System Plan ‘Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning System Plan’ on v1 final 19.6.14.pdf pages 4 to 6. How does the vision include the six characteristics of a high quality and sustainable system and transformational service models highlighted in the guidance? Specifically: 1. Ensuring that citizens will be fully included in all aspects of service design and change, and that patients will be fully empowered in their own care 2. Wider primary care, provided at scale 3. A modern model of integrated care 4. Access to the highest quality urgent and emergency care 5. A step-change in the productivity of 9 The Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning System Plan has been aligned to the six characteristics of a high quality and sustainable system and the improvement interventions grouped according to the transformational service models. This is illustrated in the attached System Plan on page 6. The System Plan is founded on the development of integrated care to better meet the ongoing care needs of the people of North Derbyshire, where services are person centred, enable people to self-care, thereby keeping themselves well for longer and reducing the level of unplanned care they receive. For this reason integrated care is placed at the centre of the transformation programme. This reflects that integrated models of care are being developed across Segment Key Line of Enquiry elective care 6. Specialised services concentrated in centres of excellence (as relevant to the locality) Organisation response Supported by: the age and need spectrum including for the frail and elderly, for children and young people and for those with mental health conditions. Besides the development of integrated care the system will also improve and align other aspects of care, which are represented in terms of the characteristics of a high quality, sustainable health and care system. These include: Prevention and self care Primary care Emergency and urgent care Elective care Specialist care The decision has also been taken locally to add a number of other workstreams including mental health, children’s services and adult social care as it was believed that these too presented opportunities to further improve and align the system. It is anticipated that the collective impact of these improvement interventions will deliver the Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning strategic vision and the improving outcomes ambitions contained within the individual CCG’s operational plans. This will in turn enable each CCG to meet its financial obligations and ensure providers remain sustainable and financially sound. How does the five year vision address the following aims: 10 a) From a resources perspective, what will the position be in five years’ time? Is this position risk Segment Key Line of Enquiry a) Delivering a sustainable NHS for future generations? b) Improving health outcomes in alignment with the seven ambitions c) Reducing health inequalities? Organisation response assessed? The strategic vision and plan presented in the Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning will result in a significantly different future state. From a resources perspective a planning scenario that best matches the system plan narrative has been used to estimate the potential impact on the whole system and also impact by individual care area. This is represented in financial terms in the bridge diagram on page 7 of the Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning System Plan. This diagram has been developed with the input of providers and commissioners and the scale of impact signed up to. Whilst this represents the current direction of travel, it should be recognised that the next steps are that a strategy for implementation developed will be developed and agreed. Once this strategy is agreed all organisations (commissioners and providers) will develop individual plans to operationalise the strategy. Until these plans are fully developed and agreed the individual organisation finance plans will not fully reflect the current vision. Our aspiration is that the finance and activity plans submitted for 2015-16 by both commissioners and providers will fully reflect the implications of the North Derbyshire vision. The bridge diagram describes the current state, i.e. funding across the system of £503m in 13/14. If we were to adopt a ‘do nothing’ approach as a system, 11 Supported by: Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response based on the forecast growth and cost pressures, we are estimating that there would be a £150m gap in funding within 5 years’ time. The bridge diagram describes the disinvestments we plan to undertake by care area over the next five years, i.e. reduce demand through introducing integrated care and referral management, providing care in the right setting, reducing length of stay and creating pathway efficiencies. This is balanced against reinvestment in improved pathways of care, providing care in the right setting and investment in integrated models of care. The net result of this is a care system that is high quality and sustainable. The bridge diagram therefore illustrates a balanced aiming point for 2018/19 representing the scale of impact and investment. In comparison to the ‘default’ planning assumptions of 4% per annum provider CIP plus 2% commissioner QIPP this plan is based on delivering the equivalent of 4% per annum demand management and care setting improvements plus 2% efficiency across the whole system. It should however be noted that the bridging diagram as shown states that the cost of the system by 2018/19 will be £566m against forecast funding of £555m, thereby suggesting a gap of c. £11m. This is because it does not include the benefits that may be realised over the duration of the plan, which are dependent on the prioritisation and phasing of big impact transformational interventions. The prioritisation and phasing of key 12 Supported by: Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response transformational interventions is yet to be defined, but is estimated that benefits could equate to c. £20m. The diagram also does not include the cost of delivering the transformation required. A full risk assessment has been undertaken on the financial plan, which contains appropriate mitigations and a number of alternative planning scenarios have been considered to determine the planned impact on the system. These are detailed on page 41 of the Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning System Plan. The bridge diagram contained on page 42 represents the default view and is considered to include a conservative view of the potential impact of integrated care. This view is represented in the system’s financial plan submissions, which will continue to be refined over the coming months as our System Plan is developed and better understood. Quality impact assessment will also be undertaken on the key transformational interventions identified as priority, which will ensure that any disinvestment, reinvestment and changes we make to services over the next five years will not be detrimental to the quality of care provided. b) You should explain how your five year strategic plan will improve outcomes in the seven areas identified, within the context of the needs of your local population and what quantifiable level of improvement you are aiming to achieve. 13 Supported by: Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response Supported by: The system plan describes why Northern Derbyshire must change the way it delivers care and shows how integrated care is at the heart of this response, both in terms of what this will mean for patients as well as the system. In addition it describes what good looks like for the other key elements of the health and care delivery system together with the necessary ingredients for delivery. How these elements fit together and how success will be measured is illustrated in the diagram on page 13 of the System Plan. This diagram demonstrates that by transforming the system, changing patterns of consumption and responding to the health and care needs of the population we will be able to deliver significantly improved outcomes for the Northern Derbyshire population. The success of this planned transformation will be measured against the national improving outcomes ambitions, which can be quantified as follows: 14 Reduce by 489 the number of years of life lost by the people of Northern Derbyshire from treatable conditions (e.g. cancer, stroke, heart disease, respiratory disease, liver disease) Improve by 5 percentage points on average the quality of life of the people in Northern Derbyshire living with one or more long-term conditions Reduce the number of avoidable hospital admissions by 1905 over the next 5 years Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response through improving the quality of primary and community care and people’s ability to selfmanage. Reduce the proportion of people reporting a poor experience of inpatient care by 6%. Reduce the proportion of people reporting a very poor experience of primary care by 11%. The Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning System Plan identifies a number of planned changes within each of the key characteristics of a high quality, sustainable health and care system. These initiatives have been mapped against the nature of the impact in terms of: Managing demand: prevention and referral management Right Care, Right Setting: Right Care, Right Setting and reduced length of stay Efficiency: improved pathways The initiatives and their planned impact are detailed on page 38 of the System Plan. The financial impact of these initiatives is defined in the bridge diagram on page 42 and is based on the planned changes and reductions in activity that will result, which links back to the seven improving outcomes ambitions. For example, by introducing integrated models of care such as community based teams and increasing the use of care plans it is anticipated that emergency admissions will reduce across the system by 22% in 5 years time. The Unit of Planning has undertaken detailed modelling on the changes we are planning to 15 Supported by: Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response make in order to arrive at the ambitions contained within the Plan. c) Reducing health inequalities The Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning System Plan identifies the case for change (pages 14 to 20) and highlights some of the most significant health inequalities experienced by the Northern Derbyshire population. These include: An ageing population – significantly higher than the national average High prevalence of long term conditions (Coronary Heart Disease, Diabetes and Hypertension Significant variation in deprivation and associated determinants of health The JSNA and public health profiles for Hardwick and North Derbyshire CCGs show a variation across Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning as a whole. Due to the health status of the population of Hardwick CCG and parts of North Derbyshire CCG, reducing inequalities is a central theme to the Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning Plan, which seeks to address these inequalities and rebalance the way resources are currently used to best meet the needs of the population. To address the inequalities that exist there are a range of initiatives contained within the Plan aimed at reducing unwarranted clinical variation across 16 Supported by: Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response Supported by: primary and secondary care, improving equity of access, initiatives to ensure parity of esteem and targeted preventative measures to improve lifestyle choices and reduce premature mortality. These initiatives are reflected in the ambitious targets to improve outcomes for the next 5 years, particularly in the areas of securing additional years of life for the people with treatable mental and physical health conditions and improving the health related quality of life for those with long term conditions. Who has signed up to the strategic vision? How have the health and wellbeing boards been involved in developing and signing off the plan? The Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning engaged GE Healthcare Finnamore in April 2014 to support the 21st Century Programme Board (representing all stakeholders across Northern Derbyshire) to pull together existing strands of work and develop a whole system plan for a safe, clinically and financially sustainable health and care system for North Derbyshire. Over the past three months GE Healthcare Finnamore have bought together a wide range of stakeholders from across the system to discuss and agree the strategic vision including Accountable Officers/Chief Executives, Clinical Leads, Directors of Finance and Planning Leads from the following organisations: 17 Chesterfield Royal Hospital NHS Foundation Trust Derbyshire County Council: Health and Wellbeing Board Adult Care Services Public Health Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response Supported by: Derbyshire Community Health Services NHS Trust Derbyshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust Derbyshire Health United (Out of Ours and 111 services) East Midlands Ambulance Service NHS Trust North Derbyshire Voluntary Association The Health and Wellbeing Board is identified above as a key stakeholder and have been involved from the beginning in the development of the strategic vision and formally ratified previous iterations. The Health and Wellbeing Board will receive the final Strategic Plan submitted on 20th June, and recognising that it will continue to evolve over time it will be discussed at the next development session in July 2014. The Strategic Plan is fully aligned with the Derbyshire Health and Wellbeing Strategy (2012-2015) and meets all key outcomes identified by the Health and Wellbeing Board as being strategic priorities for Derbyshire County. The development and progression of the vision is under the remit of the Derbyshire Health and Wellbeing Board Task and Finish Group which reports to the Derbyshire County Health and Wellbeing Board. The Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning Strategic Plan has been reviewed by the East Midlands Clinical Senate who have provided valuable feedback. In summary the feedback stated that the plan contained ‘laudable aims’, but required more detail on ‘how the 18 Segment Key Line of Enquiry How does your plan for the Better Care Fund align/fit with your 5 year strategic vision? Organisation response Supported by: aims will be achieved and how success will be measured’. This feedback has been considered and very much informed this final submission. The Plan has also been considered by Derbyshire/Nottinghamshire Area Team and feedback received. Again this feedback has been incorporated within this latest submission. Reciprocally the Northern Derbyshire CCGs have been fully engaged in development of the Area Team’s Direct Commissioning Plans, in particular the plans for Primary Care. The Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning strategic vision/Plan incorporates the strategic direction of the Direct Commissioning plans, which are essential to the achievement of the overall aims contained within the strategic plan. The Better Care Fund Plan has been developed jointly by the LA, all 4 Derbyshire CCGs and in conjunction with Tameside and Glossop CCG with regards their Glossop population. The Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning five year Strategic Plan builds on this work and recognises that the Better Care Fund Plan, Primary Care Strategy and 5 year strategic plan are intrinsically linked and collectively pivotal to achieving the outcomes required. The key elements described within the Better Care Fund documentation have been formally agreed as integrated care, community integrated working, 7 day working and other areas which require evaluation or development during 2014/15. These workstreams directly support the key programme areas contained 19 Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response within the Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning’s 5 year strategic plan and will therefore contribute to the delivery of the 5 year strategic vision. Supported by: It should also be noted that the CCGs have been heavily involved in discussion with providers and lead commissioners in mid Nottinghamshire, Greater Manchester and South Yorkshire on their system wide transformation plans to ensure that any potential impact on the Northern Derbyshire population/services is understood and influenced. What key themes arose from the Call to Action engagement programme that have been used to shape the vision? Patients have been engaged in the development of the strategic direction of the Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning for many years and have worked with us to develop our integration vision, through personal involvement in pilot schemes and through our patient reference groups. Building on previous engagement activity undertaken as part of the ‘21st Century Health and Care’ work, the CCGs held a range of Call to Action events including locality based stakeholder forums, clinical meetings for primary care staff, events for the public to contribute their views about how to address the challenges that need to be faced in primary care and an event linked to Children’s Takeover Day where students from local secondary schools were invited to participate in the CCGs’ Lay Reference Group meetings in November. At these events stakeholders were asked to comment on the CCGs’ draft commissioning intentions and the strategic priorities identified from the health needs 20 NDCCG Feedback collection template CTA.docx Hardwick CCG C2A Summary.docx Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response assessment undertaken. Feedback varied slightly by locality, however stakeholders were largely in support of the priorities identified with a particular emphasis on strengthening primary and community care, encouraging more integrated working and introducing more multidisciplinary teams to provide person centred care. There were three clear overall themes, communication, integration and self-care. Communication: Communication between clinicians and patients and their carers but also between health and care organisations was a concern. Communication and integration between organisations was seen as way of keeping people out of hospital and improving patient care. We were asked to give some focus to the role of carers. Integration: Integration as an approach to reducing non-elective admissions was seen as a positive step to improve quality, however people thought we should ensure there’s capacity in the community to support this vision and we should ensure we make good use of the voluntary and community sector. Concerns were raised around how county council funding issues will affect their ability to support our vision. Self-care: Self-care, including helping people to stay health was a 21 Supported by: Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response Supported by: key theme; concerns included getting health messages to young people particularly around alcohol use, but also practical issues such as cooking and budgeting skills. This feedback, combined with other analysis available to the CCG has informed the development of the Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning strategic vision and the priorities contained within the two year operational plan. The summary reports from events are attached for further information. Is there a clear ‘you said, we did’ framework in place to show those that engaged how their perspective and feedback has been included? Both CCGs use existing processes for ensuring that the public can see a direct link between their feedback and our strategy, this will include information on CCG websites and information provided directly to our patient reference group and Patients’ network. Clear links have been made within our strategy documents. Both CCGs also have stakeholder forums/ patient reference groups which have been influenced by the Francis Report. These groups provide an opportunity for the CCGs to hear feedback from service users to ensure patient centred quality services. Feedback and corresponding actions are discussed regularly within these arenas and the information is also available to the wider public on the CCGs websites. The CCGs have also adopted a ‘You Said, We Did’ approach, with stakeholders told how their feedback has been included in the CCGs’ operational plans, as 22 Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response Supported by: well as driving the Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning strategic vision. This ‘closing of the loop’ continues to be a regular feature of the stakeholder forums. The stakeholder meetings held in autumn 2013 delivered the Call to Action themes as well as testing out the CCGs’ draft commissioning priorities. The response to these events has strongly influenced the CCGs’ final strategy and vision. The system vision was presented to Derbyshire County Council elected members, including Scrutiny Committee members, in June 2014 and described what we have already achieved and the impact of these achievements on the future delivery of services. a) Current position Has an assessment of the current state been undertaken? Have opportunities and challenges been identified and agreed? Does this correlate to the Commissioning for Value packs and other benchmarking materials? Pre consultation has already commenced to inform a broad spectrum of the population of the vision and during this time firm proposals will be developed which will be used as the basis of the formal consultation that will be undertaken over the autumn. Yes – a review of the current state has been undertaken and is provided in detail in the System Plan on pages 12 to 20. This section describes the key challenges facing the Northern Derbyshire system, which are consistent with the national challenges described in ‘The NHS belongs to the people: a call to action’ (July 2013). The Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning recognises and agrees that to better meet the care needs of our people within the resources we have available requires 23 Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response major changes to the way in which care is provided. The opportunities to address the challenges facing the system have been identified as: Delivering integrated care at scale – proactively supporting the needs of the ‘top 20%’ Shifting care out of bedded services and into team based community care Aligning the system to work differently These opportunities are supported by a statement of what good looks like (see summary on page 4 of the System Plan), which in turn has enabled the identification of a range of improvement interventions described in pages 28 to 38 of the System Plan. The improvement interventions detailed in the Northern Derbyshire Plan were guided by a range of benchmarking and health needs assessment tools including the Commissioning for Value tool, Atlas of Variation and local JSNA. North Derbyshire and Hardwick CCGs used this information and through consultation with their stakeholders determined the areas requiring prioritisation from 2014/15 onwards, which are reflected in the System Plan. The above sources of information were also used to inform detailed activity, finance and capacity modelling, which was undertaken in developing the Plan. Examples of additional activities undertaken include: 24 GE Healthcare Finnamore were commissioned in February to undertake an exercise to Supported by: Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response Supported by: triangulate CCG and provider plans to ensure alignment and identify inconsistencies, which were rectified in the activity, finance and operational plan submissions in April. This exercise was refreshed following the April submissions and the recommendations incorporated into the System Plan. There will be an ongoing process of refinement in the coming months as investments and disinvestments are better developed and understood. Do the objectives and interventions identified below take into consideration the current state? 25 Public Health has developed a prevention strategy, which has informed the Prevention and Self Care element of the Plan. This has helped the Unit of Planning to understand how we should work with public health, adult care, voluntary sector and community themselves to develop community resilience and capacity. Public Health were also commissioned to undertake a bed capacity modelling exercise to further understand the size of the challenge for the health and care system and how the transformational interventions proposed, including implementing models of integrated care, may impact on the sustainability of the system. This was presented to the 21st Century Programme Board in May and has therefore contributed to the Plan. Yes – the objectives and interventions described within this document and the attached Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning System Plan take into consideration Segment Key Line of Enquiry Does the two year detailed operational plan submitted provide the necessary foundations to deliver the strategic vision described here? b) Improving quality and outcomes At the Unit of Planning level, what are the five year local outcome ambitions i.e. the aggregation of individual organisations contribution to the outcome ambitions? Organisation response the current state. The interventions included in the Plan are based on addressing the challenges that the current state identifies. Yes – the Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning believes that the two year operational plan submitted provides the foundations required to deliver the strategic vision. The Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning has undertaken detailed analysis and modelling to ensure that the ambitions and activity plans set are realistic and will deliver the improvement required. This is critical as the system will be using the ambition metrics and associated activity impacts to determine whether the interventions described in the Strategic Plan and Better Care Fund Plan have been delivered successfully. The Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning has Northern Derbyshire considered the respective CCG baselines and Unit of Planning considered the individual ambitions submitted in the Ambitions: Operational Plan templates. We have recognised that there is varying performance across the two CCGs for the ambition outcome measures and therefore quite different starting points. With this in mind we have agreed a methodology which aggregates the outcome ambitions that we believe is realistic (based on the improvement interventions we have planned) yet ambitious. The proposed level of attainment at individual CCG and Unit of Planning level, including the anticipated activity change, is attached. 26 Supported by: ND UoP Ambitions 18.6.14.xlsx Segment Key Line of Enquiry How have the community and clinician views been considered when developing plans for improving outcomes and quantifiable ambitions? Organisation response Supported by: A range of stakeholder events have been held over the past nine months and build on the feedback that has been obtained from stakeholders through the 21st Century Health and Care programme over the past two years. These events have helped to shape the strategic vision for the Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning and prioritise the improvement interventions that have been identified. The membership of both Hardwick and North Derbyshire CCGs have been involved in driving the strategic direction through localised planning and also via the CCG’s respective governance structures which include lay and clinical representatives as permanent members. The strategic vision and supporting interventions have been further informed/refined through a number of clinically/professionally led programme groups and events. Examples include: 27 The Northern Derbyshire Urgent Care Working Group, consisting of representation from a wide range of partner organisations, clinicians and non-clinicians, has identified the key changes that need to be made in order to redesign urgent and emergency care. A frail and elderly clinical workshop held in December 2013 identified and recommended tangible changes to pathway delivery for the frail and elderly including more integrated models of care. GE Healthcare Finnamore has undertaken a Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response Supported by: range of workshops over the past three months with a range of partner organisations, clinicians and non-clinicians including: o A clinical and professional reference group including clinical leaders and nonclinical specialists commissioning and provider organisations. This group met three times and assisted in developing the core narrative of the system transformation plan and financial bridge chart. o Finance and Planning Leads from commissioning and provider organisations met twice in order to inform the financial impact of the System Plan. o Chief Executives have been meeting fortnightly to oversee and guide the development of the System Plan. It is important to note that the Strategic Plan builds on the mission, values and objectives developed by the CCGs during the formation of both organisations. During this period there was extensive community and clinician engagement to agree the mission and objectives. The direction of integrated care, approach to sustainability and commitment to improving quality is embedded within the organisation and dates back to pre-authorisation. The CCGs also have ongoing dialogue with ‘over the border’ providers and lead commissioners both in mid Nottinghamshire, Greater Manchester and South 28 Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response Supported by: Yorkshire. The CCGs are currently heavily engaged with the South Manchester Healthier Together programme, the South Yorkshire Working Together programme and the Better Together programme in Nottinghamshire to ensure that any potential impact on the Northern Derbyshire population/services is understood and influenced. Local clinicians are represented on the governance structures of these programmes and proposed options have been presented to stakeholder forums in Northern Derbyshire to ensure that members of the community have also had opportunity to understand and influence the proposals. What data, intelligence and local analysis was explored to support the development of plans for improving outcomes and quantifiable ambitions? The following information sources have been used to develop a health profile for the CCGs and determine the key intervention areas within the 5 year strategy: Information provided by GEM CSU Derbyshire Joint Strategic Needs Assessment Profile Public Health profiles at CCG level System opportunities modelling PHO profiles – disease specific Evaluation of Hardwick Virtual Ward model To further inform the development of operational plans to improve outcomes and realise ambitions in 2014/15 and 2015/16 the CCGs have used a series of benchmarking tools and information sources to identify the greatest opportunity to improve outcomes for patients, for example the following sources have influenced specific work-streams within the key 29 Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response interventions: How are the plans for improving outcomes and quantifiable ambitions aligned to local JSNAs? Right Care - Commissioning for value pack - Commissioning for value tool - Commissioning for value explorer NHS England - Operational planning atlas - Levels of ambition tool - Outcomes benchmarking support pack (CCG level) - Primary Care tool/ practice profiles In developing the plans, the Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning has considered the JSNA and used it to help determine where the greatest area of need is, i.e. where the CCGs are statistically significantly worse than others in its ONS cluster. The Commissioning for Value tool has also been used to determine where the CCGs are in the worst quartile and worse than the England average. This information has guided the planned changes within the System Plan and the improving outcome ambitions submitted in the Operational Plan. How have the Health and wellbeing boards been involved in setting the plans for improving outcomes? 30 The Derbyshire County Health and Wellbeing Board has been heavily involved in identifying local priorities and developing local plans and metrics to ensure improvement in health outcomes. This includes developing the vision that is contained within the Better Care Fund and is mirrored in the Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning strategic vision. The Health and Supported by: Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response Supported by: Wellbeing Board formally received and signed off the Better Care Fund Plan on 3rd April. The draft Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning Strategic Plan was also shared at this meeting and comments incorporated into the latest iteration. Recognising that the System Plan will continue to evolve over time this Strategic Plan (incorporating the System Plan document) will be shared with Health and Wellbeing Board members on submission on 20th June for further comment and will be discussed in detail at a development session in July. c) Sustainability Are the outcome ambitions included within the sustainability calculations? I.e. the cost of implementation has been evaluated and included in the resource plans moving forwards? Yes – the outcome ambitions are included within the sustainability calculations in the Financial and Operational Plans. For example the ambition to reduce the amount of time people spend avoidably in hospital by 22% is reflected in the Activity Plan (Prov_Comm template) and the associated reduction in the cost of emergency admissions is reflected in the Financial Plan. The bridge diagram on page 42 of the Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning System Plan neatly describes the planned investment and disinvestments over the next five years to achieve the system vision and ensure financial sustainability going forwards. Although the bridge diagram does not include the cost of implementation provision has been made for this within the Financial Plan. 31 Segment Key Line of Enquiry Are assumptions made by the health economy consistent with the challenges identified in a Call to Action? Organisation response Yes – the messages and themes identified through engagement to date are consistent with the assumptions made by the health economy and have heavily influenced the shape the System Plan has taken. Feedback from the Call to Action events, supplemented by other feedback received from patients, public and stakeholders told us that we should strengthen primary and community care, encourage more integrated working and introduce more multi-disciplinary teams to provide person centred care. Overarching themes also included inconsistencies in access to services, which links with intelligence we have accessed on health inequalities all of which the System Plan seeks to address. Can the plan on a page elements be identified through examining the activity and financial projections covered in operational and financial templates? The key transformational interventions detailed within the System Plan (summarised on page 38 of the System Plan) are reflected in the Plan on a Page and the impact of these interventions can be identified within the activity and financial projections. The bridge diagram on page 42 of the System Plan details the forecast impact of the planned investments and disinvestments, which are mirrored within the activity and financial plans. For example, assumptions have been made in the activity and financial plan on reductions in demand as a result of introducing integrated models of care and rationalising the estate from which these services are provided. As the System Plan continues to develop and evolve 32 Supported by: Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response these projections will be revisited and refined in the coming months and are therefore subject to change. d) Improvement interventions Please list the material transformational interventions required to move from the current state and deliver the five year vision. For each transformational intervention, please describe the : Overall aims of the intervention and who is likely to be impacted by the intervention Expected outcome in quality, activity, cost and point of delivery terms e.g. the description of the large scale impact the project will have Investment costs (time, money, workforce) Implementation timeline Enablers required for example medicines optimisation Barriers to success Confidence levels of implementation The Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning System Plan describes the key transformational interventions, their anticipated impact and the enablers required to support and facilitate the changes required to the system in order to deliver the five year vision. The planning teams may find it helpful to consider the reports recently published or to be published imminently including commissioning for prevention, Any town health system and the report following the NHS Futures Summit. 33 The System Plan is founded on the development of integrated care to better meet the ongoing care needs of the people of North Derbyshire, where services are person centred, enable people to self-care, thereby keeping themselves well for longer and reducing the level of unplanned care they receive. For this reason integrated care is placed at the centre of the transformation programme. This reflects that integrated models of care are being developed across the age and need spectrum including for the frail and elderly, for children and young people and for those with mental health conditions. Besides the development of integrated care the system will improve and align other aspects of care. These include: Prevention and self-care Primary care Emergency and urgent care Elective care Specialist care Mental health Children’s services Supported by: Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response Adult social care These aspects of care form the key transformational interventions in the System Plan. Each intervention is supported by a number of initiatives, which are categorised according to where they will impact on the shape of the system and can be linked to the overall impact in financial terms (see pages 28 – 38 of the System Plan). Overall Aims of the Interventions Integrated Care The overall aim of this intervention is to: ‘better meet the ongoing care needs of the people of North Derbyshire, where services are person centred, enable people to self-care, thereby keeping themselves well for longer and reducing the level of unplanned care they receive’. Key initiatives include: • • • • • • • 34 Identification of people with high needs Care plans for most complex & high risk patients Integrated community teams (including 7 day working) Health & Social Care Community Beds programme Enhanced integrated pathways for LTC patients Tele-health & monitoring Integrated behaviour pathway for children and young people Supported by: Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response Prevention and self-care Supported by: The overall aim of this intervention is to: ‘manage the growing demands on health and social care. A fundamental premise to the way care should be delivered in the future is a focus on getting out of peoples’ lives rather than into them’. Key initiatives include: • • • • • Healthy Communities Programme Single Website Portal Early identification of risk factors Self-Management Programme ‘Wrap Around’ Community Resources Programme (enhanced carer support) Primary care The overall aim of this intervention is to: ‘ensure Primary Care sits at the heart of integrated care and drives forward out of hospital care. Increasing expectations around access and rising quality expectations mean that significant changes are required’. Key initiatives include: • • • 35 Develop a shared clinical record Develop networking/federation of provide scale Address & monitor clinical variation GPs to Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response Emergency and urgent care Whilst the emphasis of Integrated Care described by this plan is on proactive identification and planning to reduce the need for episodic care, it is critical that emergency and urgent care services are integrated and aligned 7 days a week. Key initiatives include: • Urgent Access to Primary Care • Integrated urgent & emergency care response • Acute re-ablement unit • Optimise ED/MIU/UCC services • 7 Day working/Keogh Standards Elective care The overall aim of this intervention is to: ‘drive significant improvements in the productivity of elective care and reduce the unnecessary use of services. Transformation of the planned care pathway is required to reduce the amount of time spent in contact with services’. Key initiatives include: • Referral standardisation/ management • Pathway redesign and integration • Enhanced recovery programme Specialist care The overall aim of this intervention is to: ‘ensure effective and sustainable whole system improvement in 36 Supported by: Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response Supported by: specialist services working with local strategic clinical networks’. Key initiatives include: • Review provision of Ophthalmology, ENT and OMFS across South Yorkshire • Review Dermatology, Rheumatology and Paediatrics across South Yorkshire • Consistent 7-day specialist regional pathways Mental health The underlying principles for Mental Health care over the next five years are (i) to ensure parity of esteem between physical and mental health and (ii) to deliver care as close to home as possible. Key initiatives include: • • • • Increase capabilities of Primary Care Service Intermediate/Crisis Response Service Development Psychiatric Liaison Service (RAID) Integrated pathways for mental health & LD Children’s services The overall aim of this intervention is to: ‘continue to work collaboratively with Derbyshire County Council and the Derbyshire Children’s Trust to develop a range of services which will achieve the outcomes required in the Health and Wellbeing Strategy’. 37 Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response Key initiatives include: • • Early intervention and prevention Integrated Care for Children & Young People Adult Social Care The overall aim of this intervention is ‘to deliver integrated services that are built around the principles of independence, safety, good health and quality of life’. Key initiatives include: • • • • • • • • • • 38 Develop and roll out whole person care across Derbyshire Improve services through joint working with the local NHS Implement the social care reforms set out in the Care Act Improve our safeguarding procedures Support independent living and healthier lives for older people Work with carers to better understand their needs and improve support service Improve information, advocacy and advice services Improve access to employment opportunities for disabled adults Reduce the inappropriate use of residential care Better integrate health, housing and social care Supported by: Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response Expected Outcome of the Interventions The expected outcome of each transformational intervention, i.e. the scale of the impact it is anticipated to generate is described in more detail on pages 32, 42 and 43 of the System Plan. The impact and success of the transformational interventions in their totality will be measured against the improving outcomes ambitions. The Unit of Planning has attempted to articulate the ambitions in real numbers, so that we are able to articulate our offer to the population of North Derbyshire. These are: 39 Reduce by 489 the number of years of life lost by the people of Northern Derbyshire from treatable conditions (e.g. cancer, stroke, heart disease, respiratory disease, liver disease). Improve by 5% the quality of life of the people in Northern Derbyshire living with one or more long term condition. Reduce the number of avoidable hospital admissions by 1905 over the next 5 years through improving the quality of primary and community care and people’s ability to selfmanage. Reduce the proportion of people reporting a poor experience of inpatient care by 6% Reduce the proportion of people reporting a very poor experience of primary care by 11%. Supported by: Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response Investment Costs The bridge diagrams on page 42 of the System Plan describes the level of disinvestment and reinvestment that will be undertaken over the next five years in order to deliver the strategic vision and ensure sustainability of the system in future. This can be linked back to the matrix on page 38 of the System Plan, which identifies the impact each transformational intervention is anticipated to generate. The bridge diagram on page 43 of the System Plan takes this one step further and shows the potential future spend by care area (with reference to current spend) and the planned reinvestment in ‘right care’ settings and integrated care. It should be noted that this is deliberately not intended to represent future spend or investment with any particular providers as the system recognises that we will undoubtedly need to align the system to work differently in future, i.e. work beyond existing organisational and professional boundaries. Implementation Timeline The System Plan provides a suggested roadmap of the work that will need to happen over the next five years to deliver the new model of care for the whole system (see page 47), however it is recognised that in order to focus transformation resource effectively and efficiently the Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning will need to agree which interventions/initiatives will be undertaken at which point throughout the five year transformation 40 Supported by: Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response programme. Discussions are currently underway regarding the establishment of a governance structure that will oversee and manage the five year transformation programme. It is likely that this structure will be supported by a Clinical and Professional Reference Group that will provide a key function to help the system prioritise the initiatives that will have the greatest impact at the right time within the programme’s lifetime. At present there are circa 30 initiatives (and many projects within each), which will need to be prioritised in order to create a balanced portfolio of key transformational initiatives across the spectrum of prevention, integration and pathway changes/enablers. From the workshops that have taken place to date a view of the priorities is beginning to emerge and is detailed on page 46 of the System Plan. Once the priorities have been identified further work up of the detail including investment, expected impact, etc. will be a major focus for the system in the coming months. Enablers Required To ensure the successful delivery of the transformation programme a number of key system wide enablers will be required to support and facilitate changes to the existing model of care. These include: 41 The ability to prioritise which interventions to undertake and when The understanding that not one size fits all – certain interventions may need to be implemented and/or delivered differently in Supported by: Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response different localities due to the needs of their populations A commitment for all system leaders/partners to work together to deliver the transformation required To learn as we go – recognising that we are on a journey and that the scale of challenge required is significant 7 day working – this underpins all future models of care and requires all parts of the system to move at the same pace Information management and technology More effective use of estate - in the future facilities will need to be used much more flexibly and be best located to meet people’s needs Workforce and skills Developing more effective mechanisms to commission and contract for the desired future model of care Develop an effective governance structure that will oversee and manage the transformational change across the system and ensure cross system decision making is enabled and understood. The key enablers are summarised on page 9 of the System Plan and described in more detail on pages 48 to 56. Barriers to Success The barriers to success are reflective of the enablers described above, however two are particularly 42 Supported by: Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response noteworthy and are described further below: Workforce One of the greatest barriers to success currently, particularly in introducing integrated models of care, is the workforce. Recruitment of staff in key areas such as nursing, geriatricians for the Acute Re-ablement Unit, A&E Consultants and GPs has been difficult and debilitating. Re-providing care in different settings gives providers opportunities to deliver internal savings by back-filling vacancies, however this potentially puts pressure on established or expanding services elsewhere in the system. This results in difficulties in flexing resources and providing sufficient capacity to meet demand and also continue developing and expanding proactive care services. The key challenges we anticipate as a result of the strategic vision we are working towards are: • • • 43 The Northern Derbyshire model for integrated care will have substantial implications for the whole provider workforce. New ways of working – staff will work in multidisciplinary teams made up of employees from physical and mental health providers and social care. A shared understanding across professionals and organisations will be required to ensure that the team has the right attributes and all staff are making a valid contribution to effective integrated care. Clarity of leadership and accountability will be essential. Development of existing roles – such as existing Supported by: Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response staff in the community providing a greater range of services and working to ‘top of license’. • Development of new roles and approach to skillmix – such as care co-ordinators and joint health and social care workers, and a shift to higher non-qualified to qualified ratios for community based care to provide extensive low level support. • Primary care professionals – will need to increase skills and work together in new ways including multi-professional team working and sharing skills across practices. Impact of 7 day working understood. • Flexible employment models will be required together with consideration of education and training needs of a changing workforce. Clearly the greatest enabler will be for each provider organisation to enable their workforce to work differently and across boundaries in multi-disciplinary teams. To facilitate this discussion has already commenced across the provider organisations to make some key changes to contract terms and conditions. To develop this further and overcome the barriers described above commissioners and providers across Northern Derbyshire are engaging with the Local Education and Training Board to develop a system wide workforce plan, which will feed into the wider Health Education East Midlands workforce plan. Information Management and Technology The current disconnected nature of health and care 44 Supported by: Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response information management systems is a significant barrier to achieving a new model of delivery which has integrated care at its heart. In order to achieve the required scale and pace of change the existing IM & T infrastructure will need to be addressed. The system plan (page 51) describes four key capabilities that are required to deliver effective integrated care which will need to underpin a shared informatics strategy across all organisations. These are: Data control Healthcare analytics Care coordination and management Patient and wellness engagement The establishment of common, integrated social and clinical care information, centred on the person, is an ongoing ambition to underpin health and care community-wide integration and transformation initiatives. It will enable care professionals to work within and between their respective organisations, supporting the continuity of care across pathways and to provide the opportunity to support the population to access their care records so that they may more fully participate in their care. The health and social care organisations in Derbyshire are at varying levels of digital maturity and as a consequence are not able to ensure that the various systems in use at the point of care across Derbyshire are easily and seamlessly able to exchange the 45 Supported by: Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response necessary information to support the integration and transformation of local services. So as not to inhibit greater service integration, the health and social care organisations and associated partner agencies in Derbyshire have committed to implement a platform solution that builds on the value of the capabilities and data contained within the current best of breed systems to present professionals delivering care in Derbyshire with a common and universal access, subject to appropriate governance, to care information from a wide variety of information sources and to support citizens to access their information. To ensure that the maximum value from this can be achieved at the earliest possible opportunity, the CCG's within Derbyshire are seeking support from the Integrated Digital Care Technology Fund for matched funding to accelerate the scope and pace of this critical initiative. Confidence levels of implementation A great deal of progress has been made over recent months in aligning organisational thinking and developing a system wide vision for Northern Derbyshire. Partnership has always been a strength in Northern Derbyshire and will be critical in moving forward for the scale of change that organisations have now committed to. System partners recognise that we are at the beginning of an evolving journey that will test our capacity, capabilities and working relationships, however remain confident that our plans form a solid foundation on which to proceed and secure the future 46 Supported by: Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response of services for the population of Northern Derbyshire. e) Governance overview What governance processes are in place to ensure future plans are developed in collaboration with key stakeholders including the local community? Derbyshire System Wide Governance To date oversight and governance for delivery of the Derbyshire vision and the Better Care Fund Plan have taken place through existing structures such as the Adult Care Board and Derbyshire Children’s Trust Board to the Health and Wellbeing Board. There is a monthly Joint Commissioning Co-ordinating Group that also reports quarterly to the Adult Care Board and ultimately to the Health and Wellbeing Board. Oversight and governance of the Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning system vision/plan has to date taken place through the 21st Century Transformation Programme Board. The Board comprises the Chief Officers of both Hardwick and North Derbyshire CCGs, the Chief Executives of the major provider organisations across Northern Derbyshire as well as senior representation from public health, the voluntary sector, adult care, the district council and the Chair of the Health and Wellbeing Board. It has now been recognised that a number of forums in existence potentially overlap in terms of their decision making authority. 21st Century Transformation Programme Board have therefore agreed that to support the system transformation clear cross system decision making processes need to be established that will ensure: 47 Clear remit and terms of reference Supported by: Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response Supported by: Clarity of membership and accountability Clear decision making processes are defined and understood Decision making is enabled at the point closest to its impact There is an understood and appropriate balance between local and cross system decision making (including input from clinicians) Decisions are made quickly, informed by the right information. The governance structure is currently being discussed and will be agreed imminently, however it is anticipated that it will consist of a system wide programme structure with clear leadership and supported by a system wide Programme Management Office to ensure delivery. It is likely that this structure will be supported by a Clinical and Professional Reference Group that will provide a key function to help the system prioritise the initiatives that will have the greatest impact at the right time within the programme’s lifetime. At present there are circa 30 initiatives (and many projects within each), which will need to be prioritised in order to create a balanced portfolio of key transformational initiatives across the spectrum of prevention, integration and pathway changes/enablers. From the workshops that have taken place to date a view of the priorities is beginning to emerge and is detailed on page 46 of the system plan. Continued Collaboration with Key Stakeholders In addition to the governance structure outlined above 48 Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response Supported by: the Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning will continue to utilise existing mechanisms to ensure collaboration with a) membership practices and b) local community including patients and the public. All CCG Committees have patient representatives on them from our respective constituted Patient Reference Groups, which ensures direct influence and insight to inform plan development. CCG specific routes of Governance are described below: Hardwick CCG a) Membership practices: Membership practice views are sought and gathered from a wide range of clinical and nonclinical staff across primary care. The CCG also has system wide QUEST events through the year. Following further development from the Commissioning Delivery Group, plans are then consulted on by the local community as described below and lastly plans are discussed and ratified by the Governing Body and passed to the PMO to be operationalised. b) Local community: The CCG has a Communications and Engagement Strategy which details the approach and mechanisms for engagement with key stakeholders including the local community. The CCG has a strong patient voice including an active and mature Reference Group and a wide and diverse Patient 49 Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response Supported by: Network Group. The CCG has strong links to the community, district councils and councillors, Youth councils, the voluntary sector, Parish councils and councillors. North Derbyshire CCG a) Membership practices: Member practices are grouped into five localities in North Derbyshire CCG. Each locality is responsible for developing a 2 year operational plan based on the health needs and requirements of their local population. These plans feed the CCG’s operational and strategic plan and are ratified by the Governing Body. b) Local community: The Patient and Public Engagement Plan and associated work plan provides the detail and focus for the involvement of local people in the CCG's decision making process. The CCG has a strong patient voice via its 21st Century Lay Reference Group, Patient Participation Groups (PPGs), Locality Network PPGs, Health Panel, Stakeholder Meetings and lay representation on committees and project groups. The CCG has strong links with Health Watch, voluntary sector organisations, county, district and borough councils. The CCG has also developed productive relationships with vulnerable and hard to reach groups and those covered by the 9 protected characteristics of the Equality Act 2012. 50 Segment f) Values and principles Key Line of Enquiry Please outline how the values and principles are embedded in the planned implementation of the interventions Organisation response The Northern Derbyshire Unit of Planning will work to the following principles to guide service change. It should be noted that these principles have been subject to consultation and agreed with stakeholders and the public. 51 All services will be person-centred We will work in partnership with the people needing care and their families and carers to provide care as close to the persons home as possible, and when appropriate support them to access the right care away from home. Care will be provided flexibly We will listen to and understand the person’s complete needs and meet them by using all services and resources available. We will ensure that we will co-ordinate care across health, social care and voluntary services to ensure people receive the right care from the right service at the right time. Assumptions will be challenged We will have the courage to make changes for the better that will improve the patient experience and obtain the best value for money. We will embrace innovation and find new approaches to care based on sound evidence. We will commit to monitoring and publishing patient experience data to be accountable to those who use our services. People will be treated with dignity and respect We respect and value the people who use and work in health and care services in Derbyshire Supported by: Segment Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response and we will invest resources to support the health and well-being of our communities. We will plan and deliver services in partnership We will actively seek and listen to the views of people who use and work in health and care in Derbyshire so that we can plan and deliver services in partnership and be accountable to them. Healthy lifestyles will be promoted We will support people to help them to make an informed choice about lifestyle and services and identify and provide extra support for those who need and want to make positive lifestyle changes. Each organisation will also continue to be guided by its own values, which are provided below for information. Hardwick CCG values: Responsive to local needs Listening organisation Visionary Forward thinking and creative Adaptive Courageous Inclusive Empowering North Derbyshire CCG values: Patient Focus 52 Putting patients at the centre Supported by: Segment 53 Key Line of Enquiry Organisation response of all we do Integrity Being honest, fair and open Courage Being empowered to make positive change Responsiveness Working together, committed to delivery Supported by: