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Closer working may herald joint health and social services targets

Posted: 05 February 2004 | Subscribe Online


Social workers and health professionals could be working towards joint targets in the future as the government's drive to integrate services gathers pace.

A performance development group has been set up within the Department of Health to look at how to implement joint performance indicators for services where health and social care professionals already work closely together.

Health and social care workers in community mental health teams, for example, often work closely together but have separate targets.
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The work was in its early stages but could begin to be rolled out across services within two years, said a DoH spokesperson. The group will be headed by the DoH's health and social care joint unit policy manager Paul Brittain.

There have also been calls for more multi-disciplinary working across children's services from the NHS Confederation and children's charity the National Children's Bureau.

Joint targets across health, social care and education were needed to reflect the growing emphasis on collaborative working in children's services outlined in the green paper Every Child Matters, stated the NHS Confederation, which is the membership body for NHS organisations.

Joint performance indicators based around children's well-being and protection would improve services more than imposing a separate target on already "overloaded" NHS hospital trusts, the NHS Confederation said.
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Paul Ennals, chief executive of the NCB, said primary care trusts needed to work more closely with social services departments in planning children and family services and that joint targets were crucial to that.

"There could be joint indicators based around the five broad outcomes of the green paper," added Ennals, who is also member of the DoH's children's taskforce.

Meanwhile, the NHS Confeder-ation is to extend membership to voluntary and private sector providers of NHS and social services, reflecting their growing involvement in service delivery.


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