The
Head of Democratic Services submitted a report which presented an
update from the ICB Accountable Officer (Leeds Place) on the
refreshed Healthy Leeds Plan.
The
following were in attendance:
- Councillor Salma Arif, Executive Member for Adults Social Care,
Public Health and Active
Lifestyles
- Caroline Baria, Interim Director of Adults and
Health
- Victoria Eaton, Director of Public Health
- Tony
Cooke, Chief Officer Health Partnerships
- Catherine Sunter, Head of Population
Health Planning, Leeds ICB
- Jo
Howard, Population Health Outcomes Development Lead, Leeds
ICB
The
Head of Population Health Planning and Population
Health Outcomes Development Lead presented the report and
outlined the following information:
- The
plan outlined the Health and Care contribution towards delivery of
the Health and Wellbeing Strategy, achieving the ambition that
Leeds will be a caring city for people of all ages, where
people who are the poorest improve their health the
fastest.
- The
plan was ambitious to improve health goals in line with the system
commitments to population needs. This was different from
traditional approaches that focus on primary care and point of
access.
- There
are 9 exclusive segments of population and life stages that will be
targeted by the plan, which are children and young people, healthy
adults, maternity, long term conditions, cancer, severe mental
illness, learning disabilities and neurodiversity, frailty and end of life.
- The
draft plan set out within the agenda pack had been considered by
the Leeds Committee of the West Yorkshire ICB on 5th
July 20203 and due to be considered by the Leeds Health and
Wellbeing Board during its meeting on 20thJuly
2023.
- Comments from the Scrutiny Board, ICB and Health and Wellbeing
Board were to be incorporated into the plan.
- The
Healthy Leeds Plan consultation had engaged with the public and
shaped shared system goals and expected outcomes.
- It was
noted that there were too many goals in the original Healthy Leeds
Plan and the 2023 plan will be comprised of 2 system goals
‘reduce preventable, unplanned care utilisation across health
settings’ and ‘increase early identification and
intervention’.
- The
plan had taken inspiration from the New York Staten Island system
with reduced goals, effective planning
and realistic implementation.
- The
goals were deemed reflective of the financial climate.
- The
broader purpose and next steps of the plan were to contribute to
the West Yorkshire Joint Forward Plan and influence local plans to
meet regional and national goals. At a West Yorkshire ICB
level the Leeds Place plan is unique in
terms of its focus on populations which is in line with the Leeds
system operating model.
- The
small scope of goals gave greater ability for tracking and the
actions being undertaken as a system to address the goals will
remain under review as part of an annual refresh of the
plan.
- All
system partners have a role in achieving these system
goals. A small number of priority
data-led initiatives will be identified. These will in general be delivered through
existing governance infrastructure – the relevant Population
or Care Delivery Board and Local Care Partnership.
- The
progress for goal 1 ‘reduce
preventable, unplanned care utilisation across health
settings’ will be robustly monitored with target
reductions.
- Goal 2
to ‘increase early identification and intervention’
will be informed via goal 1 data.
- Indices of Multiple Deprivation (IMD) 1 to 10 had been used to
determine levels of deprivation for areas across Leeds to identify
needs of specific communities.
- Once
finalised and published, there will also be an easy-to-read version
made available and this will be published at the same
time.
In
response to questions from Members and subsequent discussion, the
following was outlined:
- It was
noted the plan will focus on maximising the Leeds pound through
engagement with the Population and Care Delivery Boards to strive
for allocative efficiency. As the Scrutiny Board continues to
monitor delivery of the plan, the Chair also emphasised the
importance of maintaining an oversight of how well local NHS and
local authority funding is being fully maximised, including cost
sharing provisions.
- It was
outlined that IMD1 populations had more unplanned care and IMD10
was predominately planned care. This model will not ignore the
pockets of deprivation in the more affluent wards, as lessons can
be learnt from IMD1 and feed out to other areas with the overall
aim for improved services for everyone.
- Differences were noted between the healthcare systems of England
and Staten Island, however, the process
of the health led approach and focus on wider determinants and
division of areas was appropriate and effective.
- The
projections, detailed from page 71 of the report, were expectations
of unplanned system utilisation alongside population growth and
aimed to be realistic and then add targets for less unplanned care
with further data to be shared back to the Board if improved from
the projections.
- The
recruitment aims, detailed on page 114 of the report, were
explained as being developed against NHS England national priority
indicators and the GP recovery plan, and would consist of 515 full
time equivalent staff for Leeds which can be appointed specifically
to meet needs, such as social prescribers or ambulance
staff.
- Data
comparing current Leeds GP full time equivalent employment figures
with that from 5 years was agreed to be compiled and the Chair
advised that this can form part of the
report that is expected for the Board’s September meeting
around improving access to General Practice.
- More
GPs will be needed to be proportional to future population
increases. It was noted various schemes such as the GP recovery
plan identified how staff are best utilised, primary care was best
for complex, long term needs, and preventative public health
measures should limit unplanned care forecasts.
- Collective challenge was impacted by the rise in demand and
needs of the population, services had to prioritise backlogs so
proactive, preventative methods in the community needed to be
targeted to relieve pressure from the care system.
- A
streamlined approach was needed to pull services up together for
any future technological developments, including Artificial
Intelligence (AI). Various digital initiatives were outlined to be
working towards this including the Academic Health Partnership;
however, it was noted to be at an early stage of development with
challenges including GDPR and access.
- Technological developments should have people and community as a
priority to ensure trust and access and AI should not be
implemented too fast as services are mostly utilised by older
people. It was noted a watching brief should be kept over emerging
technology in the system by the Board.
- It was
highlighted that a number of the targets
set out in the plan were reflected of those set out in the
overarching Joint Forward Plan developed by the West Yorkshire
ICB.
- Each
Population and Care Delivery Board has an outcomes framework along
with outcomes measures that they are accountable for
delivering. It was agreed these would
be shared with the Board. Population
and Care Delivery Boards are responsible for advising the Health
and Care system in how to improve outcomes, experience and make a
better use of resources for their population.
In
conclusion, the Chair thanked everyone for their contributions and
requested that the Board’s comments and requests for
information be noted.
RESOLVED - That the report, along with
Members comments and information requests, be noted.