Carers Roadshow

Carer’s Roadshows are coming to a neighbourhood near you….

  • Find out about local carer services and support
  • Talk to carers, service providers and service planners
  • Find out about rights and benefits
  • Meet carers and share experiences
  • Air your views
  • Browse the market place

The events are free. This is a series of events held in local communities designed, prepared and produced by carers, for carers.

Events start from 10am.

May

Friday 12 May – Newark Market Place, NG24 1DU

Wednesday 17 May – Riverside Health Centre Bulwell, NG6 8QJ

Friday 19 May – Mary Potter Health Centre, Hyson Green, NG7 5HY

June

Wednesday 7 June – St Ann’s Valley Health Centre, NG3 3GG

Friday 16 June – Mansfield Market Place, NG18 1HX

Thursday 22 June – Hucknall Market Place, NG15 7AX

Friday 23 June – Cornerstone Health Centre, Clifton, NG11 8EW

July

Wednesday 5 July – Riverside Health Centre, Bulwell, NG6 8QJ

Friday 7 July – Mary Potter Health Centre, Hyson Green, NG7 5HY

Monday 10 July – Sutton-in-Ashfield Market Place, NG17 1BA

Thursday 13 July – Retford Market Place, DN22 6HB

Friday 14 July – Worksop Market Place, S80 1JA

Friday 21 July – Kirkby-in-Ashfield Market Place, NG17 7BQ

August

Wednesday 2 August – Lark in the Park, West Bridgford, NG2 6AT

Thursday 3 August – Hucknall Market Place, NG15 7AX

Thursday 10 August – Kings Mill Hospital, Mansfield, NG17 4JL

Wednesday 16 August – St Ann’s Valley Health Centre, NG3 3GG

Friday 18 August – Cornerstone Health Centre, Clifton, NG11 8EW

Wednesday 23 August – Arnold Market, Eagle Square, NG5 7EL

To find out more email Trevor Clower.

Improving health and wellbeing in Nottingham and Nottinghamshire

Health and care organisations in Nottingham and Nottinghamshire have signed up to a new Strategy this month to improve the health and wellbeing of local people.

The Integrated Care Strategy provides an ambitious vision to improve population health and healthcare outcomes; tackle inequalities in access, experiences and outcomes; enhance productivity and value for money; and support social and economic development in communities.

The Strategy, which runs until 2027, was developed following extensive engagement with local people, communities and key stakeholders. It also links in with the Joint Health and Wellbeing Strategies for Nottingham and Nottinghamshire.

Kathy McLean, Chair of the Integrated Care System, said: “Health and care organisations are already doing some fantastic work to join up services, improve outcomes and reduce health inequalities for our local people. This Strategy sets out how we will build on this and includes ambitious targets for each of the key areas.

“We have three guiding principles for all of this work. We want to focus on prevention, we want to tailor our approach to people’s needs in order to make things fair and we want to work in a more integrated way to ensure that local people have care that is joined up around them.

“We also need our citizens to play their part and think about positive changes they can make to improve their health and wellbeing. This could be by exercising more or cutting down on alcohol, tobacco or unhealthy foods. Or it could be something that protects our local environment, like recycling more or driving less. We’re asking the public, staff and stakeholders to make a pledge for what they can do differently. Every action helps.”

Five-year ambitions include:

Supporting children and young people to have the best start:

  • A reduction in the proportion of women smoking at the time of delivery
  • An improvement in breastfeeding prevalence at 6 – 8 weeks after birth to 56% average in Nottingham and Nottinghamshire
  • A stabilisation of the rising rates of obese and overweight children in year six to a 2.7% rise from the 2021/22 baseline

Supporting frail older people:

  • 5% reduction in emergency hospital admissions
  • 100% discharges made on the same day or next day the person was deemed medically fit for discharge

Supporting children, young people and adults with the greatest needs:

  • At least 75% of people aged 14 + with a learning disability will have had an annual health check

Focus on prevention:

  • A smoke free generation by 2040
  • 10% reduction in alcohol-related hospital admissions from 2020/21 baseline

Establish a single health and care recruitment hub:

  • A reduction in ICS health and care staff turnover rate to 10% by March 2028
  • An increase of 10% in the number of jointly employed health and care posts

Add social value:

  • 80% carbon net zero by 2028-2032
  • 100% carbon net zero by 2040
  • Ensuring over 90% of our owned or leased fleet vehicles under 3.5 tonnes are low emission vehicles, and 5% of those will be ULEV or ZEV (ultra-low – or zero- emission vehicles).

The Integrated Care Strategy and Summary document are available on our strategy pages. You will also find case studies, an explainer video and more information.

Ifti Majid – read about his first few months at Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust

I was very pleased to get the opportunity to write this blog so early in my time at Notts Healthcare as it gives me the chance to outline some of my ambitions for the Trust, our place in the health and care system and share some of my first impressions.

I’m writing at a time of sustained pressure on our health and care services. Naturally this presents some big challenges, but from my experiences so far I have witnessed Trust colleagues and colleagues across the system using their ingenuity and innovation to put our patients and local communities first.

I am so grateful for this ‘can-do’ attitude, and for the continued focus on delivering safe services that I have been seeing every day, but I am mindful that colleagues are under relentless pressure and that staff wellbeing has never been more important.

I’m very pleased with the support we are already able to offer our colleagues to help with both work challenges and the external cost of living pressures, but we must do more and we will. In terms of managing the work pressures, it’s crucial that we work closely and differently with our colleagues across the health and care system. We’re all in this together and I know everyone is doing all they can to care for those who need our help. Thank you for all that you do.

As one of the largest mental health, learning disabilities and community Trusts in the country, Nottinghamshire Healthcare delivers services across not only Nottingham and Nottinghamshire but also across the East Midlands and nationally. Over my first few months in post, I have made it my mission to get out and about to meet as many colleagues as I can within the Trust, across our Integrated Care System, and further afield.

I’m pleased that my first months in post have coincided with the creation of the ICS Strategy. I know that senior leaders from across the Trust have contributed to its development and it provides a clear vision of where we want to get to.

I’m particularly pleased about the strong focus on prevention, which is key and shapes much of our transformation work.  I have also been struck by the very strong focus on prevention and health promotion within the various Integrated Care Board (ICB) meetings. Whilst these are two key responsibilities of the ICB, in my experience that doesn’t necessarily mean it translates into a clear priority, particularly when there are so many system operational pressures to deal with.

I’m proud of some of the Trust’s achievements over the last few years, much of which makes some headway into delivering on the intentions in the ICS Strategy. For example, we have made incredible progress towards transforming our mental health services, particularly in our work with Primary Care Networks where we have embedded key roles like Mental Health Practitioners, and by increasing capacity in CAMHS with new positions in eating disorders and an expansion of mental health support in schools.

In terms of adult mental health, at the end of last year we were proud to open our new state-of-the-art Sherwood Oaks Hospital, a purpose-built, four-ward, 70-bed unit with single room en-suite accommodation. This is a big step forward in our aim to eradicate dormitory accommodation and I know that this is going to be both a fantastic place to work and for people to receive care.

We are also working closely with our voluntary sector colleagues to deliver crisis sanctuaries, crisis helpline, mental health pathways and support for people with co-existing mental health and substance misuse. This all forms part of our ongoing strategy for working collaboratively with other organisations as part of the transformation programme to improve outcomes for our patients.

Similarly, there have been some fantastic developments in community care, including the rollout of our Urgent Community Response service, and I was heartened to hear of the impact this service has had in terms of helping flow through our acute hospitals in Nottinghamshire. In fact, I was a national call a few weeks ago where I heard our Nottinghamshire Urgent Community Response service being hailed as a national leader because of the way they were intercepting calls straight from the ambulance call centre ‘stack’.

We have also been involved in the development of virtual wards with partners across the system. We know that when patients are treated in their own homes it benefits their health and wellbeing and our virtual wards will support patients with respiratory conditions to be discharged from hospital and continue to receive the same quality of care in the place they call home. This is a different way of working for all of us and I recognise we have a way to go but I have been heartened by the recognition of our need to do things differently.

These are all really exciting developments and none of it would be possible without our partners across the Integrated Care System, who we have continued to work closely with. But as well as working with partners, I think that working with our people and communities is key to the success of the ICS Strategy, actively listening to their needs and aspirations and ensuring they are represented across the system. The voluntary sector has a unique relationship with our communities and its value cannot be underestimated as both advocates for and as a link to our local populations.

Earlier this month, along with other provider system leaders, we spent some time looking at the key priorities of the Nottingham and Nottinghamshire Provider Collaborative. These conversations resonate with me in terms of the fact that there are probably a few things that are in the gift of NHS Provider Trusts in the ICS to do differently that could make a difference to patient care. 

I’m impressed that there is real enthusiasm for collaboration from Notts providers to further develop our services together for the benefit of patients, families and communities. I have a growing confidence that now we have established two core priorities within the provider collaborative, we will create the infrastructure and the momentum to bring about lasting change in how we work together.

The future of our Integrated Care System is very much in the hands of each and every one of us, and I’d like to end by thanking you all for the exceptionally warm welcome I have received as a newbie in the Nottingham and Nottinghamshire system.

I look forward to continuing to meet as many of you as possible over the coming months so we can collectively realise our ambition to improve services for people and communities. I’m passionate about making a difference to both the communities we serve and the colleagues we work with, and together I hope we can cement Nottingham and Nottinghamshire’s reputation as a great place to work, live and receive care.

Thanks, Ifti

About Ifti

Ifti took up his position as Chief Executive of Nottinghamshire Healthcare on Thursday 1 December 2022.

He joined the Trust from Derbyshire Healthcare where he had held the position of Chief Executive for over five years, with an additional two years preceding this as Acting Chief Executive.

A mental health nurse by background, Ifti qualified in 1988 after training at St George’s Hospital in London. He has held a range of clinical posts in adult mental health services, both in acute inpatient and community settings.

Ifti also has significant experience of effective leadership holding several nursing management roles before being promoted through senior management and executive roles.

He also holds a number of national positions, including Chair of the NHS Confederation’s Mental Health and Learning Disabilities Network, and Co-Chair of their BME Leadership Network.

Nottingham and Nottinghamshire Integrated Care System newsletter – February 2023

Voluntary and Community and Social Enterprise  (VCSE) Alliance

The VCSE sector is acknowledged as an essential partner in delivering the ambitions of the ICS, to enable every citizen to enjoy their best possible health and wellbeing. It has strong links with groups and communities, including those who are underserved and experiencing the greatest health inequalities. A new ‘Working with People and Communities: Citizen Intelligence Strategy 2022-2025’ places a great deal of importance on the VCSE sector, for these very reasons.

The VCSE Alliance are a group of VCSE organisations across Nottingham and Nottinghamshire that act as a single point of contact to help generate citizen intelligence from the groups and communities that they work with. This vital insight is then being shared across the Nottingham and Nottinghamshire ICS and ICB, to ensure that the experiences and views of local citizens are considered in the design and delivery of health and social care services in the region, and to enable an effective two-way flow of information.

The VCSE Alliance is an essential part of how the system operates at all levels, and will involve the sector in governance structures and system workforce, population health management and service redesign work, leadership and organisational development plans. The Alliance is currently recruiting for a Chair.  This new role is an important one, as the person appointed will be instrumental in continuing to build relationships across the local VCSE sector and wider health and care partners.  More information on this role can be found here.

Creating Psychologically Informed Environments and Trauma Informed Care in Tesco stores

Tesco stores throughout Nottingham are taking part in a specialised training programme to support customers who experience severe multiple disadvantage (SMD) and make sure everyone feels welcome at Tesco.

The training comes as Tesco has partnered with Nottingham City Place Based Partnership (PBP) to deliver a training programme for Tesco store colleagues, managers, and directors across Nottingham.

44 stores, including Nottingham, Leicester, and Loughborough, will be taking part in the training, aiming to better understand and support the emotional and psychological needs of customers and colleagues in Tesco stores.

The initiative comes as data from the Joint Strategic Needs Assessment that shows Nottingham has the eighth highest prevalence of SMD in the country, with more than 5,000 people facing the most complex needs and inequalities, many of them experiencing trauma.

Tesco believes that the training will make customers feel safer and more welcome in the stores with the programme’s Trauma Informed Care and Support (TIC) helping colleagues to understand how individuals with trauma experience daily life.

Rachel Jones, Retail Director of Tesco Large Stores Central, said: “It is very important that our colleagues and leaders understand the issues people experience in society and are well educated on how to support them when they visit our stores.

“From this greater understanding, we can then take the correct and appropriate actions locally to help improve the communities they serve.”

Training began mid-January and is being delivered through the Practice Development Unit as part of the PBP’s Changing Futures programme  Sessions are led by Clinical Psychologists, Dr Anna Tickle, and Christine Collinson from Framework. The Practice Development Unit is hosted by Nottingham Community and Voluntary Service. It acts as a Nottingham hub to bring together and share the knowledge and expertise of agencies working with people living with SMD.

Dr Hugh Porter, Clinical Director at Nottingham City Place Based Partnership said: “We are delighted to be working with Tesco to provide this important training. Nottingham City PBP has always looked beyond traditional health and care boundaries to improve the health and wellbeing of people in our local area.

“Those who experience SMD have often suffered trauma, so creating an environment of understanding across communities is an important part of our work through our Changing Futures programme. We hope the training with Tesco is the start of wider community work increasing awareness in other non-public sector organisations around this issue.”

Ends

Notes to editor:

The Nottingham City Place-Base Partnership’s Changing Futures programme is part of the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities and The Nationally Community Fund national programme. Further information can be found here.

Tackling racism and discrimination in primary care

ICS leaders are pledging to play their part to tackle racism and discrimination in primary care.

361 people responded to the Nottingham and Nottinghamshire Racism and Discrimination survey, which is the first of its kind to capture the experiences of administrators, clinical staff, and managers working in primary care in Nottingham and Nottinghamshire (excluding Bassetlaw).

The survey was carried out in March by the Nottingham and Nottinghamshire Primary Care Racial Equity and Diversity Working Group, which is sponsored by the ICS.

The group has now published a report which calls for an accountable and targeted system approach to tackle racism, provide support and empower the primary care workforce through addressing inequalities and creating a safe and inclusive environment for all.

The responses highlighted people’s experiences of discrimination in areas including education and training, professional development, working patterns, and complaints.

For example, 22% of Black, Asian and Minority ethnic respondents reported that their education or professional development was affected by racism or discrimination and 24% of Black, Asian and Minority ethnic respondents reported they received complaints from colleagues due to racism or discrimination.

One respondent commented: “Looking back having spent 34 years in NHS there were times when I had to be twice as good or work twice as hard than the local Caucasian colleague to get where I needed to professionally.”

Kathy McLean, Nottingham and Nottinghamshire ICS Independent Chair, said: “This survey reminds us that discrimination against black, Asian and minority ethnic people continues, despite the best efforts of some committed people in our system to address this. We now need to use this insightful work to generate action and change within primary care and across our whole system. I am personally committed to ensuring that across our system we work as active partners to tackle discrimination in all forms.”

Amanda Sullivan, Chief Executive of NHS Nottingham and Nottinghamshire, said: “Everyone should feel comfortable bringing their true selves into the workplace, without fear of discrimination or negative overtones. I’d like to commend the network for this ground-breaking survey and the courage people have shown in responding. We believe it is vital that they are able to have a voice and help raise the profile of issues so that we can be a proactive anti-racist ICS.”

The survey and report are part of a Nottingham and Nottinghamshire strategy, supported by the Primary Care Workforce Group and the Nottingham and Nottinghamshire People and Culture Board, to understand and address racial inequalities and barriers and provide support for all those staffs from ethnic minority backgrounds working in primary care.

Read the full report Nottingham and Nottinghamshire Primary Care Racial Equity and Diversity Working Group Racism and Discrimination Survey Report 2022 (healthandcarenotts.co.uk)

For more information contact info@nottsredgroup.co.uk

New services from General Practice teams

Your general practice team is here to help you. More healthcare professionals are being recruited at your local general practice to work alongside GPs, Nurses and Healthcare Assistants.

Depending on your needs, you may be seen by a member of the wider general practice team. Having a range of professionals at your general practice means you receive the most appropriate care as quickly as possible.

You can often see these specialists straight away. For an appointment, just check your Practice website or discuss your needs with Practice staff.

Practice reception staff are specially trained to understand your needs and will listen to you so that they can:

  • get you an appointment with the right clinician as quickly as possible.
  • identify services you can access with a GP referral.
  • make appointments for new kinds of care or services.

Care Navigator, Tom Ward and Senior Partner, Dr Nina Vadgama of Derby Road Health Centre, talk about the growing importance of care navigation in local practice in this video.

You can also hear from Dr Paul Scullard, GP in Eastwood, who explains how Practices are working together to design bespoke services for their patients in the video below.

You can watch the individual videos here on the different roles:

PCN Care Coordinator / Navigator

Physician Associate

Clinical Pharmacists

Pharmacy Technician

Dietician

Social Prescriber

Health and Wellbeing Coach

Mental Health Practitioner

Occupational Therapist

Nursing Associate

Advanced Physiotherapist

People and culture – what comes next….

I am now past my fourth week, and I have had the opportunity to meet many wonderful colleagues and partners and I wish to thank you all for such a warm welcome.  I have connected and listened to colleagues in primary care, local authority, across senior leadership and Executive teams, and I have been struck by the desire to be and do something different and add value to our system.  I believe we have a great opportunity to turn up the dial on recognising, nurturing, and developing our people and I am confident that our new system People and Culture function will add value to you and our community.    

Progress in establishing and developing our new People and Culture function is something that I wish to keep you all up to date on.  Why? Because a function that is here to serve its people must remain connected, engaged, and importantly, actively listening to the needs and opportunities across our health and care system.

I will therefore aim to update colleagues and partners every 2-3 weeks with our progress and development.  This may range from outlining our immediate priorities, updating you on recruitment to key roles into the new function and sharing ways in which we would like you to be involved.  

By way of providing first insight into our progress, I wish to share two key things that I consistently remind myself and invite you all to be part of:

  1. Journey: An act of travelling from one place to another
  2. Deliberate: Done consciously and intentionally

We are all part of a journey where we will experience obstacles and solutions to safely navigate a way forward.  What is important in our journey is that we are deliberate in our chosen approach and actions for improvement.  I am sure many of you have heard the expression, fail to plan, plan to fail.  Establishing an effective function requires careful consideration, time to engage, listen and identify areas to prioritise based on need and importantly shared leadership and direction.  We will therefore ensure our journey to establishing our new function is one that is deliberate and works hard to ensure engagement and partnership working is at the heart of all that we do. 

So, what is happening right now and what am I involved in? 

  1. Recruitment to the role of our new Chief People Officer.  I will lead alongside and support our new Chief People Officer and we will optimise each other skills to successfully deliver our people and culture vision and objectives.  Interviews for the role are planned for late November.
  2. Identification of key roles within the new function and the transition/recruitment into these roles.  We are actively recruiting into those roles identified as critical in the first phase of our new function. This includes a system Lead role for EDI.  We hope to advertise this role in the next 2 weeks.   
  3. Securing support to develop a system OD Plan to be in place by April 2023.  Our OD Plan will outline areas of system priority, including: workforce leadership and talent development, strengthening equality and equity across our workforce, supporting teams in culture improvement and engagement and applying tools and ways for system objectives to be led well, communicated well and delivered with impact.  Widening participation is something that is at the forefront of my mind.   
  4. Produce a stocktake of work to date across the areas of People and Culture.  We now have a stock take of the enormity of work that has taken place across our system and we are now in the process of further refining this work and that which will be the responsibility of the system People and Culture function and that which is led, for example by Provider Collaborative.  This work will take some time and will also support our future governance and assurance processes.  We are making good process on this.  
  5. Consider the role of provider collaboratives and principle of a system focussed people and culture function.  We have started conversations with key leads utilising the stocktake information, national guidance and together we will define roles and responsibilities based on value, impact, and expertise.  We will keep you a breadth of this work.    

This is just a small insight into our progress, and I promise that we will keep you updated on a regular basis.  Equally and where appropriate, we will ask for your engagement and help towards our journey to establish a highly effective People and Culture function for all system partners and colleagues. 

I am very keen that we remain connected and engaged with you all and please do get in touch if you have any questions, comments, or feedback.  I will do my upmost to help and respond in a timely manner. 

Emma Challans-Rasool, Director of Organisational Development, Culture and Talent

Email; Emma.Challans@nhs.net