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NHS England announces new joined-up care systems

NHS England has announced eight areas which will lead action to provide joined-up care, breaking down barriers between GPs and hospitals, physical and mental healthcare, social care and the NHS.

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Sue Hayward-Giles: What makes a difference to whether transformation is successful or not is clinical engagement

Simon Stevens, NHS England’s chief executive, said: ‘We are now embarked on the biggest national move to integrating care of any major western country.

‘For patients this means better joined-up services in place of what has often been a fragmented system that passes people from pillar to post.’

The eight ‘accountable care systems’ (ACSs) are:

  • Frimley Health including Slough, Surrey Heath and Aldershot
  • South Yorkshire and Bassetlaw, covering Barnsley, Bassetlaw, Doncaster, Rotherham and Sheffield
  • Nottinghamshire, with an early focus on Greater Nottingham and Rushcliffe
  • Blackpool and Fylde Coast, with the potential to spread to other parts of the Lancashire and South Cumbria at a later stage
  • Dorset
  • Luton, with Milton Keynes and Bedfordshire
  • Berkshire West, covering Reading, Newbury and Wokingham
  • Buckinghamshire

NHS England expects west, north and east Cumbria and Northumberland to join the group of ACSs later in the year.

It also announced a new devolution agreement in Surrey Heartlands, similar to the existing one in Greater Manchester. The aim is to bring together the NHS locally with Surrey County Council to integrate health and social care services and give local leaders and clinicians more control over services and funding.

Clinical engagement

Following the announcement, the CSP’s director Sue Hayward Giles said: ‘What makes a difference to whether transformation is successful or not is clinical engagement.

‘If clinicians are engaged, these new developments stand a better chance of being successful.’

The aims of ACSs were outlined this March in the Next Steps on the NHS Five Year Forward View. Next Steps says an ACS will be an ‘evolved’ version of a sustainability and transformation plan that is working as a locally integrated health system.

It says this is a complex transition, which is why ACSs will need staged implementation.



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