Title: Let’s talk about health visiting
1Lets talk about health visiting
- The Changing Context for Health Visiting
- Kate Billingham
- Deputy Chief Nursing Officer
- Department of Health
2Part One The policy context for health Part
TwoThe policy context for children and
familiesPart ThreeImplications for health
visiting
3Future health challenges
- Public expectations are changing as patients
and tax payers - Increasing and changing health needs
- Scientific and technological change
- HOW DO WE SUSTAIN A SERVICE THAT IS
- TAX-FUNDED-FREE-AT-POINT-OF-USE?
4Challenges for health visiting
- Using new knowledge, new technologies and
evidence of what works e.g. parenting and
neurological development - Preparing for impact of unhealthy living and
global health threats - Inequalities in health
- Public expectations are changing - as patients
and tax payers - Finding HVs unique contribution in a more varied
and diverse workforce - Making the case for preventive services to
commissioners
5The policy jigsaw
Supporting independence, healthy choices,
Integrated services centred on the community
Meeting changing needs, improving health and
reducing inequalities
Changing the system (funding, commissioning, IT,
regulation, providers)
Adapting the workforce
6Modernising Nurse Careers the strategic
direction for nursing
- Constancy of nursing values and practice
- Quality care organised around peoples needs
- A community centred health service
- Better care for people with long term conditions
(self-care) - Effective preventive interventions
- Integration of services
- Able to meet physical and mental health needs
- Sufficient number with advanced skills
- Leaders of mixed teams
- Deliver high productivity and best value for
money
7Health policies that impact on health visiting
our health, our care, our say
- Public Health obesity, inequalities, fully
engaged public, pandemics - Primary care hospital to home, long term
conditions, choice, practice based commissioning,
new providers, self-care and independence - Nursing Modernising Nursing Careers, quality and
reputation - System reform Client/patient experience as the
driver, active commissioning, better value for
money/productivity, Connecting for Health, new
providers, devolution
8Part Two The policy agenda for children and
families
9The policy agenda for children and families
- Priorities reducing poverty and social
exclusion, best start in life, education - Prevention and early intervention
- Progressive universalism
- Balancing support with challenge
- Integration of services in childrens centres
- Health led during pregnancy to 3 years
- Choice for parents from a range of different
sources of support - Using what we know about risks and protective
factors and what works
10Key priorities for children and young people
since 97
- Tackling child poverty
- introducing welfare reforms to make work pay and
financial support for families with children. The
Governments goal is to eradicate child poverty
by 2020, halving it by 2010 - Ensuring every child has the best start in life
- recognising the importance of the early years
through Sure Start, Childrens Centres and
expanded early years education. The Government
has invested more than 17 billion in these areas
since 1997 - Education
- raising standards across the board while giving
priority to improving standards in schools in the
most challenging circumstances. - Investment per pupil (including capital spending)
has risen from 2,500 in 1997 to over 5,000
today and is expected to exceed 5,500 by
2007-08.
11What is progressive universalism?
- A universal preventive service that is
systematically planned and delivered to give a
continuum of support according to need at
individual and population level in order to
achieve ECM outcomes. - Those with greatest needs receiving more
intensive support and those with lower levels of
need a lighter touch - Why?
- We know more about the impact of parenting and
maternal health of outcomes for children - Inequalities (IMR 6x higher in Birmingham than
Eastleigh) - It happens anyway but tends to be unplanned
- The world is changing (expectations, technology,
social relations)
12Progressive impacts but concerns about the tail
- Faster income growth for poorer families since
1997 particularly compared to 1979 - 1997
poorer families
richer families
Source Institute for Fiscal Studies
13Reaching Out An Action Plan on Social Exclusion
- Considerable progress made in tackling poverty
and social exclusion since 1997 - Need to do more to achieve the goal of
progressive universalism and help those with the
most entrenched and complex problems - Importance of support from the start breaking
intergenerational transmission of disadvantage - Research on risk and protective factors offers us
considerable opportunities for early
identification and more effective prevention
14Life chances are influenced by opportunities and
constraints operating at different levels at
the heart of this model is the individual child
and family
Economic, fiscal and social policy
Current well-being
Be healthy stay safe enjoy and achieve make a
positive contribution economic well-being
Choices Actions
Opportunities Constraints
Family
Community
Region
Nation
Future well-becoming
Global
Prospects and social mobility (inter- and
intra-generational)
Proximal factors (e.g. parenting and cultural
capital) distal factors (e.g. social class,
income, assets)
Social capital peers concentrations of
deprivation discrimination
Environment housing regional economy
15A magic moment of opportunity
Like it or not, the most important mental and
behavioural patterns, once established, are
difficult to change once children enter
school Nobel Laureate James Heckman (2005)
- Pregnancy and the first 3 years are vital to
child development, life chances and future
achievement - Birth of a child is a magic moment of
opportunity when parents are uniquely receptive
to support - Universal midwifery and health visiting services
are ideally placed to identify children and
families at risk - Embedding the principle of progressive
universalism into maternal services should be a
priority to ensure that additional support is
provided to those children and families at
greatest risk
16What might this look like for a 16 year old
single mother with her first child?
- Has chosen which HV she wants by seeing video
clips of the teams particular skills at the
local childrens centre - The HV keeps in touch with the practice and all
other services using the new IT systems that are
in place, with all aware of progress - The mother has a collection of video clips of her
babys development on her own Health Space which
mum and the HV look at on the digital TV - Feels that she is benefiting from the intensive
parenting support programme - She has a volunteer support worker who helps her
with some of the practical day to day needs - Job centre staff at the childrens centre have
helped her find a job and she has made new
friends - Daily SMS messages sent via the HVs PC are
helping mum to keep off cigarettes
17Part Three
- Implications for health visiting
18National developments
- The establishment of 10 health-led parenting
support demonstration projects from pre-birth to
age 2 - Working group to look at the future of health
visiting - Modernising Nursing Careers
- These workshops
- Commissioning for health well being guidance
19What does this mean for health visiting?
- Health visiting role within a service rather than
a HV service? - Focus on improving the well being of children
through progressive universalism, health-led
prevention and early intervention - Evidence based interventions with known outcomes
- Integration of child and family services
- Changing landscape of primary health care
- New career paths and educational preparation
(level and content) - More players on the field - public health role
of the public - New roles in a new world leading and delivering
- Influencing commissioning and delivering a
contract - Local decision making
- New providers (general practice and childrens
centres)
20-
- The real social revolution we are living through
is from a life that is largely organised for us
To a world where we have to be in charge of our
own destiny
21The Blue Book, Trevor Bradley Greive
22The Blue Day Book Trevor Bradley Grieve