making engagement real

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Making Engagement Real Great British Care Show Sixways Stadium 1.5.13 Andrea Pope Smith- Director of Adult, Community and Housing Services Dudley MBC “I have good support but not until I hit rock bottom, its getting to the ‘good stuff’, it is out there but it is about getting to it in the first place”. Views of a West Midlands Resident 2012

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Presentation delivered at the Great British Care Show by Andrea Pope Smith 1st May 2013

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Page 1: Making Engagement Real

Making Engagement RealGreat British Care ShowSixways Stadium 1.5.13

Andrea Pope Smith- Director of Adult, Community and Housing Services Dudley MBC

“I have good support but not until I hit rock bottom, its getting to the ‘good stuff’, it is out there but it is about getting to it in the first place”. Views of a West Midlands Resident 2012

Page 2: Making Engagement Real

Strategic ContextCornerstones of Making it Real and personalisation are

• Co-production or put more simply “working together”

• Hearing not just listening

Complete, accurate and timely information is vital for people to make informed decisions about themselves and on behalf of others

Page 3: Making Engagement Real

People who use services and carer

forum

Heathwatch Voluntary Sector and

ULOs

Other involvement

networks e.g. People’s

Parliament

Commercial Sector

Providers of Care and Support

Means to Engage.....

Page 4: Making Engagement Real

Making It Real

• Tells us what the world would look like if care and support was fully Personalised.

• Co-produced by people who use care and support services

• Contains 31 “I statements” (I would experience....) www.thinklocalactpersonal.org.uk

Page 5: Making Engagement Real

The Care and Support White PaperVision

To promote people’s independence and wellbeing by enabling them to prevent and postpone the need for care and support.

To transform people’s experience of care and support, putting them in control and ensuring that services respond to what they want.

Vision

To promote people’s independence and wellbeing by enabling them to prevent and postpone the need for care and support.

To transform people’s experience of care and support, putting them in control and ensuring that services respond to what they want.

This means that, in the future, we expect people will be able to say:

1. “I am supported to maintain my independence for as long as possible”

1. “I am supported to maintain my independence for as long as possible”

2. “I understand how care and support works, and what my entitlements are”

2. “I understand how care and support works, and what my entitlements are”

3. “I am happy with the quality of my care and support”3. “I am happy with the quality of my care and support”

4. “I know that the person giving me care and support will treat me with dignity and respect”

4. “I know that the person giving me care and support will treat me with dignity and respect”

5. “I am in control of my care and support”5. “I am in control of my care and support”

Page 6: Making Engagement Real

People who use services and carer

forum

Information and advice

Active and Supportive Community

My Support My Money Workforce

Implementation Group

Programme BoardLinks to Making It Real

Page 7: Making Engagement Real

Production of the Local Account

Our Local Account asked four questions:

1. What has worked well about your care and support in the last year?

2. What has not worked so well?

3. What could you or others do to make your life better?

4. What does having a good quality of life mean to you?

Page 8: Making Engagement Real

You say, we do. “We have had to actively seek out information, we are trying to cope with a difficult situation on a daily basis. The Council needs to be more pro-active.”We are sorry to hear this. Over the

next 12 months we will improve the quality of information and support that we provide via ouraccess team and other public access points including Healthwatch “My personal budget has taken a

long time to approve. It doesn’t allow any time to support me with shopping or voluntary work which is important to me.”We will review our processes to

ensure individual priorities are responded to. We will also explore wider resources in the community to increase the range of choice available

Page 9: Making Engagement Real

Increasing Engagement

We will “Map” participants

• Geographically • By Gender• By Age• By Disability • By Ethnicity etc. etc.

To ensure that the people with whom we engage with make up a truly representative sample of the boroughs population

We have gaps in particular “communities” we will proactively recruit people from these “communities”

Every intervention with a member of the public is an opportunity to promote engagement

Page 10: Making Engagement Real

Stimulating the Marketplace

Market intelligence

Market structuringMarket

intervention

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The development of a common and shared perspective of supply and

demand, including the Engagement Bank, Local Account and Provider

Engagement leading to evidenced, published, market

position statements for a given market.

The activities designed to give the market shape and structure, where commissioner behaviour is visible and the outcomes they are trying to achieve agreed, or at least accepted.

The interventions commissioners make in order to deliver the kind

of market believed to be necessary for any given community.

Page 11: Making Engagement Real

“The Council bent over backwards to help me to help myself. I am benefitting from activities I didn’t know existed. I am an important member of my Community again.”

Page 12: Making Engagement Real

To find out more about Making It Real in Dudley and to access these slides please click on http://makingitrealindudley.org

Thanks for listening.