Issue - meetings

NHS Sussex Non Emergency Patient Transport Service (NEPTS)

Meeting: 07/03/2024 - Health Overview and Scrutiny Committee (Item 7.)

7. NHS Sussex Non Emergency Patient Transport Service (NEPTS) pdf icon PDF 297 KB

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Meeting: 21/09/2023 - Health Overview and Scrutiny Committee (Item 15)

15 NHS Sussex Non Emergency Patient Transport Service (NEPTS) pdf icon PDF 298 KB

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Minutes:

15.1     The Committee considered a report on the delivery of the Non-Emergency Patient Transport Service (NEPTS) and the ongoing re-commissioning of the service. NEPTS is an eligibility driven service that is a statutory obligation for NHS commissioners to provide to transport patients to and from their healthcare appointments.

15.2     The Committee asked how NHS Sussex could guarantee the new provider would be able to deliver the service, given previous problems with the last procurement.

15.3     Maggie Keating, NHS Sussex Urgent and Emergency Care Programme Director recognised the previous problems from the previous procurement, and explained that there had been significant market and patient engagement throughout the creation of the new service specification. As a result of this and learning from the previous procurement NHS was in a strong position to avoid a similar problem with the new procurement.

15.4     The Committee noted that some people felt the eligibility criteria for NEPTS was set too high, which created issues for those on the borderline of being eligible and where services had been moved to single sites through reconfiguration.

15.5     Maggie Keating explained that the new national eligibility criteria had been subject to public consultations and should make more people eligible for the service. Part of the new service specification required the provider to signpost patients who weren’t eligible to a suitable alternative. The availability of voluntary sector support was inconsistent across Sussex, but NHS Sussex had worked with it to increase volunteer capacity, and ensure that as part of the new model patients would be assisted to find their own ways to healthcare settings.

15.6     The Committee asked how bidders would be evaluated on their capacity to meet the new service specifications, and what due diligence there would be to ensure the financial robustness of bidders.

15.7     Maggie Keating confirmed that these all formed parts of the information to tender questions that potential providers were asked as part of the bidding process to ensure they were organisations capable of delivering the service. Bidders were first evaluated on their organisational viability to ensure they met financial and legal thresholds that assured they were capable of delivering in an appropriate way. NHS Sussex were not prescriptive of the service operating model, meaning sub-contractors could potentially be used, however bidders were required to have the arrangements in place prior to the contract being agreed.

15.8     The Committee asked what review processes were in place for once the contract had been awarded.

15.9     Maggie Keating confirmed there were Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) running through the contract that would be looked at as standard contract management mechanisms.

15.10   The Committee asked how net zero ambitions would be built into the contract to ensure they were delivered on, and what would be done if the provider failed to meet the targets.

15.11   Maggie Keating confirmed that there was a very clear requirement for the provider to reach net zero delivery by the end of the contract in 2035, and a trajectory for achieving this target over the  ...  view the full minutes text for item 15