Issue - meetings

Urgent Care at Home - Service Options

Meeting: 18/06/2024 - Cabinet (Item 76)

76 Urgent Care at Home - Service Options

    To receive a report from the Corporate Director, People.   

Supporting documents:

Decision:

That Cabinet:

 

1)    Approves the delivery of the Urgent Care at Home and Telecare Response Service to Wiltshire Council in-house services from the 1 August 2024 at an annual cost of £1.665m, to be funded from the Better Care Fund.

 

2)    Delegates to the Director Adult Social Care in consultation with the Cabinet Member for Adult Social Care, SEND and Inclusion to finalise operational matters to ensure a safe transfer of the services. This will include the TUPE transfer of eligible staff and the purchase of the necessary resources such as uniforms, laptops, phones, equipment for service deliver and the use of fleet vehicles.

 

Reason

The transfer of the services from Medvivo to the Council was due to take place 1 May 2025, however accelerating this to nine (9) months earlier than expected has required the Council to act quickly to ensure vulnerable people are not left without support. The three (3) month extension period has been agreed to allow for staff eligible for TUPE transfer(s) to be identified, alongside putting other operational requirements in place.

 

The service in scope consists of:

 

Urgent Care at Home; when a situation is moving into crisis, it can often be stabilised with some domiciliary support. Through the timely provision of experienced carers who can respond to presenting issues, risks can be managed to safeguard the situation. An example would be a carer who helps and supports a partner with dementia being admitted unexpectedly to hospital. Urgent Care could provide 24 hour support to look after the person at home until their partner returned home or alterative arrangements were made. Telecare Response; Wiltshire Council commissions a telecare call response service with Apello. When a personal alarm is triggered, for example because of a fall, Apello call the person and find out how to best support them through a conversation on the phone system. The telecare response service can provide a physical response in the form of a community visit when it is deemed safe and appropriate to do so, for example when an alarm has been triggered and the person cannot be contacted. In some circumstances it is not appropriate to use this service, for example when the risks require a medical emergency response.

 

The telecare triage service at Apello carefully manage these risks to ensure they are referring onto the most appropriate service.

 

Bringing the service in-house was the preferred option (to start 1 May 2025) but the inability of the parties to agree terms for a further twelve (12) month extension has forced an earlier timetable.

 

We are confident that the service can be delivered through the Council’s Wiltshire Support at Home (WSAH) Service. WSAH is currently commissioned to provide a domiciliary support service working with Homefirst and Reablement to support hospital discharges. This expansion will support the Urgent Care Response Service (UCR) - the Wiltshire Health and Care Service commissioned to provide clinical response within 2 hours. Wiltshire Support at Home urgent support service will work with Wiltshire Health and  ...  view the full decision text for item 76

Minutes:

Cllr Richard Clewer, Leader of the Council presented a report seeking approval to bring the Urgent Care and Telecare Response services in-house. This was to be funded by the Better Care Fund. The recommendation was reached after determining it would not be possible to agree a 12-month extension to the existing contract with the current provider, Medvivo.

 

Cllr Ian Thorn, Leader of the Liberal Democrat Group, stated he was generally in support of bringing services within the council where possible. He sought details on the reasons for the current contract not being extended, the funding process and relationship with the Integrated Care Board, and how the services would be made aware of users who would benefit from the schemes.

 

Details were provided of how GPs, paramedics, and others would be able to have a route into the service. It was also confirmed the service related to basic interventions, but the NHS at Home expansion was intended to provide further support in future.

 

Cllr Gordon King, Vice-Chairman of the Health Select Committee, detailed that he and the Chairman of the Committee had been briefed by the Director of Adult Social Care, looking at the risk to the council, the benefits, and the extension to the support at home service. They had been assured the resources were in place, and had sought detail on any differences to those who would be receiving care, such as more limited hours.

 

At the conclusion of discussion, and on the motion of Cllr Jane Davies, seconded by Cllr Richard Clewer, it was then,

 

Resolved:

 

That Cabinet:

 

1)    Approves the delivery of the Urgent Care at Home and Telecare Response Service to Wiltshire Council in-house services from the 1 August 2024 at an annual cost of £1.665m, to be funded from the Better Care Fund.

 

2)    Delegates to the Director of Adult Social Care in consultation with the Cabinet Member for Adult Social Care, SEND and Inclusion to finalise operational matters to ensure a safe transfer of the services. This will include the TUPE transfer of eligible staff and the purchase of the necessary resources such as uniforms, laptops, phones, equipment for service deliver and the use of fleet vehicles.

 

Reason

The transfer of the services from Medvivo to the Council was due to take place 1 May 2025, however accelerating this to nine (9) months earlier than expected has required the Council to act quickly to ensure vulnerable people are not left without support. The three (3) month extension period has been agreed to allow for staff eligible for TUPE transfer(s) to be identified, alongside putting other operational requirements in place.

 

The service in scope consists of:

 

Urgent Care at Home; when a situation is moving into crisis, it can often be stabilised with some domiciliary support. Through the timely provision of experienced carers who can respond to presenting issues, risks can be managed to safeguard the situation. An example would be a carer who helps and supports a partner with dementia being admitted unexpectedly to  ...  view the full minutes text for item 76