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Agenda and minutes

Venue: CC2, County Hall, Lewes. View directions

Contact: Harvey Winder, Democratic Services Officer  01273 481796

Note: ++Please note that this meeting is taking place remotely++ 

Media

Items
No. Item

1.

Minutes of meeting of Health and Wellbeing Board held on 3 March 2020 pdf icon PDF 104 KB

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Minutes:

1.1.        The minutes of the meeting held on 3 March 2020 were agreed as a correct record.

 

2.

Apologies for absence

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2.1.        The following apologies were received:

  • Sarah MacDonald, NHS England
  • Sam Allen, Sussex Partnership NHS Foundation Trust

 

 

2.2.        The following substitutions were made

  • Dr Richard Warden, Chair of East Sussex CCG (Substitute Julia Rudrum)
  • Adrian Bull, East Sussex Healthcare NHS Trust (substitute Joe Chadwick-Bell)
  • Cllr Sean MacLeod (substitute Cllr Zoe Nicholson)

·         Mark Andrews (substitute Sophie Hepworth)

2.3.        Zoe Nicholson left after item 6

2.4.        Siobhan Melia and Joe Chadwick-Bell left after item 8.

 

3.

Disclosure by all members present of personal interests in matters on the agenda

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3.1.        Cllr Ungar declared a personal interest as a member of the Green Street Patient Participation Group.

 

4.

Urgent items

Notification of items which the Chair considers to be urgent and proposes to take at the end of the agenda. Any members who wish to raise urgent items are asked, wherever possible, to notify the Chair before the start of the meeting. In so doing, they must state the special circumstances which they consider justify the matter being considered urgently

 

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4.1          There were no urgent items

 

5.

East Sussex Health and Social Care Plan progress update pdf icon PDF 97 KB

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5.1.        The Board considered a report providing an update on work to implement a revised East Sussex integration programme in 2020/21 as a result of the changes brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic.

5.2.        The Board asked which new models of care that have emerged during Covid-19 would be kept and expanded. The Board was particularly keen to see the continuation of the community hubs, given their important role in prevention.

5.3.        Vicky Smith, Programme Director - East Sussex Health and Social Care Transformation, explained that the new models of care that partners are keen to retain or develop further included:

  • the new community hub arrangements, which have helped with patient flows, as well as improved working between East Sussex County Council, the East Sussex Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG), district and borough councils, and community and voluntary sector (CVS).
  • Remote working and virtual team meetings, which has aided the recently established integrated locality health and social care teams. This is due to the fact that finding appropriate estate for social workers, district nurses and occupational therapists to co-locate was proving to be a challenge.
  • The co-ordinated whole system support for care homes during the pandemic, which seen a dramatic improvement in working together across primary, community, adult social care and the independent sector – and between commissioners and providers – to support care and nursing homes.

 

5.4.        Keith Hinkley, Director of Adult Social Care and Health, explained that it was important now for all partners to think about what the best ways were of doing things collaboratively so that they can be maintained in the future. Partners are likely to be pragmatic for the rest of the year and continue to support the arrangements that have been developed over the last four months. After that time, it will be necessary to decide on the long term future of these services and whether they can be enhanced. 

5.5.        The Board asked what the plans were for re-engaging the public in relation to the East Sussex Health and Social Care Plan (ESHSCP).

5.6.        Vicky Smith said that the key principles of the ESHSCP will not have changed following the pandemic and much engagement around these already took place prior to publishing the current plan.  Partner organisations are now in the process of determining which elements of the ESHSCP need to be adjusted in light of Covid-19. Once this process is complete, partners will take a view of which elements of the revised ESHSCP they will need to conduct engagement with the public and patients. for example, proposed new services.

5.7.        The Board asked about the impact of agency staff working in more than one care home during the pandemic.

5.8.        Keith Hinkley explained that movement of agency staff between care homes during the pandemic has been identified nationally as an issue. It is the case, however, that there is roughly a 10% shortfall in the social care workforce nationally and that creates an environment where there is  ...  view the full minutes text for item 5.

6.

East Sussex Outbreak Control Plan pdf icon PDF 164 KB

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6.         

6.1.        The Board considered a report seeking approval of the proposed East Sussex Outbreak Control Plan.

6.2.        The Board asked whether the Pillar 2 testing information had not been available in Leicester and whether it is made available for East Sussex Public Health Team within 24 hours.

6.3.        Darrell Gale, Director of Public Health, explained that Leicester’s Public Health Team had started to look at pillar 1 testing and had raised concerns with the centre that had not been heeded. Pillar 2 data was later made available to the local public health team and within a day Matt Hancock declared the local lockdown, as the centre had seen the data at an earlier date and was responding to it. East Sussex Public Health Team (PH) is now getting pillar 2 data usually within 24 hours, although the weekend can cause delays.

6.4.        The Board asked about the reasons for the difference in the number of cases between Hastings and the rest of the county.

6.5.        Darrell Gale explained that Hastings had the second lowest and now, following the addition of pillar 2 data, has the 13th lowest number of infections in England. The pillar 2 data added a number of positive results from the community, care homes and other settings. Hastings and Rother, however, still have a considerably lower infection rate than the rest of the county.

6.6.        Darrell Gale said that PH is working closely with the local universities on an investigation into why Hastings and Rother have a lower infection rate, especially given the higher health inequalities and Black and Minority Ethnic (BAME) population and tendency of these factors to lead to worse outcomes.  Some of the reasons being investigated include the fact the Hastings Borough Council and Rother District Council both cancelled public gatherings sooner than the national lockdown, and the area has poor transport links so was behind the curve in transmission rates when the local moves towards lockdown were made.  The investigation would include direct engagement with communities, including the BAME population.

6.7.        The Board asked whether there is any ethnicity data collected on pillar 2 and if not whether this meant there is no clear understanding of the impact of Covid-19 on BAME.

6.8.        Darrell Gale said he had not seen the most recent figures but it was case that previous tranches of pillar 2 data did not include ethnicity data for local populations or workforce, which are essential for helping to identify the impact of the virus on BAME community. He explained it is possible, however, for the PH to understand the impact on BAME communities via a proxy measure of comparing the postcodes of people with positive results included in pillar 2 data with the known location of BAME populations in the county. 

6.9.        Rob Tolfree, Public Health Consultant, confirmed that the issues with the dataset stem from both how it is collected and how it is distributed locally. Pillar 1 testing by the NHS and  ...  view the full minutes text for item 6.

7.

The Sussex Wide Children & Young Person's Emotional Health & Wellbeing Service Review pdf icon PDF 736 KB

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7.1.        The Board considered a report on the Sussex-wide review of Children and Young Persons’ Emotional Health and Wellbeing Services.

7.2.        The Board asked where the funding for the improvements identified in the report would come from, and whether there are any tangible outcomes that progress will be measured against and how will it be delivered, including via the community and voluntary sector.

7.3.        Steve Appleton, Independent Chair, said that the delivery of the recommendations would be for the individual commissioning organisations that were the subject of the review to deliver. The report identifies opportunities to do things more effectively and provide a better service for children and young people, but it is likely this will have some financial impact.

7.4.        The Board asked whether it is possible for the recommendations of this report to be absorbed into the workstreams of the ESHSCP to ensure they are acted on, for example, through both the children’s and mental health workstreams of those ESHSCP.

7.5.        Steve Appleton agreed that the there should be local change as a result of the report and that HWB can play an important part in monitoring the implementation of the report’s recommendations.

7.6.        The Board RESOLVED to:

1. Note the Independently Chaired Report – Foundations For Our Future - at
Appendix 1;

2. Note the Concordat Agreement which underpins the partnership commitment
to act upon the recommendations – at Appendix 2; and

3. Endorse the recommendations described in the Report.

 

8.

Joint targeted area inspection of the multi-agency responses to children's mental health in East Sussex pdf icon PDF 258 KB

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8.1.        The Board considered a report on the outcome of the joint targeted area inspection (JTAI)
of the multi-agency responses to children’s mental health in East Sussex.

8.2.        The Board asked how the delay in mental health CAMHS assessments could be reduced.

8.3.        Ruth Hollman, Director of CAMHS, agreed that people wait too long for diagnosis and that this has been going on a long time. The number of children or young people referred to specialist services such as CAMHS has also continued to increase recently. This means that the mental health pathway for children and young people needs continued investment at the earliest stages where parents and children are trying to access support and advice. This is a workstream of the ESHSCP and East Sussex has made considerable progress in this area already, both through the establishment of a  Single Point of Advice (SPOA) for people calling about child and young people mental health issues; and the iRock services in Hastings and Eastbourne that provide low level mental health support and signposting to other services than mental health, such as housing support, which may be the cause of distress in some people.

8.4.        Stuart Gallimore, Director of Children Services, added that the JTAI report speaks highly of the partnership arrangements and the innovations in place. SPOA had been in place for 6-8 months at time of the inspection and the report welcomes its ability to bring in support from the Council’s early help and health visiting services along with  SPFT’s CAMHS practitioners to ensure help is provided at the earliest possible time and avoids waiting for clinicians, except for those who need it.

8.5.        The Board RESOLVED to:

1) note the findings of the inspection into the multi-agency responses to children’s mental
health in East Sussex which was published 14 April (Appendix 1); and

2) note the multi-agency action plan which has been developed to address the areas for
development (Appendix 2).

9.

Healthwatch Annual Report 2019-20 pdf icon PDF 198 KB

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10.1.      The Board considered a report and presentation providing an overview of Healthwatch East Sussex’s Annual Report 2019-20

10.2.      The Board thanked Healthwatch for the presentation and the work that Healthwatch does highlighting the views of the public.

10.3.      Keith Hinkley suggested that the future plans of Healthwatch should be timetabled alongside the plans of the rest of the ESHSCP in due course.

The Board RESOLVED to note the report.

10.

Work programme pdf icon PDF 142 KB

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11.1.      The Board considered its work programme.

11.2.      The Board RESOLVED to:

1) note the work programme; and

2) note that the Board may need to meet more often in the future as part of the East Sussex  Outbreak Control Plan