CCG commissioning and mental health Mark Burdon, Commissioning Manager (Mental Health), South Tees...

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CCG commissioning and mental healthMark Burdon, Commissioning Manager (Mental Health), South Tees CCG

Purpose of the presentation

• What does the CCG do?• What kind of information does the CCG

need?• How can service users and carers work

with the CCG?

What does Commissioning mean?

• Determining needs of the local population

• Ensuring services are planned and designed to meet health needs

• Ensuring services are effectively procured and then managed and monitored to ensure that they deliver what is required for patients and the local population, safely and effectively

Apr-Jun: CCG to review information

from engagement to identify potential Commissioning

Intentions

Jul-Aug: CCG Work Streams to work

up Commissioning Intentions with

providers

Sept: Draft Commissioning

Intentions shared with the public,

Member Practices,

voluntary sector

Oct-Nov: Final Commissioning

Intentions approved by CCG Executive

and Governing Body

Dec-Feb: Commissioning

Intentions agreed by providers and

implemented

South Tees CCG Commissioning

Cycle

Changes to the NHS

• New ways of working: clinically led commissioning

• Membership organisation

• Partnership working is essential

What is ‘clinical’ commissioning?

• Clinical commissioning gives clinicians the power to influence commissioning decisions for their patients

• The CCG is clinically led, as a membership organisation of 46 practices, which supplies clinicians for the workstreams, the council of members, the locality councils, and a clinical majority on the Governing Body.

New general structure of the NHS

How we spend the budget

NTW

• CCGs are overseen by NHS England at a national level

• Locally we have NHS North (M62 Corridor and above) and a sub-region in the north east

• They commission specialist and primary care services

What we don’t do

What we don’t doNHS England commissions:

•General Practices (GP)•Pharmacies •Dentists•Opticians •Orthodontic/Oral Surgery•Prisoner Health•MoD Health•Forensic and high intensity inpatient mental health

services•Specialised services typically provided by less than 50

hospitals in England

2016/17 Comissioning Plans• Consider review of primary mental health

“gateway” service• Implement Crisis Care Concordat• Improve physical health of people with mental

ill health• Continue transformation of children and young

people’s mental health services

Data on referrals, costs, etc.

Information we use

Informal feedback from patients, partners, providers

Public health estimates of prevalence in the population

NICE guidance and other evidence bases

Input from GPs

Information from patient advisory groups, public consultations, etc.

What kind of information we needThe CCG needs information about:• Need: for example, if no

service is available for a certain condition

• Quality: how services could be improved

• Access: if services are accessible and being provided as contracted

How can service users and carers work with the CCG?

• Participate in Voices 4 Choices• Share your experience, opinions and ideas as a

patient or member of public – public consultations

• Get involved in your GP practice’s Patient Participation Group

• Keep updated on Twitter or MY NHS – see leaflets

How can service users and carers work with the CCG?

• We want to involve service users and carers in each step of commissioning

• Telling us what services should be commissioned

• Helping us assess if services are fulfilling needs –and if not how they could be better

• Being a ‘critical friend’

Thank you for attending.

To get in touch email

markburdon@nhs.net

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