About transformation and our journey
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1 July 2022
We know we need to think differently, be innovative, and work together to change health and care services so that Staffordshire and Stoke-on-Trent can become the healthiest places to live and work. Your involvement in our work is helping us to develop future proposals for service change.
Why change is needed
We know we face many challenges and opportunities that will affect our ability to deliver quality services in the future. These include an increasing older population with multiple long-term conditions and care needs, and the impact of a decreasing workforce and vacancies in some key services. We are not alone with these challenges – many areas across the country face the same issues.
Our partners, doctors and nurses agree that people will experience poorer health outcomes unless we take action. We need to plan services for the future to improve quality, using the available budget and resource as efficiently as possible.
We can help to address the challenges and opportunities we are facing by introducing different ways of working and providing services in a more efficient and effective manner; some of these are recommended by NHS England and systems are expected to implement them at the earliest opportunity.
You can find out more about our work by visiting the relevant pages within this section of the website.
Services under discussion
Our work to transform services is not new, but builds on work started in 2016 and has been influenced and informed by the publication of the NHS Long Term Plan in 2019.
The plan has three core objectives:
- Making sure everyone gets the best start in life
- Delivering world-class care for major health problems
- Supporting people to age well.
Our journey
Developing the Case for Change
We started this conversation in 2016 with our original Case for Change ; this was followed later in the year by a series of engagement events led by our local Healthwatch partners to capture local peoples’ views on health and social care services. Our what people have told us so far page outlines examples of the comments received at these events.
At the end of 2016, we published a plan for health and care to work together better.
Over the past few years, our partners have been working closely together through a number of clinically-led work programmes to take this forward and achieve our collective vision: working with you to make Staffordshire and Stoke-on-Trent the healthiest places to live and work.
Listening exercise
During summer 2019, we held a clinically-led, 12-week public conversation (a listening exercise) to seek views on the local health and care services.
As part of the listening exercise, we described some of the challenges and opportunities we face locally.
You can read more about this work by clicking on the different document links below:
2019 listening exercise
- Listening exercise paper
- Summary listening exercise paper
- Listening exercise questionnaire
- Communications and involvement strategy
- Report of findings
- Summary report of findings
- Public responses on general practice which should be read with the main report of findings.
Delivering change across health and social care services
The conversation in 2019 was the start of our formal involvement process to help us deliver change across health and social care services.
The comments and insights received during this listening exercise were considered by clinicians and managers, and informed the start of the work to develop future proposals for service change, but in early 2020 we had to pause this work to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic.
As part of that response, some services had to change temporarily. In Autumn 2020, we worked with our Healthwatch, local authority and NHS partners to find out about people’s experiences of these changes.
You can read about this below in people’s experiences during Covid-19. Comments received have been considered as part of the wider transformation of services programmes, helping to inform and shape proposals for future services.
We restarted work on the wider conversation to transform health and care services in Autumn 2021 – at this point, we decided to have conversations about each of the services we were asking about to ensure we could have detailed discussions with patients, service-users, carers, staff and other stakeholders:
- We asked about people’s experiences of diagnostic services, and you can read about this work on Community Diagnostic Centres
- We are supporting the Midlands Partnership University NHS Foundation Trust (MPFT) with its work to find a long-term solution for inpatient mental health services previously provided at the George Bryan Centre. You can read more about this on Inpatient mental health services in South East Staffordshire
- We wanted to understand about people’s experience of accessing urgent and emergency care, and continue the conversation about introducing urgent treatment centres to replace walk-in centres and minor injuries units. This was known as the listening exercise refresh and you can read about it by visiting improving urgent and emergency care in Staffordshire and Stoke-on-Trent.
September 2021 Documents
- UEC Listening Exercise Refresh 2021 Document
- UEC Easy Read Document
- Urgent and emergency care involvement
- A summary of what you told us about urgent and emergency care services in Staffordshire and Stoke-on-Trent
People’s experiences during COVID-19
Our work so far:
Please be aware that due to the current situation around coronavirus (COVID-19) all efforts of local health and care partners are focused on supporting the frontline.
This means that for a time, other programmes aimed at the long-term transformation of services were placed on hold in March 2020.
We recognise this means that our ongoing work to develop future proposals for service change will be reviewed once the COVID-19 response has eased.
We recognise that this pandemic has affected everyone’s lives and we wanted to understand people’s experiences. Thank you to everyone who has attended our virtual events or taken part in our partnership survey. Your insight will help inform our approach to restoration and recovery.
We recognise that health and care services have had to adapt during this pandemic, and we are keen to continue our ongoing dialogue to understand:
- What worked well during our response to the pandemic
- What we could improve
- What should our priorities be for the future.
You can find out more about what people told us in the following sections. For a short overview of the findings, please see our summary report. This brings together all the feedback from the different events and surveys held across the partnership.