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Agenda and draft minutes
Venue: 1P05: Beira Room - City Hall, College Green, Bristol, BS1 5TR. View directions
Contact: Johanna Holmes
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Welcome, Introductions, and Safety Information PDF 105 KB Minutes: The Chair welcomed all attendees to the meeting and explained the emergency evacuation procedure.
Also in attendance were; · David Jarett, Chief Delivery Officer, Integrated Care Board (ICB) · Rachel Allbless & Olly Watson, Joint Chief Operating Officer, Bristol Health Partners · Olly Watson, Joint Chief Operating Officer, Bristol Health Partners · Bev Haworth, Deputy Head of Primary Care Development, BNSSG ICB · Christina Gray, Director of Communities & Public Health, Bristol City Council · Carol Slater, Head of Service, Public Health, Bristol City Council · Jenny Bowker Deputy Director of Primary Care, BNSSG ICB · Alison Mundell Community Pharmacy Clinical Lead, BNSSG ICB · Richard Brown, Chief Pharmaceutical Officer Community Pharmacy Avon
· Councillor Helen Holland, Cabinet Member with responsibility for Adult Social Care and Integrated Care System, Bristol City Council
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Apologies for Absence and Substitutions Minutes: It was noted that apologies for absence had been received from:
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Declarations of Interest Minutes: There were no declarations of interest.
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Minutes of Previous Meeting PDF 237 KB Are ‘to follow’. Minutes: The minutes of the previous meeting were agreed as a correct record.
There was one outstanding Action from previous meeting: Agenda Item 8. Children and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS). Resolved; It was agreedthat more in-depth information would be provided on the demographics of referrals from deprived areas and wards in Bristol. This information was sent to the Committee and is appended to these minutes.
Matters arising; Councillor Tim Wye remarked that the dentist surgery in St Pauls had recently re-opened and said this was very positive news for the local community. He thanked all those in the NHS and local residents who had worked hard to get the surgery re-opened.
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Chair's Business Minutes: The Chair highlighted that he had just come straight from a Bristol, North Somerset and South Gloucestershire ICB ‘Children and Young People's Neurodiversity Accelerated Design Event’. The workshop had been positive and full of energy and it was clear that all those involved understood the problems and there was a determination to sort them out. The Chair said he was grateful to be able to contribute and would also attend the second session on the 21 February.
The Chair added that he had hoped a Joint Health Overview and Scrutiny Committee (JHOSC) meeting to have taken place this municipal year. This had been discussed with neighbouring local authorities but it had become clear it was not possible to arrange one before the pre-election period began in March.
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Public Forum Up to 30 minutes is allowed for this item.
Any member of the public or Councillor may participate in Public Forum. The detailed arrangements for so doing are set out in the Public Information Sheet at the back of this agenda. Public Forum items should be emailed to scrutiny@bristol.gov.uk and please note that the following deadlines will apply in relation to this meeting:-
Questions - Written questions must be received 3 clear working days prior to the meeting. For this meeting, this means that your question(s) must be received in this office at the latest by 5pm on Thursday 1st February.
Petitions and Statements - Petitions and statements must be received on the working day prior to the meeting. For this meeting this means that your submission must be received in this office at the latest by 12 Noon on Tuesday 6th February.
Minutes: There was none.
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Healthwatch Updates (Standing Item) PDF 432 KB Minutes: Vickie Marriott briefly took Members through the published slides which focussed on Healthwatch’s Quarter 3 (Oct – Dec 2023) data. The information showed how Healthwatch’s outreach work was generating feedback and who had contacted them. The information also showed the frequently occurring themes that people contact Healthwatch about.
A Member asked if it was known how many of the 212 respondents have multiple issues that crossed over the categories. Yes it was said to be possible to filter that information out separately.
There were no further questions. The Chair thanked Vicky for the information she had provided and for attending the HOSC meetings this municipal year.
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Bristol Health Partners & Health Integration Teams PDF 230 KB Additional documents: Minutes: Rachel Allbless and Olly Watson introduced the item and took Members through the published paper and slide deck, which included the following key points:
The Health Partners and HITs have strong links with the One City Office and meet regularly to align work.
Bristol Health Partners & Health Integration Teams work with the Integrated Care Board (ICB) and access NHS funding.
Some communities experience disproportionate health issues. Support networks are set up to help make the research undertaken more inclusive.
The following points were discussed and questions asked:
A Member asked about the different pieces of research that had been carried out were details of them all on the website? Yes, all the research and summaries carried out to date were on the website as well as the annual report. Some research was said to be service improvement related and some were formal published papers.
It had been said the work was ‘grass roots’ and organic but at what point did HITs get involved? Did groups approach them or was it the other way round? It was said to be a bit of both. The outreach work was an open process but they were also very happy to be approached.
The Councillor Helen Holland, Cabinet Member in attendance, commented how positive it was that so many different teams were involved in the HITS. However, it was possible they were not ‘plugged in’ as well as they could be. Cllr Holland said she had attended the dementia HIT and it was a very positive piece of work especially the work with the Chinese community. But it did in her view need to be more visible. Christina Gray, Director of Communities & Public Health (DoPH) commented that the Bristol Health Partners website was excellent and very rich in terms of recording the work that had been done which, was very innovative and grounded and puts research into practice.
David Jarett, Chief Delivery Officer (ICB), asked about priority health areas, and connecting ... view the full minutes text for item 8. |
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Recovering Access to Primary Care PDF 171 KB Additional documents:
Minutes: Jenny Bowker Deputy Director of Primary Care of the ICB and Bev Haworth, Deputy Head of Primary Care Development, at the ICB introduced the item to Members and took them through the published slides which explained the joint NHS and Department of Health and Social Care Delivery Plan for Recovering Access to Primary Care.
Bev and Jenny explained the background to the Plan, which was first published in May 2023 and what it aimed to achieve. The Plan was a collaboration between many groups and individuals including the ICB, OneCare and Healthwatch and they had been working on this for some time before it had been published. The Plan focusses and prioritises the following key ambitions:
• Tackling the 8am telephone rush for appointments and reduce the number of people struggling to contact their practice. • Restoring patient satisfaction of accessing their general practice. • Supporting a move to a digitally-enabled operating model in general practice.
The data focussed on the following and was monitored on a monthly basis:
The BNSSG ICB response to the access recovery plan and development of the system level access improvement plan had been based on the patient survey results.
Any GP practices that were struggling were supported and toolkits were available to work through.
Primary Care Nurses (PCNs) work closely with practices by reviewing progress made and assessing what work is still required.
Although a huge amount of work had already been undertaken, it was said there there was still a long way to go on this.
The following questions were asked and points discussed: A Member said they had been speaking to a digital support group of patients at a GP practice in Ashley and was raising some questions on their behalf about the challenges they were experiencing whilst trying to make changes to their online accounts. The officers said this was a recognised problem because changes needed to be signed off by panels for safety reasons but they would feed this back and see what could be done to speed the process up.
A Member asked about the phone systems and 8am rush of calls and did the new cloud system count the number of calls that were dropped by callers. Yes it was said that all calls including those who drop-off from the call waiting systems and those who request a call-back were calculated and included. The aim was to reduce the number of people calling at 8am because people knew they could call and get action at other times of the day.
Another Member commented that some patients at their local surgery expressed frustration at being required to text on mobile phones, as they were not said to be ‘text savvy’. Officers said it had been recognised that some communications were presenting problems for some people, especially older people. However, with the emphasis now on the triage path, it shouldn’t matter now ... view the full minutes text for item 9. |
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Local Pharmacy Services PDF 163 KB Additional documents: Minutes: The Local Pharmacy Services item was introduced by Carol Slater, Head of Service in Public Health at Bristol City Council. Pharmacy services were commercial business that were providing services and played a vital role in communities. There were currently many changes taking place such as more online services being made available. The last needs assessment was carried out in 2022 and the next one will be in three years’ time. Carol took the Committee Members through the slides, some of which showed pharmacy provision, population statistics and opening hours.
A Member asked for confirmation about the about the number of pharmacies and closers detailed in the slides as they were quite surprised at the figures. Officers said there were some changes in provision, particularly during evenings and weekends but the figures published were definitely correct.
Pharmacies were working hard to take on additional work and to cover any gaps. And so were now delivering some public health services such as sexual health services and substance-use services.
Jenny Bowker, Deputy Director of Primary Care, BNSSG ICB, provided further information about the current community pharmacy network across Bristol and the processes for managing community pharmacy closures.
Alison Mundell, Community Pharmacy Clinical Lead and Richard Brown, Chief Pharmaceutical Officer then provided an update on the ‘Delivery Plan for Recovering Access to Primary Care’ which commenced in May 2023. This had originally been a pilot project in 2019 and then became part of the national framework. Local pharmacy services had then gotten the Plan ‘off the ground’ so speak. Part of the aim of the Plan was to increase the number of referrals from GP practices to community pharmacies for some minor ailments. It was said that the average number of referrals had gone up from 5,000 per month to 7,000 in January of this year. This had now become a national plan and the data sets from BNSSG had contributed towards this.
The following points were discussed and questions asked:
A Member said that on paper this all sounded very good. But when they had spoken to residents about this they were not happy about the services being provided. Also, that a 20-minute walk was a lot further if you are 80 years old. And some people could not physically get to a GP practice or a pharmacy. In response it was said that there were rules and regulations within which community pharmacies had to operate. Pharmacies were sometimes invited to open but the underpinning contracts did not completely fund them and they were required to provide more units and services make them financially viable. Boots were said to be consolidating their stores and Lloyds pharmacies had completely gone now, which had made things much worse.
The Director of Public Health said that an NHS England rule stated that a relevant ‘pharmaceutical needs analysis’ must be carried out and show that they meeting a need before a new pharmacy could open.
A Member said they were aware of all sorts of regulations and ... view the full minutes text for item 10. |
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Minutes: The Members noted the work programme and that this was the Committee’s final meeting for the year.
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