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Personalisation and its effects South West of England Regional Housing Learning and Improvement Network: Wednesday 4 th March Martin Stevens, Social Care Workforce Research Unit, King’s College London
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Evaluation Team Caroline Glendinning; Nicola Moran LSE branch: Martin Knapp; José-Luis Fernandez University of Kent branch: Ann Netten, Karen Jones University of Manchester branch: David Challis; Mark Wilberforce; Sally Jacobs Jill Manthorpe; Martin Stevens
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Introduction Personalisation Individual Budgets Evaluation findings Housing 21 – broadening the debate report Implications
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www.boxuk.com/server/show/ConWebDoc.362/Person alisation-and-the-Tailored-Sales-Process.html
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Government goals Better prevention and earlier intervention for improved health and well-being More choice, control and a stronger voice Improve access to community services and tackle inequalities Better support for people with longer term needs – better partnerships and more integrated services Source: Care Services Improvement Partnership presentation: ‘Department Of Health Direction of Travel – Policy Framework’
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Principles underlying IBs Greater role for users in assessing needs Users should know resources available before planning how needs met. Resource Allocation System (RAS) recommended Encourage users to identify desired outcomes and how to achieve these Support individuals in using IBs Test opportunities to integrate funding streams and simplify/integrate/align multiple assessment processes and eligibility criteria (NB No NHS) Experiment with different ways of deploying IBs
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The IB pilots 2006-7 13 local authorities representative mix but higher than average take-up of direct payments Mix of user groups (OP, LD, MH, P/SI) Mix of funding streams Target numbers onto IBs by June 2007 (for evaluation) Implementation support from CSIP
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How were IBs evaluated? Randomised trial – IB and comparison groups (but lots of flexibility within those groups re deployment) Baseline data from local authority records Follow-up interviews after 6 months some challenges (logistical, instrumentation, interviewee exhaustion, proxies) In-depth user interviews – support planning process Interviews with IB leads, providers, funding stream lead officers, other managers Interviews and diaries, front-line staff and first-tier managers Add-on study of impact of IBs on carers
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Evaluation findings Processes Inputs Money Outcomes Cost effectiveness
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Processes Growing use of self-assessment and outcomes focus Most sites (not all) developed RAS Care managers spent more time helping plan IBs Role for independent brokers Care managers expressed more satisfaction with user relationship More role for users and carers in planning support Boundaries and legitimate use of social care resources Monitoring and reviewing developing
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Excluding NHS resource from IBs Extensive partnerships with PCTs and providers ‘Missed opportunity’ NHS Continuing Care – threats to personalised support IBs and mental health Integrated services and budgets Indivisibility of ‘health’ and ‘social’ care outcomes Cost-shunting
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How much money from where? The average annual gross value of an IB was found to be £11,450.1 Varied by service user group People with physical disabilities £11,150 People with learning disabilities £18,610 People with mental health problems £5,530 Older people £7,860 Almost all (99%) included social care funding 11% had Supporting people; 8% Independent Living Fund; 1 Access to Work; No Disabled Facilities Grants ££££££££££ ££££££££££
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Outcomes of IBs Interviews at 6 months; only 45% had IB support in place Overall quality of Life (single QoL question) MH – IB group reported better QoL Psychological wellbeing (GHQ) OP – IB group lower well-being
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More outcomes of IBs Social care outcomes (Adult Social Care Outcome Toolkit measure) Higher levels of ‘control’ in IB group, particularly for people with learning disabilities Satisfaction with services provided IB group more satisfied with outcome Especially people with physical disabilities Older people Concerns about managing budgets? Anxiety about change? Lower budgets, more personal care, less flexibility? Level of IB affects outcome
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Cost effectiveness? Some evidence of cost-effectiveness in the overall sample with respect to social care outcomes Weaker evidence of cost-effectiveness with respect to psychological well-being But picture varies significantly by user group IBs appear more cost-effective for People with physical disabilities or mental health problems No evidence of cost-effectiveness for older people Mixed pattern for people with learning disabilities, slightly lower costs, slightly lower outcomes
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User responses to choice and control ‘I don’t want anything different’ Anxiety or unwillingness to manage money ‘Carers are all laid on for me at the moment and I haven’t got the time and I haven’t got the brain really to work out financial details or anything like that, and I’m quite happy with the arrangement I’ve got.’ (Older person) Able and willing to handle finances without stress ‘so I thought, right, well I can do this cheaper myself so … I went to a smaller, cheaper and far superior agency.’ (Older person)
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Perceived areas of risk Poorer quality services Service users being overwhelmed by the need to manage the IB IB used inappropriately and unproductively Hiring suitable and firing unsuitable workers More open to physical and financial abuse Loss of collective ‘voice’
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‘Building Choices’: Personal Budgets and Older People’s Housing No specific research on implications for social housing (particularly specialist provision) Housing strategy – chimes with choice and control goals Stakeholder workshop aimed to: Identify issues Share good practice Broaden debate on personal budgets and housing
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Themes from Housing21 report Organisation and expertise Landlord duties Risk Funding issues Diversity considerations
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Organisation and Expertise More active tenant role Housing providers may provide brokerage Quality of Information Supporting People budgets pooled – tenants opt out of housing related support? Core and add on schemes opt in/opt out? – Impact on sheltered housing staff Closer involvement with care providers More involvement in advising on care and financial issues? More of a floating role
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Landlord duties Responsibility for risk Response if residents opt out Duty of care to third party providers? In relation to equipment and adaptations To those not taking up personal budgets
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Risk to providers Risk to extra care housing package Choice of provider Opting out of night care for example Sheltered housing – changes in terms of increased flexibility reduce ‘24 hour’ availability? Regulation – risk of recategorisation and inspection Better understanding of the market
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Risk and the built environment Developing PEEPs? Sustainable communal areas and facilities Progressive privacy designs Risks and security Leasing/rental agreements in respect of specialist facilities and equipment Insurance/liability Training Charging
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Funding issues Block contracts/individual contracts Increased costs Staff recruitment/retention Uncertainty over contract duration Minimum ‘sign up’ periods (incentive to purchase else where?) Cost transparency – personal budgeteers Increased commercialisation Consolidate or speculate?
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Diversity considerations Personal budgets more attractive to people from BME groups? Equity across groups Mental health and capacity issues – a two tier system? Increasing diversity with age
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Implications Safeguarding Commissioning Cost neutrality Practice Policy
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How can we move forward on safeguarding and personalisation? Not just a council affair Nor even statutory sector Way of revitalising adult safeguarding But there will be decisions about monitoring (over and under protection) And the safety net of social care may be tested.
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New commissioning roles for local authorities Informing the market – both supply and demand Supporting providers through change Promoting standards Managing tensions efficiency vs personalisation
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Can IBs remain cost-neutral? Resource allocation Managing the ‘winners and losers’ From bulk purchase to individual buyers Integrating funding streams ILF review Increased demand for IBs Mental health services
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Practice issues Managing change Information Training Champions Involve stakeholders Managing risk New ways of deploying IBs Spread understanding of different approaches Managing finance arrangements New roles for social workers/care coordinators
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Issues for policy Resource allocation – underlying principles Funding streams – personal budgets (social care only) NHS budgets? FACS and charging policies Personal Budgets available for residential services Individualism over collectivism The legitimate ‘boundaries’ of adult social care
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Conclusion IBs – developing example of personalisation Suggested positive outcomes Identified areas of concern Managing change Integrating safeguarding Balancing individualism and collectivsim Implications across public services
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Contact details Martin Stevens martin.stevens@kcl.ac.uk 020 7848 1860 Social Care Workforce Research Unit King's College London Strand London WC2R 2LS
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