The latest batch of papers from the Transforming Care and
Commissioning Steering Group, chaired by Sir Stephen Bubb, have been made
available by NHS England at the bottom of this webpage http://www.england.nhs.uk/2014/08/01/community-support/
There are the agenda and notes from a meeting held on 18th
August, a paper containing a draft of a ‘National Framework for Local
Commissioning’ and a paper from Skills for Care on workforce development.
You will be relieved to know I won’t be going through these
in depth – instead in a relatively short post I just want to make a few
observations arising from my reading of these papers.
1) The social finance reference group. This group is
supposed to be coming up with options for the social financing of the
transforming care strategy. The person leading this group is the CEO of Social
Investment Business. According to Debrett’s ( http://www.debretts.com/people-of-today/profile/24799/Stephen-John-Limrick-BUBB
), Sir Stephen Bubb has since 2008 been the Chairman of Social Investment
Business. Furthermore, the meeting notes state that Social Investment Business
and Big Society Capital are jointly funding a consultant to work on this. What
is their expectation for a return on this investment?
2) The meeting notes also mention that NHS England have
developed a draft stakeholder partnership proposal (this is not one of the
papers published on the website). However, this proposal appears to have been
knocked back by Sir Stephen Bubb (“SB noted that this is a proposal for
extensive engagement and we must be careful not raise expectations
unrealistically. The group has a discrete, time-limited task and finish activity
to complete and we are not able to engage in full consultation.”). It would be
good to see the proposal, but it sounds highly promising to me – why was it
dismissed? This is particularly worrying, as the Steering Group are not
managing to complete the very limited engagement goals they have set themselves
(“SJ said that in either case he is finding it difficult to make contact with
people we need input from on the Steering Group’s stakeholder engagement
reference group.”).
3) The draft ‘National Framework for Local Commissioning’.
The ostensible purpose of this paper is “To set out for discussion the key
areas where clarity, work and contributions will be needed to develop a robust
commissioning framework for community-based support for people with learning
disabilities or autism”. The paper does indeed set out a number of fundamental
questions to be addressed and the information that would be needed to inform answers
to these questions. Why then, with so much uncertainty, does the paper only
state one ‘preferred option’ when it comes to commissioning? “We need to agree
criteria and work these through, but an attractive option (given the need to
drive-up and assure quality, stimulate market development, secure good value
for money, and enable genuine locally-led co-commissioning) could be a
centrally procured, quality-driven nationally-procured framework from which
local commissioners and users can call-off” (underlining in original). In
terms of contract duration, the paper states “Needs to be long enough to enable
investment to be re-couped and risk shared fairly and avoid frequent disruptive
changes in providers – 7 years+?”. Why is this the only option on the table,
why is it proposed before the fundamental questions in the rest of the paper
are addressed, and what work is being done on alternatives?
4) The workforce development paper from Skills for Care. I
would recommend you read this, as it takes a quite different approach to the
Steering Group so far. Indeed, this paper states:
“Whilst we fully understand ACEVO’s remit, Skills for Care
would argue that the contribution of all parts of the social care sector and
specifically individual direct employers and small user led / family led groups
and innovative PBS networks must be harnessed to achieve the outcomes needed.
We are aware that there is a belief in some parts of the
social care and health infrastructure that the skills required to work with
people in crisis or who may need very particular care and support can only be
developed within health settings. This must be completely rebutted, We maintain
that the skills can be developed anywhere so long as they are based around the
individual people’s needs, hopes, situation and interests, and that the workers
in question have been recruited for the values they hold.”
For fans of Freud, there is a revealing slip in the meeting
notes. The action recorded in response to the workforce development paper is “All
to send comments on commissioning framework proposal to HW and BR” – copied and
pasted from the actions concerning the ‘National Framework for Local
Commissioning’ and, of course, not referring to the workforce development paper
at all. What, if anything is going to happen to this workforce development
paper?
In summary, it seems
to me that the Steering Group is designed to enact the original plan put
forward by Sir Stephen Bubb as soon as possible, with any good work that might
challenge this being brushed aside. I hope I’m wrong.
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