Agenda and minutes

Extraordinary Meeting, Cabinet - Wednesday, 12th July, 2017 6.00 pm

Venue: Conference Room 1 - Fred Perry House

Contact: Jonathan Vali  (0161 474 3201)

Note: Extraordinary Meeting 

Media

Items
No. Item

1.

Minutes pdf icon PDF 89 KB

To approve as a correct record and sign the Minutes of the meeting held on 13 June 2017.

Additional documents:

Minutes:

The Minutes (copies of which had been circulated) of the meeting held on 13 June 2017 were approved as a correct record and signed by the Chair.

2.

Declarations of Interest

Councillors and officers to declare any interests which they have in any of the items on the agenda for the meeting.

Additional documents:

Minutes:

Councillors and officers were invited to declare any interests they had in any of the items on the agenda for the meeting.

 

No declarations of interest were made.

3.

Urgent Decisions

To report any urgent action taken under the Constitution since the last meeting of the Executive.

Additional documents:

Minutes:

No urgent decisions were reported.

4.

Public Question Time

Members of the public are invited to put questions to the Chair and Executive Councillors on any matters within the powers and duties of the Executive, subject to the exclusions set out in the Code of Practice.  (Questions must be submitted no later than 30 minutes prior to the commencement of the meeting on the card provided.  These are available at the meeting. You can also submit via the Council’s website at www.stockport.gov.uk/publicquestions)

Additional documents:

Minutes:

Members of the public were invited to submit questions to the Cabinet on any matters within its powers and duties, subject to the exclusions set out in the Code of Practice.

 

One question was submitted.

 

The questioner asked why the Council and its partners had not provided sufficient background information in its publicity material for the ‘listening events’ being held for Stockport Together, and why Council representatives were not present at these events to answer political questions and be held to account.

 

In response, the Cabinet Member for Health addressed a number of points raised in the question and its preamble, including: the assertion that Stockport Together was part of the nation-wide programme of Sustainability and Transformation Plans (STPs) was inaccurate as the local decision to undertake this work predated the STPs by approximately 18 months; the reductions in hospital capacity would only take place once there was sufficient safe capacity within the community, and that this approach had been agreed with the hospital Trust and accorded with the position taken by Simon Stevens, Chief Executive of NHS England; the Council now published one printed copy of The Review per year, but that Government restrictions prevented it from containing party political information in the way the question implied it should; assertions that Stockport Together would be ‘ripe for privatisation’ did not accord with the view of the Cabinet Member, but that such a decision would rest with the national government; the Council had publicised and discussed extensively Stockport Together; there were more listening events planned and senior officers from the Council and partner organisations had attended those that had already taken place, but any councillor attendance would be in a listening capacity so that public feedback could inform the development of the final business cases.

Key Decisions

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5.

Stockport Together Outline Business Cases pdf icon PDF 88 KB

To consider a report joint report of the Cabinet Members for Adult Social Care and for Health.

 

We have been working together with partners and with the public and patients to test and trial new ways of working that improve people’s experience of treatment and care and their outcomes. The results of this initial work are encouraging. These Outline Business Cases describe how we can by working together more closely deliver these new models of care and associated benefits to many more people on a permanent basis. It is important that before we propose making these changes permanent that we hear from a wider group of patients and the public to ensure that our thinking is right and is shaped by their experiences and expectations. It is equally important that as the work on the design of the new service models continues to progress, the Boards of all the Partners remain sighted and able to comment on and influence the content ahead of final approval being sought.

 

The final approval of these Outline Business Cases is subject to our learning from a period of wider patient and public involvement. We anticipate the Boards of each Partner organisation receiving Final Business Cases for discussion and proposed approval in late 2017.  In the meantime funding from the Greater Manchester  Health & Social Care Partnership will enable us to continue to develop and test our thinking. Changes will not happen overnight and there will be continual adjustment of ideas as we implement them. This is just one of many stages at which we will need patients and the public to be involved if the people of Stockport are to have the best health and care services available so they can live healthier and happier lives.

 

The Cabinet is invited to

 

1.      endorse the Outline Business Cases as the current description of the approach of the Stockport Together partners to design and delivery of new models of care.

2.     note that the cases will remain in outline and be finalised for approval, anticipated late 2017 as a result of learning from a period of wider patient and public involvement and continued input from clinicians and professionals working across health and care.

3.     support the continuation of the Greater Manchester Transformation Funding being invested in testing the thinking locally and in refining and developing the services for the benefit of patients.

 

Officer contact: Andrew Webb, 0161 474 3808

Additional documents:

Minutes:

A joint report of the Cabinet Members for Adult Social Care and for Health was submitted (copies of which had been circulated) inviting the Cabinet to consider a series of Outline Business Cases for new models of health and social care, developed as part of the Stockport Together Programme for health and social care integration.

 

The Outline Business Cases focussed on the following areas:-

 

·         Summary Economic

·         Neighbourhood Model

·         Intermediate Care

·         Enablers

 

The Cabinet Member for Health outlined the background to the development of the Stockport Together programme, including

 

·         the Cabinet’s previously stated commitments to improving health and outcomes for those using local services and to reduce long-standing inequalities;

·         the financial constraints on local partners and funding future challenges;

·         demographic pressures on services currently and the projected ongoing challenge this would create, in particular a cohort of older people with complex needs creating demand on acute services;

·         the ambition of the Programme to fundamentally change the way certain services were delivered;

·         the concerns of particular groups about the possible impact of changes of access and quality of care, and of the achievability of the Programme.

 

The Cabinet Member emphasised that the Programme was not seeking to deny or reduce access to health services, but to ensuring that those in need received the right service from the right professional in the most appropriate place to receive that service, thereby releasing resources and time for reinvestment.

 

Specifically in relation to the Outline Business Cases, the Cabinet Member highlighted:-

 

·         the other partners within the Programme had considered and commented on the Outline Business Cases and endorsed them, subject to various caveats;

·         the Council’s Scrutiny Committees had considered their content and been supportive;

·         it was important to ensure that the new models of care were implemented as soon as possible to realise savings and to release Transformation Fund resources;

·         a number of ‘listening’ events had taken place and would continue to take place over the coming weeks;

·         final decisions on the business cases would be taken at the turn of the year, and these finalised documents may be very different following public and professional consultation;

·         further consideration on organisational and governance form would take place in the future and be subject to further public consultation.

 

The Cabinet Member in summation emphasised that ‘doing nothing’ was not an option open to partners and that although services would change as a result there remained significant uncertainty and risk.

 

The Leader of the Council commented on the significant funding challenges facing partners and the Council in particular, emphasising the significant national underfunding of social care, about which the Council and its partners could do little to change. He further stated that the proposals were not simply about responding to reduced resources and increased demand, but also about improving the quality of care being provided.

 

Other Cabinet Members acknowledged the significant financial, organisational and cultural challenges of the Programme but also emphasised the importance of seeing patients and people who used services as being at the core of this agenda.

 

RESOLVED – That in relation to the Stockport Together Outline Business Case:-

 

(1)          the Outline Business Cases as the current description of the approach of the Stockport Together partners to design and delivery of new models of care be endorsed, subject to the following caveats:-

 

(i)     the need to focus on

·           reducing health inequalities

·           ensuring mental health and parity of esteem were prioritised by all partners

·           having a workforce with the right skills allied with the right approach to recruitment, training and retention

·           prevention, or where this was not possible early intervention

·           quality of care

 

(ii)    and further consideration of

·           how to generate the cultural change needed

·           whether there was sufficient capacity to deliver the Programme

·           clearly defined commissioning targets and plans to which all within the system worked toward

 

(2)          the cases remaining in outline and being finalised for approval, anticipated late 2017 as a result of learning  ...  view the full minutes text for item 5.

6.

To consider recommendations of Scrutiny Committees

On:-

 

(a)  Matters (if any) referred to the Executive Meeting

 

(b)  Any called-in Executive Decisions

Additional documents:

Minutes:

There were none to consider.