Venue: County Hall, Chichester, PO19 1RQ
Contact: Rob Castle on 033 022 22546 Email: rob.castle@westsussex.gov.uk
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Declarations of Interest Members and officers must declare any pecuniary or personalinterest in any business on the agenda. They should also make declarations at any stage such an interest becomes apparent during the meeting. Consideration should be given to leaving the meeting if the nature of the interest warrants it. If in doubt please contact Democratic Services before the meeting. Additional documents: Minutes: 31.1 In accordance with the code of conduct, the following interests were declared: -
· Cllr Cooper declared a personal interest in respect of item 5, NHS Winter Preparedness, as a Governor of University Hospitals Sussex NHS Foundation Trust · Cllr Baldwin declared a personal interest in respect of item 5, NHS Winter Preparedness, as a Governor of Sussex Community NHS Foundation Trust · Cllr McKnight declared a personal interest in respect of item 5, NHS Winter Preparedness, as an employee of University Hospitals Sussex NHS Foundation Trust · Cllr Pudaloff declared a personal interest in respect of item 5, NHS Winter Preparedness, as member of the Royal Society for Public Health, item 6, Access to NHS Primary Care and item 7 South East Coast Ambulance Service Update as a member of Q community at the Health Foundation, on a steering group committee and also at the Health Foundation related to patient and public involvement and quality improvement |
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Minutes of the last meeting of the Committee PDF 110 KB The Committee is asked to agree the minutes of the meeting held on 23 September 2022 (cream paper). Additional documents: Minutes: 32.1 Resolved – that the minutes of the meeting held on 30 September 2022 are approved as a correct record and are signed by the Chairman. |
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Responses to Recommendations PDF 73 KB The Committee is asked to note the responses to recommendations made at the 23 September 2022 meeting. Additional documents: Minutes: 33.1 It was requested that the action relating to the principles the Council works to when engaging with people who are having financial difficulties be added to the recommendations section of the tracker.
33.2 Resolved – that the Committee notes the responses to recommendations made at its last meeting. |
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NHS Winter Preparedness PDF 51 KB The report sets out NHS Sussex’s plans relating to West Sussex residents, highlighting any specific challenges and risks and how these are being addressed. Additional documents: Minutes: 34.1 The Committee considered a report by NHS Sussex (copy appended to the signed minutes).
34.2 Summary of responses to committee members’ questions and comments:
· The Committee felt that the Government should be lobbied over the low rate of hospital beds in the county per 100,000 people · There were national pressures around delayed discharges and staff shortages · South East Coast Ambulance Service NHS Foundation Trust was managing handover delays better than some other ambulance trusts · The NHS works as effectively as possible with partner organisations to make best use of resources · The Systems Operations Centre analyses data and helps coordination of services feeding into executive level meetings · There was concern over vaccination rates - Action: Claudia Griffith to look into why communications around vaccinations appear not to be working as well as during the pandemic · Across Sussex there are about 800 people medically fit to leave hospital a day – trends are improving at St Richard’s hospital, Chichester and Princess Royal Hospital (PRH), Haywards Heath · The NHS is working closely with social care to decrease delayed discharges · Of patients currently awaiting discharge across St Richards and Worthing 55 are waiting for domiciliary care packages, 106 are waiting for a community or rehabilitation bed, and 18 are waiting for residential care · To mitigate this, University Hospitals Sussex NHS Foundation Trust (UHSFT) has increased capacity by 106 beds to support flow and is supporting care homes with early interventions to try to avoid admittance to hospital · Optimum bed occupancy is 88%, but we are typically running at close to 97% · Adult Social Care (ASC) also tries to avoid people being delayed in hospital by increasing assessment capacity. · The discharge funding received by ASC was welcome and slightly more than expected · A more sustainable/ambitious model of supporting discharges should be possible in the future · Voluntary sector organisations such as Age UK and the British Red Cross help with discharge, admission avoidance and signposting to appropriate services instead of A&E · All organisations must have safeguarding frameworks in place before they can be involved · Urgent Treatment Centres (UTCs) are a core part of NHS infrastructure and have to comply to national standards · There are UTCs collocated at Worthing Hospital, St Richard’s Hospital and PRH and a UTC in Crawley run by Sussex Community NHS Foundation Trust supported by primary care and A&E staff when necessary · Work is going on with Surrey & Sussex Healthcare NHS Trust to increase the number of appropriate patients using the Crawley UTC service instead of A&E at East Surrey Hospital, Redhill · Medically Ready for Discharge wards help people to be mobile by providing Occupational Therapy and Physiotherapy assessments · Making efficiencies is challenging as hospitals are near full capacity and nearly back to pre-covid levels of activity, but it may be possible to utilise theatres better for planned care and Trusts are looking at how they can move more towards seven day working · New technology can also help with efficiencies by reducing amount of time staff spend on ... view the full minutes text for item 34. |
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Access to NHS Primary Care PDF 53 KB The report provides information on the current position regarding access to primary care, in West Sussex. Additional documents: Minutes: 35.1 The Committee considered a report by NHS Sussex (copy appended to the signed minutes).
35.2 Summary of responses to committee members’ questions and comments:
· Practice level appointment data is being published in December, but the actual data will vary from GP practice to GP practice due to the way practices record information - conversations are being held with practices about them holding better, more detailed databases - Action: Amy Galea to provide further data, including trends · West Sussex GPs are some of the most productive in the country · The number of GPs per 1,000 is higher in West Sussex than in East Sussex · The figure for face-to-face appointments does not include vaccinations · Satisfaction scores have reduced partly due to the move to digital services during the pandemic and changes to GPs practice’s ways of working · Planned improvements include management of phone calls through cloud telephony and better practice websites · The new cloud telephony system should help identify how many people don’t get appointments · Non-attendance rates are lower in West Sussex than the national average · There are concerns over the community pharmacy consultation service as it incurs a cost for people · Winter planning has identified primary care funding for areas of deprivation where things might need to be done differently · All initiatives in the Winter Plan are based on learning from last year and have milestones to be measured against till the end of March 23 and will be fully evaluated · Teams will be created that can link patients to the right healthcare professional early to improve outcomes · There are some concerns over the ‘Patient Knows Best’ website and the ability of individuals to use technology · Adjustments for people who suffer from sensory overload were made at practices during the pandemic and learning from this is being shared and may be done through joint practice work · Change will take time as there are 158 different practices · The Sussex Health and Care Assembly will be developing a strategy for the whole system involving partner organisations across Sussex that will set out each organisation’s responsibilities to deliver the plan · NHS Sussex will be developing a delivery plan alongside this that will be clear on what it wants to achieve and when over the next three to five years · Concerns were raised over splitting GPs between acute and long-term care management · Registered patient lists are reviewed bi-annually to remove those that have moved away – Action: Amy Galea to check the discrepancy between registered patients and population
35.3 Resolved –
i. An assurance was received that measures to increase and optimise capacity are being addressed ii. That the committee receives data relating to face-to-face appointments broken down into category of care iii. The Committee requests further GP data broken down geographically including trends over time and patient levels per GP compared nationally iv. A review of the discrepancy in population data compared to GP registration to take place and fed back to the Committee |
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South East Coast Ambulance Service Update PDF 55 KB The report updates the Committee on South-East Coast Ambulance Service NHS Foundation Trust’s planning for Winter 2022-23, the current Urgent Emergency Care transformation initiatives and the ongoing improvement journey to respond to the 2022 Care Quality Commissioner inspection findings and recent NHS Staff Survey feedback. Additional documents:
Minutes: 36.1 The Committee considered a report by South-East Coast Ambulance Service NHS Foundation Trust (SECAmb) (copy appended to the signed minutes).
36.2 Summary of responses to committee members questions and comments:
· Handover delays are a whole system flow issue that needs investment in social care and community services to help reduce them · 51% of ambulance callouts result in conveyance to A&E · Patients that have to wait more than one hour for handover experience some level of harm, 53% low, 23% moderate and 9% severe · The proportion of delays over one hour has increased from 1% in 2018 to 18% for October 2022 · The average handover time, against the 15 minute target, was 30 minutes in October 2021 and has increased to 42 minutes in October 2022. The 90th percentile, for average handover time was 35 minutes in 2020 and as at October 2022, is 1 hour 21 minutes · Nationally an estimated 44,000 people suffered some level of harm due to delays in the last month with 5,000 suffering severe harm when 23% of ambulance capacity was lost to handover delays compared to 7% in October 2019 · In West Sussex handover delays in the last year have risen from 0.17 hours (10 minutes) to 0.19 hours (11.5 minutes) · The agreed handover process framework is being reviewed with Worthing Hospital, St Richard’s Hospital (Chichester), Royal Sussex County Hospital (Brighton) and East Surrey Hospital (Redhill) to help reduce handover delays · SECAmb is working with commissioners to standardise appropriate pathways across all hospitals in the West Sussex and East Surrey place footprint · The Same Day Emergency Care conveyance pathway is critical to supporting non-Emergency Department presentations · More overtime is not the answer to reducing response delays · Crews have one to one meetings with managers, review rest and meal breaks and a wellbeing hub · The Trust provides a variety of services for all staff to support mental and physical health · There is a trauma risk management response (TRiM), which includes trauma risk assessments and support from associated TRiM practitioners and external counsellors where required · Rollout of the Make Ready Centres programme is continuing · SECAmb has a recruitment plan in place, which employs people from the UK and is exploring international opportunities, specifically from Ireland and Australia · Workforce numbers are reviewed monthly – the Trust is on track meet its workforce planning forecast, however attrition rates are currently higher than planned and present a risk to the Trust’s workforce projection · Currently 6% of the Trust’s frontline operational hours is sourced from private ambulance providers · The Care Quality Commission (CQC) report focussed on the response to covid when difficult decisions had to be made i.e. suspending core training. This period has put a strain on frontline clinicians · The Trust is looking at improvement by focussing on people and quality of service · The improvement journey focusses on the four warning notices and the four improvement pillars established to address this are Quality Improvement, People & Culture, Responsive Care and Sustainability & Partnerships · Although the warnings have since expired, the ... view the full minutes text for item 36. |
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End of September 2022 (Quarter 2) Quarterly Performance and Resources Report PDF 72 KB A report by the Chief Executive and Interim Director of Finance and Support Services setting out the corporate performance, finance, workforce, risk and capital programme positions as at the end of September 2022.
The Committee is asked to examine the data and supporting commentary for the Performance and Resources report and make any recommendations for action to the relevant Cabinet Member. Additional documents:
Minutes: 37.1 The Committee considered a report by the Chief Executive and Interim Director of Finance and Support Services (copy appended to the signed minutes).
37.2 Summary of responses to committee members’ questions and comments:
· The results of the ‘Stoptober’ non-smoking campaign are being analysed, but there has been an increase in website hits in this area · Three areas where Public Health would like to undertake more work are anti-smoking, sexual health and the Healthy Child Programme (with help from the Sussex Community NHS Foundation Trust) which is due to be re-commissioned in April 2024 and that feeds into Children & Adolescent Mental Health Services · Bereavement counselling for young people will be done in a more sustainable way · Work is taking place with district/borough councils and communities to increase vaccination take-up – it may be necessary to repeat the mobile service used during the pandemic · Although the Public Health Grant increased slightly last year it required additional work done, such as prep medication · Public Health services are either provided through activity-based contracts or block contracts – additional needs will be looked at when contracts are reviewed · Detail around the additional money promised for social care in the Autumn Statement was not yet known · The Council has a responsibility to make sure people pay for their care packages as it is part of the Council’s budget, therefore backdated charges are applied where necessary taking into account people’s personal circumstances · People with complex needs are prioritised for care assessments which slows the process · The rolling year average of 71% in the narrative of Key Performance Indicator 36 is inaccurate – Action: Alan Sinclair to ensure this data is presented differently in future · The percentage of adults with learning difficulties in paid employment could be higher than reported as not all may be known to social services · Social care is working with individuals now that Aspire (a charitable social enterprise which provided adult education in West Sussex) has closed until a new offer is in place · With regards to savings targets, half will be met this year and half next year
37.3 Resolved – that the Committee supports the change to the Key Performance Indicator ‘Outcomes of safeguarding risk’
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Forward Plan of Key Decisions PDF 134 KB Extract from the Forward Plan dated 10 November 2022 – attached.
An extract from any Forward Plan published between the date of despatch of the agenda and the date of the meeting will be tabled at the meeting.
The Committee is asked to consider whether it wishes to enquire into any of the forthcoming decisions within its portfolio. Additional documents: Minutes: 38.1 There was a query as to whether the Avila House Extra Care Housing Scheme was on schedule – Action: Alan Sinclair to confirm
38.2 Resolved – that the Committee notes the Forward Plan of Key Decisions |
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The Committee to review its draft work programme for the year ahead taking into consideration the checklist at Appendix A. Additional documents: Minutes: 39.1 Resolved – that the update on the West Sussex Stroke Programme may need to shift timeframes which may not fit in the Committee’s scheduled of meetings. In this case a Task & Finish Group would likely be established to scrutinise the update. |
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Date of Next Meeting The next meeting of the Committee will be held on 11 January 2023 at 10.30 am at County Hall, Chichester. Probable agenda items include: -
· Progress update on Adult Social Care Strategy · Terms of Reference for Mental Health Task & Finish Group · Update on the West Sussex Stroke Programme
Any member wishing to place an item on the agenda for the meeting must notify the Director of Law and Assurance by 22 December 2022. Additional documents: Minutes: 40.1 The next meeting of the Committee will be held on 11 January 2023 at 10.30 am at County Hall, Chichester. |