- Nigel Hawkes, freelance journalist
- 1London
- nigel.hawkes1{at}btinternet.com
Sixteen organisations have been chosen to pilot new models of integrated care in the English National Health Service. The scheme, announced in the Darzi review last July, aims to improve services for defined groups of patients by integrating health and social care, or primary and secondary care, or both.
The pilots announced on 1 April include seven that will focus on long term conditions or chronic diseases, three on elderly people and end of life care, two on dementia, and one each on falls, mental health, delivery of rural health care, and substance misuse. Geographically the pilots are unevenly spread, with four in the North East Strategic Health Authority, four in the South West, but none in South Central, South East Coast, or West Midlands (box). The 16 were chosen from 100 applications.
Winning pilots
Bournemouth and Poole Teaching PCT—Dementia care
Cambridge Assura—End of life care
Church View Medical Practice, Sunderland—Long term conditions
NHS Cumbria—Chronic diseases
Durham Dales Integrated Care Organisation—Rural health care
Nene Commissioning Community Interest Company—Long term conditions
Newcastle Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust—Reducing falls among old people
Cornwall and Isles of Scilly PCT—Dementia
NHS Norfolk and Norfolk County Council—Care of elderly people
Northumbria Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust—Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
North Cornwall Practice Based Commissioning Group—Mental health
Principia Partners in Care (Rushcliffe, Nottinghamshire)— Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
NHS Tameside and Glossop—Cardiovascular disease
Torbay Care Trust—Care of elderly people
Tower Hamlets PCT—Long term conditions
Wakefield Integrated Substance Misuse Service—Drug misuse
Integration has long been an article of faith among NHS commentators, and the new Care Quality Commission expresses that faith by combining the regulation of health and social care in a single organisation. But previous efforts to …
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