Agenda and minutes

Our Healthier South East London Joint Health Overview & Scrutiny Committee - Wednesday 13 December 2017 7.00 pm

Venue: Bromley Civic Centre,Stockwell Close, BR1 3UH

Contact: Julie Timbrell, Southwark scrutiny 020 7525 0514 Graham Walton, Bromley 020 8461 7743 

Items
No. Item

1.

ELECTION OF CHAIR AND VICE-CHAIR

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    Minutes:

    RESOLVED that Councillor James Hunt be appointed Chairman and Councillor

    Judi Ellis be appointed Vice-Chairman for the 2017/18 municipal year.

2.

APOLOGIES

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    Minutes:

    Apologies for absence were received from Councillors Ross Downing, Rebecca

    Lury, Clare Morris and Cherry Parker.

     

    The Chairman led Members in thanking Councillor Rebecca Lury for her excellent

    work as previous Chairman of the Committee. The Chairman also thanked Mark

    Easton who was standing down from his role as Programme Director of the "Our

    Healthier South East London" Programme.

3.

NOTIFICATION OF ANY ITEMS OF BUSINESS WHICH THE CHAIR DEEMS URGENT

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    In special circumstances, an item of business may be added to an agenda within five working days of the meeting.

    Minutes:

    Two items of business were raised for discussion comprising the financial situation

    of King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust and proposals to reconfigure

    stroke services across the Kent and Medway region.

4.

DISCLOSURE OF INTERESTS AND DISPENSATIONS

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    Members to declare any interests and dispensations in respect of any item of business to be considered at the meeting.

    Minutes:

    Councillor Jacqui Dyer declared that she was the NHS England Equalities Lead for

    Mental Health.

     

    Councillor Judi Ellis declared that she was a Governor and her daughter was an

    employee of Oxleas NHS Foundation Trust.

     

    Councillor Alan Hall declared that he was a former Governor of King’s College

    Hospital NHS Foundation Trust.

     

    Councillor Robert Hill declared that his wife was the Assistant General Secretary

    of UNISON.

     

    Councillor James Hunt declared that his wife was an employee of Dartford and

    Gravesham NHS Trust.

     

    Councillor Bill Williams declared that he was a Governor of Guy’s and St Thomas’

    NHS Foundation Trust.

5.

DISCUSSION OF ANY OTHER OPEN ITEMS AS NOTIFIED AT THE START OF THE MEETING

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    Minutes:

     

    The Committee considered King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust which

    had recently been put into financial ‘special measures’.

     

    A Member underlined the

    need to seek reassurance for patients that clinical services would not be reduced

    as a result of the financial situation and informed the Committee that a request had

    been made to King’s for an update on the financial and operational consequences

    of the Trust being placed into ‘special measures’. Members requested that a full

    briefing be provided to the next meeting of the Joint Health Overview and Scrutiny

    Committee relating to the impact of the financial situation on the Sustainability and

    Transformation Plan and updating Members on the Trust’s future commissioning

    intentions, as well as identifying implications for the stability of the acute health

    sector across the South East London region.

     

    The Chairman advised the Committee that Kent and Medway Sustainability and

    Transformation Partnership had announced proposals to reconfigure stroke

    services for the Kent and Medway region in which hyper-acute and acute stroke

    units would be consolidated onto fewer sites. This service was accessed by

    approximately 70 residents of the London Boroughs of Bexley and Bromley and

    the Royal Borough of Greenwich on an annual basis and was likely to increase

    demand for services within the South East London region going forward.

     

    The Chairman requested Members consider the forward work programme for

    future meetings of the Committee.

6.

MINUTES OF THE MEETING HELD ON 28TH NOVEMBER 2016

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    To approve as a correct record the Minutes of the open section of the meeting held on 28 November 2016

    Supporting documents:

    Minutes:

    Written questions were received from Jane Mandlik, Save Lewisham Hospital

    Campaign and these are attached at Appendix A.

     

    RESOLVED that the minutes of the meeting held on 28th November 2016 be

    agreed as a correct record.

7.

OVERVIEW OF OHSEL ACTIVITY PLANNED FOR 2017/18

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    Supporting documents:

    Minutes:

    The Committee considered a report providing an overview of OHSEL activity

    planned for 2017/18.

     

    Sustainability and Transformation Partnerships had been launched in early 2016

    to bring together different NHS and partner bodies in creating a strategic plan.

    This role had since evolved, and the South East London Sustainability and

    Transformation Partnership now undertook a wider range of functions including

    setting the strategic direction for changes to health and care systems within the

    region and supporting NHS providers to work together. The Partnership also

    worked to develop a financial strategy and enabler strategies in the areas of

    workforce, digital and estates, and with regulators to take an oversight of finance

    and performance.

     

    The four key workstreams of the South East London Sustainability and

    Transformation Partnership comprised improved public engagement and

    transparency, a focus on national priorities and alignment of transformation with

    delivery, a refresh of the financial model, and the development of accountable care

    systems. As part of these workstreams, detailed delivery plans had been

    developed for the national clinical priorities of Cancer, Primary Care, Mental

    Health and Urgent and Emergency Care, as well as for other key areas including

    Maternity Services. Financial modelling had also been undertaken on the South

    East London system to identify what would be required to move back into financial

    surplus on a recurrent basis by 2021. A model was now being developed to roll

    out accountable care across the region which would include greater integration of

    health and care systems, and to support this, the South East London Sustainability

    and Transformation Partnership had expressed an interest in participating in the

    second wave of accountable care delivery pilot projects which could realise

    additional resources and support for the South East London region.

     

    In considering the update, a Member requested that more detailed financial

    information be provided on planned OHSEL activity. The Member also asked for

    clarification on how this would affect the number and use of hospital beds, and the

    Lead Officer, South East London Sustainability and Transformation Partnership

    confirmed that there were no plans to reduce the number of hospital beds across

    the region. A Member noted that patients often accessed support from multiple

    sources including social care, acute, mental health and primary care services and

    that accountable care would need to provide ‘wraparound care’ to patients which

    simplified the system of receiving health care and support, such as through multiskillingthe health care workforce.

     

    The Chief Executive, Oxleas NHS Foundation Trust reported that Oxleas NHS Foundation Trust had placed increasing emphasis on community care for patients accessing mental health services in recent years, and was working in partnership with South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust and St George’s Hospital to consider how key services such as Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services could be delivered more effectively, as well as with other key partners to develop early intervention services across the region.

     

    RESOLVED that the update be noted.

     

8.

MENTAL HEALTH - UPDATE ON PLANS

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    Supporting documents:

    Minutes:

    The Committee considered a report providing an update on mental health

    provision.

     

    Mental health remained a core part of the Sustainability and Transformation Plan

    and was prominent in the clinical transformation pillar. The key priorities for

    mental health across the South East London region included improving the

    provision of health-based places of safety, achieving parity of esteem and

    integration of physical and mental health and developing an approach to address

    workforce difficulties across the South East London region. Other key priorities

    included building on progress in reducing out-of-area placements for acute

    inpatients and developing new models of care for accountable care systems.

     

    The financial position of the South East London Sustainability and Transformation

    Partnership remained exceptionally difficult, placing an increased focus on the

    need for new ways of working to deliver service improvement. All Clinical

    Commissioning Groups within the South East London region had met the Mental

    Health Investment Standard for 2017/18, and system providers continued to

    assure themselves on the make-up of the allocation across all key partners to

    ensure it genuinely met the standard. It was the intention of Clinical

    Commissioning Groups within the region to meet the investment standard for

    2018/19 as set out in their two year Operating Plans; however it had been

    recognised that this would be particularly challenging in the context of both

    workforce constraints and the increased pressure and demand on the system. To

    mitigate this risk, providers and Clinical Commissioning Groups within the South

    East London region were developing joint strategies and plans to maximise

    resources which would include pooling budgets across health and social care.

     

    The Chief Executive, Oxleas NHS Foundation Trust reported that work had been

    undertaken to deliver parity of roles across mental health services within the South

    East London region. Mental Health clinical staff would also be given opportunities

    to advance by achieving approved clinical status which was expected to increase

    the retention of skilled staff in clinical roles.

     

    In considering the update, a Member underlined the impact of the affordable

    housing shortage on recruiting and retaining a skilled mental health care workforce

    and on patients receiving inpatient care. The Chief Executive, Oxleas NHS

    Foundation Trust confirmed that a new housing scheme at Queen Mary’s Village,

    Sidcup had been developed to offer homes for shared ownership or for rental at

    intermediate market rent to Oxleas nurses and staff, NHS staff and other key

    workers who lived or worked in the London Borough of Bexley. Should this

    scheme be successful there was potential to roll it out to other areas of South East

    London in partnership with Housing Associations and developers. A care plan

    was developed for all patients admitted for inpatient mental health care including

    how their discharge would be managed and where possible, patients were

    supported to sustain existing tenancies.

     

    Following a request by a Member, the Chief Executive, Oxleas NHS Foundation

    Trust confirmed that information relating to a reduction in out-of-Borough

    placements would be provided to the Committee following the meeting. The

    Member also requested that  ...  view the full minutes text for item 8.

9.

ORTHOPAEDIC CLINICAL NETWORK

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    a      FULL TEXT OF NEW PROPOSAL

     

    b      ASSESSMENT OF IMPACT OF THE DECISION

     

    Supporting documents:

    Minutes:

    The Committee considered an update on the Orthopaedic Clinical Network which

    was being developed with the aim of providing elective orthopaedic services on

    fewer sites across the South East London Region to support the implementation of

    the Getting it Right First Time recommendations.

     

    Following an extensive assessment and consultation process, it had become clear

    that it would not be possible for a consensus to be reached on the best model to

    adopt within the South East London Region, and it was therefore proposed to

    move forward with creating an Orthopaedic Clinical Network across the existing

    three providers. Terms of Reference had now been formulated for the

    Orthopaedic Clinical Leadership Group and it had been recommended to the

    South East London Sustainability and Transformation Partnership that the Network

    be established and that a Clinical Lead be appointed. From 2018/19, orthopaedic

    services would be commissioned against the standards and performance metrics

    set out in the Getting it Right First Time report, and the Network’s progress in

    delivering quality and efficiency benefits would be independently assured by the

    London Clinical Senate. Commissioners would review the findings of the Clinical

    Senate on embedding the Getting it Right First Time recommendations over the

    three sites after 12 to 18 months, at which time a decision would be made on

    whether quality and efficiency benefits had been met and could be sustained

    across three sites.

     

    In response to a question from the Chairman, the Programme Director, "Our

    Healthier South East London" Programme confirmed that patients within the South

    East London region would not be compelled to use services within the

    Orthopaedic Clinical Network and could continue to use other orthopaedic

    services, such as those offered by Dartford and Gravesham NHS Trust.

     

    Members discussed the recent announcement that Guy's and St Thomas' NHS

    Foundation Trust and Johnson & Johnson Managed Services would be working

    together to deliver an Orthopaedics Centre of Excellence at Guy’s Hospital. This

    would include the construction of three new operating theatres which would

    increase the total number of operating theatres to eight. The Consultant

    Orthopaedic Surgeon and Clinical Director of Surgery, Guy's and St Thomas' NHS

    Foundation Trust advised Members that it had been projected that demand for

    Orthopaedic services would continue to increase as a result of the ageing

    population, and that the Centre of Excellence would deliver sufficient additional

    capacity to meet this increasing demand as well as supporting innovation and

    research in the area of orthopaedic surgery. The partnership did not represent a

    privatisation of the service as Guy’s Hospital already used Johnson & Johnson

    Managed Services within its existing supply chain, and one of the key aims within

    the proposed new arrangement was to streamline processes to procure devices,

    surgical instruments and implants required for orthopaedic surgery to reduce

    costs. To support this, work had been undertaken with individual surgeons over

    the past two years to identify best practice in orthopaedic surgery, supporting

    surgeons to work more efficiently. In response to a question regarding the total

    project value, the Director, Commercial  ...  view the full minutes text for item 9.

10.

COMMUNITY CARE - STRATEGY AND GOVERNANCE

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    Supporting documents:

    Minutes:

    The Committee considered an update on Community Care – Strategy and

    Governance.

     

    Within the South East London Region, Community Care was delivered via Local

    Care Networks which had been designed collaboratively by the six Clinical

    Leadership Groups. All local areas within the region had adopted the target model

    which would embed an integrated pathway of care to be supported by delivery

    milestones encompassing the London Primary Care Standards. The new model of

    Local Care Networks would realise a number of benefits including longer opening

    hours for primary care, increased use of digital technology to improve patient

    experience and social prescribing in which patients would be supported to manage

    their own health. The new way of working also aimed to improve access to

    diagnostics, including for the management of long term conditions, and increased

    joint working with specialist providers to improve reablement and end-of-life care.

    An updated governance structure had now been agreed and would be used to

    support the leadership and oversight of the Community Care strategy.

     

    The Clinical Chairman, Bromley Clinical Commissioning Group outlined a new

    model of care that had been introduced to the London Borough of Bromley in the

    form of three Integrated Care Networks launched in October 2016 which took a

    Multi-Disciplinary Team approach to making appropriate care and support

    available to Bromley residents with complex care needs. Over 550 referrals had

    been made to the Integrated Care Networks during the first nine months of

    operation up to the end of June 2017 with an average service user age of 82

    years. All key partners had now signed an Integrated Care Network Alliance

    Agreement which set out the objectives, expected deliverables and operational

    framework for partner working, and consideration was being given to how this

    model could be used to support other vulnerable groups such as people with heart

    failure.

     

    In discussion, a Member suggested that new models of care would benefit from

    linking in with the Mayor of London’s strategies. Another Member emphasised the

    value of involving the voluntary sector and carers in delivering new models of care,

    which might require a change in culture and language. In response to a query

    from a Member on how parity of esteem could be built into new models of care for

    patients with mental health needs, the Programme Director, "Our Healthier South

    East London" Programme confirmed that this issue was being reviewed and would

    be supported by a planned realignment of Oxleas NHS Foundation Trust

    management teams to Borough-level. The Member suggested that this work be

    aligned with Thrive LDN which was a London-wide movement to improve mental

    health and wellbeing and was supported by the Mayor of London.

     

    A Member noted the need to promote new initiatives effectively, such as longer

    opening hours for primary care. The Member also underlined the benefits of nonmedical interventions such as social prescribing and highlighted the importance of encouraging diversity of provision within new models of care, such as inclusivity of

    community groups. The Programme Director, "Our Healthier South East  ...  view the full minutes text for item 10.

11.

INFORMATION ITEMS

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    THE KING'S FUND REPORT ON SUSTAINABILITY AND TRANSFORMATION PLANS IN LONDON

     

    Supporting documents:

    Minutes:

    THE KING'S FUND REPORT ON SUSTAINABILITY AND

    TRANSFORMATION PLANS IN LONDON

     

    The Committee received the King’s Fund Report which provided the results of an

    analysis of the five London Sustainability and Transformation Plans published in

    October 2016.

     

    RESOLVED that the report be noted.

12.

PART B - CLOSED BUSINESS

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13.

DISCUSSION OF ANY CLOSED ITEMS AS NOTIFIED AT THE START OF THE MEETING AND ACCEPTED BY THE CHAIR AS URGENT.

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14.

EXCLUSION OF PRESS AND PUBLIC

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    The following motion should be moved, seconded and approved if the committee wishes to exclude the press and public to deal with reports revealing exempt information:

     

    “That the public be excluded from the meeting for the following items of business on the grounds that they involve the likely disclosure of exempt information as defined in paragraphs 1-7, Access to information Procedure rules of the Constitution.”