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Joining up interventions for better outcomes. November 2009 update Jim McManus Towards a neighbourhood model for health interventions in Birmingham. Where has this come from?. This is one part of Birmingham City Council’s Health Inequalities Strategy - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Joining up interventions for better outcomes
November 2009 update
Jim McManus
Towards a neighbourhood model for health interventions in Birmingham
www.bhwp.nhs.uk
Where has this come from?
• This is one part of Birmingham City Council’s Health Inequalities Strategy
• It works with Partners but is focused on what the Council can do
• It is a part of the work of the council on– Producing a Health Inequalities Strategy– Having a senior council officer leading on health in each
Department– Having a series of health interventions at local level which touch
on what local authorities can do on health inequalities– Inputing into the Birmingham Health and Wellbeing Partnership
www.bhwp.nhs.uk
Current Status• Model supported by
– Neighbourhoods Board*– Children and Young Peoples
Partnership*– Health and Wellbeing Partnership
(BHWP)Exec*– Housing and Constituencies– Constituency Directors– Neighbourhood Managers– Be Birmingham*– Police Operational Commanders &
Constituency Directors joint meeting– Be Birmingham task and finish group
established under Moira Dumma, Chief Exec SBPCT*
• Current roll-out– 31 Neighbourhoods managers in
place– Initial “induction” training complete– All neighbourhood managers get a
week’s training on the model in November 2009
– Masterclass in baselining and target setting for neighbourhood Managers Nov 2009
– Faith communities regeneration workers training November 2009
– Health section within Neighbourhood plan templates devised
– Completed plan for each neighbourhood by Feb 2010
* indicates fora which includes NHS partners
BHWP Summit event in January 2010 will focus on the model
www.bhwp.nhs.uk
Pilot
• Pilots are currently being scoped, including Castle Vale
www.bhwp.nhs.uk
The Idea
• The City Council work on a neighbourhoods approach to health with partners as part of its health inequalities programme.
• There is a significant and growing evidence base for this approach from UK and European as well as US work.
• This could make substantial contributions to the LAA
www.bhwp.nhs.uk
Policy Drivers and evidence
• Health status is one of the key variables in Birmingham which acts on, and is acted on by, almost every other variable– It is in every agency’s corporate plan, to some extent– Life expectancy– Neighbourhood Stress
• Joining up interventions can bring additional benefits
• We do not do prevention well in Birmingham
www.bhwp.nhs.uk
The effect of place on health
• The consensus from research evidence
– There is a strong, independent and enduring effect of place on the health status of individuals, families, communities and neighbourhoods
• Findings from JSNA– Wide variations in health outcomes by ward
(statistical problems with analyses of neighbourhoods)
www.bhwp.nhs.uk
JSNA
• Mini needs assessments on health inequalities for every ward in Birmingham are available on
• http://www.bhwp.nhs.uk/jsna
www.bhwp.nhs.uk
Northfield Example
www.bhwp.nhs.uk
Leading causes of death
Common Risk Factors
www.bhwp.nhs.uk
Life Style
Key figures for life style Deprivation in Birmingham, West Midlands and England
Year Birmingham West Midlands England
Adults who smoke 2003/5 24.9% 24.0% 24.1%
Binge drinking adults* 2003/ 2005 17.8% 17.9% 18.0%
Healthy eating adults** 2003/ 2005 25.1% 25.1% 26.3%
Physically active adults***2007/8
16.9% 19.1% 21.3%
Obese adults**** 2003/ 2005 23.4% 26.5% 23.6%
www.bhwp.nhs.uk
Environmental pollution• 57 children per 1,000
have long term lung function problems due to this
• 36 children and 30 adults per 1,000 have pollution-related asthma
• 1g/m3 drop in PM air pollution could reduce CVD deaths by over 100
• As much as 30% of acute asthma attacks and hospitalisations are atttributable to air pollution
• 46% of acute bronchitis admissions are attributable to air pollution
www.bhwp.nhs.uk
BIRMINGHAM NEIGHBOURHOOD HEALTH INTERVENTIONS MODEL
Development of a local plan for each neighbourhood between partners with use of existing community networks
2. WORK ON THE COMMON RISK FACTORS FOR BIG KILLERS
Neighbourhood interventions for
Diet, Physical Activity, Smoking, Alcohol,
3. IMPROVE LOCAL NEIGHBOURHOOD QUALITY
Physical Environment, Green Space, Crime/ASB. INCREASE SOCIAL CONTACT BETWEEN
NEIGHBOURS
4. INCREASE UPTAKE OF PREVENTIVE HEALTH PROGRAMMES
Immunisation, Screening, This may differ from area to area depending on issues
1. Complete a Basic health profile – identification of health issues salient for the neighbourhood by a) providing a basic profile and b) running health typologies through Customer Insight or whatever mechanism is favoured in each PCT/locality (for Ben it is PRIME/DR Foster)
5. Local worklessness and skills programme – deliver public health and literacy for health skills training. Develop local health trainer programmes using WNF to get people into work.
So…towards a modelexplicitly designed to be as simple as possible so non-health specialists can implement it
www.bhwp.nhs.uk
Making it happen 1 - Process
1. Multi-Agency and BCC support
2. Giving a clear responsibility to neighbourhoods managers to co-ordinate with health and other partners
3. Scoping a plan for each area
4. Allocating some WNF monies for delivery and implementation as a means of kick-starting the process and moving on from there
5. Producing a single co-ordinated programme approach with local flavour using the model outlined above
6. Linking this to the key health outcome issues
www.bhwp.nhs.uk
Making it happen 2 - Skills• THIS IS ALL PART OF THE ROLL OUT PLAN
• Developing a clear model for prevention which is effective and evidence based
• Using intervention mapping principles shown to ensure that interventions remain consistent with evidence
• “real world” (doability and evidence) appraisal of candidate projects
• Development and evidence appraisal of candidate projects (“proof of concept”) [both the prevention of undesirable outcomes and interventions which will deliver this efficaciously]
• piloting – consider usage of a prospective case-control approach or other quasi-experimental design if ethically possible
• rolling out (see Making it happen below.)
www.bhwp.nhs.uk
Why bang on about intervention mapping?
• Good prevention needs a combination of
– Knowledge, Evidence, Skill and Direction
• Intervention mapping is a means of ensuring an intervention is consistent with the evidence and needs assessment
• It has paid dividends where it has been properly implemented, not just in health but in community safety, regeneration and other areas of work
• Intervention Mapping should be a key technology for rolling out any health model. This will be a key part of the roll out of training and of plans.
www.bhwp.nhs.uk
Tasking Models
• Currently there are different tasking models for police, community safety and others
• Be Birmingham has set up a task and finish group to ensure we have consistency across tasking models
• The Neighbourhood health model is a model of “what” we will do.
• Intervention Mapping will be the “how”.
www.bhwp.nhs.uk