“NHS must be more responsive to the needs and wishes of the public”, says guide

Broadcasting tower

Time and time again, research has shown that involving patients and carers in the treatment decision-making process is beneficial to all involved as it improves compliance, patient satisfaction and experience, and ultimately reduces cost for the service as a whole. So, it is crucial that commissioners take this into account when designing and procuring services.

Person listening to megaphone

This guide describes how NHS commissioners can involve the general public

Listening to the public

This guide describes how NHS commissioners can involve the general public, thus meeting the following summarised requirements of the Health and Social Care Act:

  • Individual participation – commissioners need to make sure individuals have all the support they need to allow them to participate in decisions made about their treatments.
  • Representation – making sure that at least two people sit on each Clinical Commissioning Group.
  • Feedback – at each stage of the commissioning cycle, patient and carer feedback should be obtained and acted upon. Furthermore, commissioners should take on board feedback from local Healthwatch.
  • Redesign – when redesigning services, commissioners should provide evidence of how patients and cars have been involved and how their ideas have been implemented.
  • Transparency – commissioners should publicly record whenever a ‘patient and public voice’ activity has been carried out.
Children playing with swings

This guide explores each of these requirements and details the resources that are being developed to support commissioners

Programmes and activities

This guide explores each of these requirements and details the resources that are being developed to support commissioners, such as:

  • an online health literacy programme.
  • ‘Patients in control’, a programme to support the delivery of patient-centred care.
  • ‘People Bank’, an initiative which allows individuals and organist ions to register their interest in participation.

Throughout the guide, there are useful links for commissioners including:

  • an overview of the legal duties for NHS commissioners
  • an overview of related policy frameworks
  • glossary of terms
Cogs with the words engage, join, participate, unite, involve,

Involving patients and carers in the treatment decision-making process is beneficial to all involved

Commentary

This guide is important because it demonstrates that there is a lot of practical support available to help commissioners meet the patient-centred requirements of the Act. In your organisation, are you aware of all the new programmes described in this guide? How will you become involved with them? Are you doing something different to involve the general public, and can this be shared with other commissioners? As the NHS Constitution says, “The NHS belongs to the people“, and it is important for commissioners to bear this in mind as they carry out their duties.

Link

NHS England. Transforming participation in health and care. September 2013

Related links

NHS Constitution

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Caroline De Brún

Caroline De Brún

Caroline has been a medical librarian in a variety of NHS and academic roles since 1999, working in academic, primary and secondary care settings, service improvement, knowledge management, and on several high profile national projects. She has a PhD in Computing and currently develops resources to support evidence-based cost and quality, including QIPP @lert, a blog highlighting key reports from health care and other sectors related to service improvement and QIPP (Quality, Innovation, Productivity, Prevention). She also delivers training and resources to support evidence identification and appraisal for cost, quality, service improvement, and leadership. She is co-author of the Searching Skills Toolkit, which aims to support health professionals' searching for best quality clinical and non-clinical evidence. Her research interests are health management, commissioning, public health, consumer health information literacy, and knowledge management. She currently works as a Knowledge and Evidence Specialist for Public Health England, and works on the Commissioning Elf in her spare time.

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