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Towards effective local delivery Empowered communities and individuals
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Towards effective local delivery

Feb 25, 2016

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Towards effective local delivery. Empowered communities and individuals. The aim of our presentation. To show that Assets can be far more powerful than Deficits To show needs and wants can be compatible Fear of loss autonomy by statutory providers is unfounded - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Towards effective local delivery

Towards effective local delivery

Empowered communities and individuals

Page 2: Towards effective local delivery

The aim of our presentation• To show that Assets can be far more powerful than

Deficits

• To show needs and wants can be compatible

• Fear of loss autonomy by statutory providers is unfounded

• To demonstrate that: Resilience Co-production Asset-based – aren’t just ‘buzz-word bingo’ winning lines

Page 3: Towards effective local delivery

This is the journey that led to the formation of North Coast Connection

The small village of Tongue The community that lives there

and the Reshaping of Community Services

Page 4: Towards effective local delivery

How it all began

A review of Day Care Service provision (provided by

Social Work at the Kyle Centre, Tongue) during the spring of 2011 identified 5 day care service users

Of these people assessed as requiring day care -o 3 people attend for one day per week.o One person attends for two days per week.o One person attends once every two week

Page 5: Towards effective local delivery

• High cost service o 3 full time members of staff o Dedicated minibus

• Poor uptake of service with no new service users within last 12 months

The facts behind thiso Remote community o Service not meeting needs o Local economy supported by health and social care

employment o Difficulty in providing care at home services o Social isolation a reality

Issues

Page 6: Towards effective local delivery

Add to that the deficit!

• Outward migration of younger people • Increasing elderly population • Difficulty in delivering health and social care

services: recruitment and retention of staff • Supersparsity• Geographic challenges

Problems and Gaps

Page 7: Towards effective local delivery

Surely there’s some good news

Are there any Assets!!!

Page 8: Towards effective local delivery

There’s a tucked away little building

With a rather tired interior

Page 9: Towards effective local delivery

But an amazing view

Page 10: Towards effective local delivery

And a truly amazing community

More about the community later

Page 11: Towards effective local delivery

Service user consultation told us more about the service

• 22 older people, who didn’t have a day care needs assessment, attended the Kyle Centre regularly

• The service was highly valued and existing service users felt that without it they would quickly become socially isolated, not be able to access the local shops and bank etc

• That they would be less able to attend the GP, opticians, podiatrist and nurse

• For some the provision of a cooked meal was of great importance • That although the provision of ‘Respite’ might have appeared minimal – this

was needed by the carers

Page 12: Towards effective local delivery

Wider community consultation showed

• Great local concern about the potential loss of services for older people

• A strong community voice prepared to campaign and petition on behalf of the older people

• A community with a commitment to be proactive in looking for a solution

• A sense of value for the service and the building

Page 13: Towards effective local delivery

So next steps

Health and Social Care

The commitment to look at new ways of delivery and working with the community to achieve this

“Effective local delivery requires effective participatory decision-making at local levels. This can only happen by empowering individuals and local communities”

The Marmot Review: Fair Society, Healthy Lives (2010)

Page 14: Towards effective local delivery

The community came together

Summer 2011: the first village meeting

• 50 people attended • They felt the building was of value to the community and could

become a centre for all ages • There was a clear understanding of needs and list of wants:

Youth Group, Parent and Tots, Carer Support, Gardening Group, etc

From this a working group was formed to take on the challenge of a community response

Page 15: Towards effective local delivery

The Working Group

• Regular meetings to explore opportunities and develop a plan

• August 2011 the working group met with the Director of Social Work and the Area Manager to share their thoughts and plans

• The vision was agreed

Page 16: Towards effective local delivery

CommunityHub

specificsupportgroups

healthyeating

youth cafe

outreach meals &

befriending

communitylunch

parent & tots

volunteers

gardengroup

generalcommunity

elderlyisolated

frail

young people

new parents

mentalhealthserviceusers

dementia sufferers & carers

substance abusers &

families

transport gard

en

Page 17: Towards effective local delivery

North Coast Connectionwas born

Following further public consultation North Coast Connection was formed – a volunteer

organisation

Page 18: Towards effective local delivery

All continued to drive forward

Reports prepared, business plans, submissions to committees for agreement etc

Successes • Charitable status achieved January 2012• Service Level Agreement jointly developed and signed • Budget agreed • Asset transfer agreed

Page 19: Towards effective local delivery

April 2012

North Coast Connection opened the Kyle Centre as a Health and Well-being Hub for the local community

o Employing 3 local people oPartnering with the local community transport scheme

‘Transport for Tongue’ maintaining accessibilityoPartnership working with Crossroads Care ensured that

those with an assessed care need were supported and still able to attend the new activities

Page 20: Towards effective local delivery

The first 12 months • Successful application to become a

Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organisation

• Staff, volunteer and community learning e.g. Food Hygiene, Digital Inclusion, Reminiscence and life story work

• Chair-based and Otago exercise provided

• Parent and Tot Group • Youth Café • Additional activity: Art Group,

Mackay Project• Funding & fundraising

• More people attending core activity 100% increase

• Increased attendance of those with assessed day care need

• Removing the restrictions of registration and the ‘Social Care’ stigma made the service accessible and acceptable

• 24 volunteers providing 1594 hours of support

• Secured Volunteer Action Funding to develop the volunteers

• Award winning: Patrick Brooks Award and Saltire Awards

• Development of Gardening Project

Page 21: Towards effective local delivery

Foresight Project: Asset Approach

Building well-being into lives:

• Connected - with the people around

• Be active – walk, garden, play

• Take notice – be curious. Catch sight of the beautiful

• Keeping learning – do something new, take responsibility, rediscover something old

• Give – something to other

New Economics Foundation (Aked et al., 2008)

Page 22: Towards effective local delivery

Five Actions to Improve Well-being

Building in to lives and the community

Take notice: recognition of setting

Keeping learning: staff, volunteers,

attendees and community

Connected people: 100% increase in

attendance Community activity

Give: volunteers, fund raisers and the

organisation

Active people: gardening, Otago,

chair-based

Page 23: Towards effective local delivery

For more info contact Andrea Maddenemail: [email protected] Tel: 01847 611241 Mobile: 07557 197665

Dr Marion Macdougall email: [email protected]: 01847 611392

Liz Goudie email: [email protected]: 01847 611392