Co-ordinated, integrated and fit for purpose: A Delivery Framework for Adult Rehabilitation in Scotland
A delivery framework for adult rehabilitation in Scotland.
2. Policy context and background
This delivery framework for adult rehabilitation explores the principles of rehabilitation in line with the new health and social care agendas in Scotland.
Policy context
Delivering for Health1 signals transformational change in the NHS from a service that is primarily focused on providing care in hospitals to one where care is planned, delivered and evaluated close to people's homes, when this is the most appropriate option. It sets out the Scottish Executive's priorities for NHSScotland over the next decade (see Box 2.1), presenting a new vision for the NHS based on:
- delivering services close to where people live;
- offering people timely access to services;
- promoting a strong emphasis on anticipatory care;
- supporting individuals and carers in self-managing long-term conditions.
Box 2.1 Delivering for Health1 |
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Delivering for Health1 calls for:
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Delivering for Health1 set out a specific action to develop:
… a rehabilitation framework to support services for older people, people with long-term conditions and people returning to work after a period of ill health. The framework will promote a co-ordinated approach to delivering integrated care in community settings…
The importance of applying a more systematic approach to care for people with long-term conditions is emphasised in the policy. This calls for services to identify individuals in their local population who have long-term conditions and to tailor health and social care services to meet their requirements. Proactive, systematic approaches to rehabilitation, underpinned by good prevention, need to be adopted to further this agenda.
Various initiatives have been launched by the Scottish Executive in response to specific needs identified in Delivering for Health, 1 including those that support services for:
- people with long-term conditions and their carers;
- older people;
- people with specific conditions, such as stroke.
Rehabilitation is seen as being central to all of these initiatives.
The shift in policy direction in the health service that Delivering for Health1represents is mirrored in the social care sector by Changing Lives. 2 The review of social work in Scotland sets out a vision for social care services for the 21st century. The report outlines 13 recommendations based on the premise that 'more of the same won't work', highlighting the need for change to ensure services respond to future demographic changes, public expectations, workforce availability and financial allocations (Box 2.2).
Box 2.2 Recommendations from Changing Lives2 |
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1. Social work services must be designed and delivered around the needs of people who use services, their carers and communities. |
Changing Lives2places the emphasis on service redesign, workforce training and leadership and a shift towards early intervention and prevention. It focuses on building the capacity of the workforce to deliver personalised services and create sustainable change.
Rehabilitation can therefore be seen as being pivotal to the principles of Delivering for Health1 and Changing Lives, 2 many of which are shared (see Box 2.3).
Box 2.3 Shared principles of Delivering for Health1 and Changing Lives2 |
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Each document focuses on different aspects of transformation within the respective services, but shares common principles of:
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Other key policy statements relevant to rehabilitation services include:
- Delivering for Mental Health4
- The Scottish Executive Response to The Future of Unpaid Care in Scotland5
- The Diabetes Action Plan6
- Cancer in Scotland7
- Coronary Heart Disease and Stroke Strategy for Scotland8
- Workforce Plus - An Employability Framework for Scotland9
- More Choices, More Chances: A Strategy to Reduce the Proportion of Young People not in Education, Employment or Training in Scotland10
- Healthy Working Lives: A Plan for Action11
- Pathways to Work: Helping People into Employment12
- The Department for Work and Pensions Cities Strategy13
- The Strategy for Community Hospitals in Scotland.14
These UK and Scottish initiatives, and many more like them, indicate a significant shift in policy towards community-based services, with rehabilitation firmly defined as a central component.
Health and social care professionals now need to build on existing skills in the management of long-term conditions and co-morbidities, health improvement and anticipatory care/early intervention. The Community Health Partnership ( CHP) Long-Term Conditions Toolkit will be a useful resource in taking this forward. By focusing on rehabilitation and enablement, professionals will be in a strong position to contribute their expertise to the delivery of the new health and social care agenda, working with individuals, carers, communities and voluntary organisations.
Rehabilitation services in Scotland
Hard data on the numbers of people accessing rehabilitation services in Scotland are difficult to establish due to the diverse nature of service provision. An indication of the extent of demand, however, can be gained from the National Allied Health Professions ( AHP) Census, which took place in September 2005, and which showed that across Scotland, 59 997 people were seen by an AHP on Census Day - on average, 1:89 people in Scotland. 15 The Census covered only AHPs working in the NHS, so the actual numbers will be greater when account is taken of people accessing rehabilitation services through social services, independent and voluntary organisations.
Rehabilitation services currently are delivered in a variety of settings, often by diverse groups that cross health, local authority and voluntary sectors and which include individuals and carers, equipment and adaptation services and employers. Around 600 000 unpaid carers support individuals throughout Scotland and play a crucial role in successful self management.
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