| Literature DB >> 34754282 |
Robin Miller1, Jon Glasby1, Helen Dickinson2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: As part of major policy reforms begun in 2010, England introduced a wave of initiatives to encourage more integrated care between health and social care. These built on previous attempts which sought to achieve similar objectives through a focus on better partnership working. This article provides an overview and critical commentary on integrated care policy in England from 2010-2020 based on reviews by regulators, parliamentary committees and the national audit office. OVERVIEW OF POLICY: Integrated care became a priority through the work of the Future Forum, a group of leading stakeholders established due to concerns about greater competition in public health care. This led to a public statement of shared commitment to integrated care by national health and social care bodies. Early mechanisms included a pooled fund to achieve nationally set objectives, the creation of local authority led partnership boards, and high profile innovation programmes. Later in the 2010's, new health led partnerships became more dominant vehicles to achieve integrated care at regional level. IMPACT OF POLICY: Despite progress within a few local areas, and reduction in delayed discharges from hospital the overall picture from national reviews was that expected improvements were not achieved. Emergency admissions to hospital continued to grow, patients within primary care reported being less involved in their care, and health inequalities worsened. The initial response to COVID-19 was health-centric contributing to outbreaks in care homes and inadequate supplies of protective personal equipment. The ability of leaders to look beyond their organisations' interests was reported as vital for local progress. National government performance frameworks discouraged system based working and chronic underfunding of social care led to major capacity and workforce challenges.Entities:
Keywords: England; integrated care; leadership; partnership working; policy
Year: 2021 PMID: 34754282 PMCID: PMC8555479 DOI: 10.5334/ijic.5666
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Integr Care Impact factor: 5.120
Key policy initiatives and legislation relating in integrated health and social care in England between 2010 and 2014.
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| YEAR | TITLE | OVERVIEW |
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| 2012 | Health & Social Care Act 2012 | Established local health and wellbeing boards in each local authority area, with a duty to encourage the integrated commissioning of health and social care services. Required clinical commissioning groups to promote integration where this would improve quality or reduce inequalities. |
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| 2013 | Integrated Care: Our Shared Commitment | The Department of Health and twelve national partners made a commitment for urgent and sustained action with an ambition to make joined-up and coordinated health and care the norm by 2018. |
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| 2013 | Integrated Care and Support Pioneers | Twenty five local areas were selected to pilot new ways of working to improve the quality and cost-effectiveness of care for people whose needs are met from both NHS and local authority services. |
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| 2013 | Better Care Fund | This national initiative required clinical commissioning groups and local authorities to pool a minimum of £3.8 billion to promote integrated working, overseen by local health and wellbeing boards |
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| 2014 | Care Act 2014 | Required local authorities to promote integration where this would promote wellbeing, improve quality, or prevent care needs from developing |
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| 2014 | Five Year Forward View | Called for a ‘radical upgrade’ in prevention and public health; models of care which shift care from hospitals to settings closer to people’s homes. Introduced seven new models of care based around the Five Year Forward View to be piloted at 50 ‘vanguard’ sites |
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Key policy initiatives and legislation relating in integrated health and social care in England between 2015 and 2020.
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| YEAR | TITLE | OVERVIEW |
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| 2015 | Spending Review and Autumn Statement 2015: | Introduced a commitment to integrate health and social care services across England by 2020 and required local areas to submit plans by April 2017 demonstrating how they would achieve this |
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| 2015 | Sustainability and Transformation Plans | Local health bodies were required to draw up plans to improve services and finances over the five years to March 2021 around identified ‘footprints’. There was a subsequent shift in focus from the ‘Plan’ to the ‘Partnerships’ |
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| 2018 | Integrated care systems | Advanced forms of Sustainability and Transformation Partnerships in which the local NHS organisations are awarded greater autonomy over use of available funding and managing the quality of their health care services. National bodies only assure system level plans rather than those of individual organisations. Local areas applied for this status. |
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| 2019 | NHS Long Term Plan | Committed to the development of Integrated Care Systems in every area of England by 2021. |
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| 2019 | Primary Care Networks | Individual general practices can establish or join PCNs covering populations of between 30,000 to 50,000 to integrate primary care services around local communities and collaborate with other relevant agencies [including social care] |
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