Improving and increasing both service user / participant, and service delivery staff, in the development, design and improvement of health and care services in Scotland. (GBSC0002)
Overview
At-a-Glance
Action Plan: Action plan – Scotland, United Kingdom, 2021 – 2025
Inception Report Summary: Inception Report – Action plan – Scotland, United Kingdom, 2021 – 2025
Commitment Start: Nov 2021
Commitment End: Nov 2025
Institutions involved:
- Directorate for Healthcare Quality and Improvement, DG Health and Social Care
- Scotland Open Government Network
- Scottish Community Development Centre
- Community Justice Scotland /Shelter/Families Outside
- Safe Families for Children
- Barnardo
- Cancer Support Scotland/Scottish Cancer Coalition
- The Pain Association Scotland
- Parkinsons UK
- Centrestage (Arts)
- Epilepsy Campaigner/parent/lived experience
Primary Policy Area:
Primary Sector:
OGP Value:
- Civic Participation
- Public Accountability
Inception Report Summary
Verifiable: Yes
Relevance to OGP Values: Yes
The commitment is a new regulation, policy, practice or requirement.
The commitment activities is a positive change to a process, practice or policy but will not generate a binding or institutionalized change across government or specific institution(s).
Description
Commitment ID
GBSC0002
Commitment Title
Improving and increasing both service user / participant, and service delivery staff, in the development, design and improvement of health and care services in Scotland.
Problem
- The current health and care system is not consistently person centred.
- The development and design of health and social care services are not always co-designed. People are not engaged consistently, and when they are included it is not always early enough in the policy making process to fully influence work.
- People who are using/accessing health and social care systems are not always supported to be able to provide feedback or support development work based on their experiences and in an accessible way which meets their needs.
- People, parents and/or carers are not always regarded and listened to, as experts in their own lives or the lives of those they care for. They can be excluded from involvement under the current systems.
- There are currently few mechanisms for people, parents and/or carers to be able to inform or establish the agenda in terms of health and social care development and design.
- Different sectors (national and local government, NHS, and third sector services) have different priorities, levels of funding, governance requirements and levels of accountability which can result in disjointed services.
- The current health and social care system often focuses on crisis and urgent care needs rather than prevention and early intervention.
- There can be a considerable difference between policy intentions and delivery of services.
Status quo
The Scottish Government is taking a proactive approach to hear from and involve people and communities in aspects of the planning, delivery and continuous improvement of services, for example:
- We support NHS Boards to engage with the independent website Care Opinion, where people can share their stories of care in Scotland, good or bad, and engage in constructive dialogue about how services could be improved.
- We fund the ‘Our Voice’ Citizens’ Panel, which enables the voices of people to be heard including how to make communication between services and those that use them more inclusive.
- The Scottish Care Experience Survey Programme provides information on the quality of health and care services from the perspective of those using them.
- The Scottish Government is developing Community Engagement Guidance, recognising the important role that people have in shaping their local services.
- The Independent Review of Adult Care in Scotland stated “we have a duty to co-produce our new system with the people who it is designed to support, both individually and collectively”.
- In Scotland’s Open Government Action Plan 2018-20 a Participation Framework was created to enable and embed a strong culture and practice of participation across government.
We will build on all of the above work, drawing on lessons from each of piece of work to better embed co-production with people in priority work in health and social care.
Action
As we remobilise the health service and begin to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic, person-centred healthcare, and ensuring that the voices of people who use healthcare services are heard, and can influence the design and delivery of services, is a priority for the Scottish Government and those who deliver services.
Scottish Government will use the Open Government Principles and processes to develop actions that will support the aim of improving person-centred user design and participation in health and social care. This commitment will support developing better systems to involve people in the design and delivery of policy and services that meet their needs.
The Scottish Approach to Service Design advises organisations on the importance of service users and delivery staff in the formation of multi-disciplinary design teams. Scottish Government is committed to this approach, ensuring that work on the redesign and recovery of services post-pandemic will make it easier for people to participate in co-designing the services they need and use.
The action will aim to embed the principles of co-design in health and social care policy making. Co-design is an approach which involves everyone (e.g. employees, partners, customers, citizens, end users) in the design process to help ensure the end result meets the needs of those involved and is usable. We will seek to empower people to collaboratively design services, based on their lived experiences.
How will the commitment contribute to solving the public problem described above?
The commitment will ensure Scottish Government has tested and effective processes for involving people in the co-design of health and care services. Previous work to review existing literature on this topic evidenced the importance of involving communities as equal and reciprocal partners in effecting change. It also highlights the importance of the evaluation of work being participatory. In embedding these principles we will design services that meet the needs of people accessing and working within them.
Working with people to co-design services should help ensure people can access the services that they need to access at the right time. It should reduce barriers to people accessing health and care provision. By designing services that work for the people using them and those working in them they should be more efficient, hopefully reducing costs and time. This will also provide a blue print that can be used in wider policy making.
What long-term goal as identified in your Open Government Strategy does this commitment relate to?
This commitment will offer opportunities for embedding person-centred user design and participation in work to improve health and social care provision, aligning with the Open Government principles of innovative participation and engagement. It will support a person-centred approach that is open, transparent and accountable.
This will support the long-term goal of embedding Open Government principles across the work of Government.
Primary Policy Area
Inclusion
Primary Sector
Health & Nutrition, Public Services (general)
What OGP value is this commitment relevant to?
Civic Participation | The commitment makes clear that the Scottish Government recognises that by including people and supporting accessible participation in the design of services we will better meet the needs of people accessing and working within them.The commitment makes clear that the Scottish Government recognises that by including people and supporting accessible participation in the design of services we will better meet the needs of people accessing and working within them. |
Public Accountability | We will ensure a system of accountability is built in to the planned actions.We will ensure a system of accountability is built in to the planned actions. |