Categories
Healthy Settings Public Mental Health Well-Being

Wellbeing: why it matters to health policy

By the Department of Health (2014)

These documents contain evidence on why wellbeing matters to health throughout someone’s life, and what policy makers can do about it.

Click here to view this document

Categories
Healthy Settings Licensing Planning Well-Being

Sustainable, resilient, healthy people and places: a sustainable development strategy for the NHS, Public Health and Social Care System

By Public Health England (2014)

This strategy aims to show how the health and care system can join forces to adapt for a more sustainable future while potentially saving millions of pounds. It features reducing carbon emissions, protecting natural resources, preparing communities for severe weather events and promoting healthy lifestyles and environments. Organisations are being encouraged to develop a local strategy, measure their success with regular reporting, and evaluate their progress as well as joining up with local Health and Wellbeing Boards.

Click here to view this strategy

Categories
Commissioning Finance Health Promotion Licensing Planning Public Health Advice to NHS Commissioners Well-Being

'Any Town' toolkit

By NHS England (2014)

This toolkit uses high level health system modelling and allows CCGs to map how interventions could improve local health services and close the financial gap. It is an additional guide to help commissioners with their five-year strategic plans, showing how a typical CCG could achieve financial balance over the strategic period up to 2018/19. Using 2013/14 as a baseline, ‘Any town’ uses detailed data including population size and disease prevalence, to predict what a typical health system’s quality and financial baseline may look like in 2018/19.

Click here to view this toolkit

Categories
Care of the Elderly End of Life Care Patient Experience Well-Being

A better life: valuing our later years

By Joseph Rowntree Foundation (2013)

Hundreds of thousands of older people need  a great deal of support. This book presents a  vision of what life can be like, and should be  like, for all of us as we get older. This vision is  not unattainable, it is about being recognised  as individuals, with our own passions,  preferences and interests. It is about having a  network of meaningful relationships, about  being able to get the right support – no  matter where we live. It is about being looked  after by staff who are confident, who are able  to relate to us and who are appreciated for  the work they do. It is about new ideas, but  also simple things that can matter a lot, like  being able to get outdoors. It is about older  people speaking up and driving change.

Click here to view this book

Categories
Cancer Quality Well-Being

Stratified cancer pathways: redesigning services for those living with or beyond cancer

By NHS Improving Quality (2013)

The incidence of cancer in England is increasing, but so are survival rates. By 2030 there are likely to be over 3 million people in England living with or beyond their cancer (National Cancer Survivorship Initiative 2012). As a result, there is growing demand for cancer aftercare services. Routine 1- to 5-year follow-up of cancer survivors within the NHS costs approximately £250 million a year from an annual £6 billion budget.

Click here to view this pathway

Categories
Healthy Settings Licensing Planning Well-Being

Effects of housing improvements on health

By NICE (2013)

Overview: In 2011, 6.8 million (29.8%) of the 22.8 million houses and flats in England did not meet housing standards (English housing survey 2011: homes report). One in ten (10.6%) were in substantial disrepair, 4.6% had damp, a quarter did not meet the ‘decent home’ standard (23.5%), and 15.3% had a serious health and safety hazard.

A large body of evidence suggests an association between poor housing and poor physical and mental health, but the nature of any causal links is complicated by the coexistence of poor housing with other determinants of poor health, such as unemployment and poverty. An analysis by the Health Development Agency (2005), now part of NICE, found review-level evidence that a number of housing interventions, such as housing subsidy programmes for low-income families and improving housing energy efficiency measures, improved health. However, the authors noted a number of methodological issues that might limit the validity of their findings.

Current advice: The Department for Communities and Local Government considers a house or flat ‘decent’ if it:
• poses no serious health and safety hazards, as measured by the Housing Health and Safety Rating System
• is in a reasonable state of repair
• has reasonably modern facilities and services, such as kitchens, bathrooms and boilers
• provides a reasonable degree of thermal comfort.
Social houses and flats that do not meet the Decent Homes Standard should undergo refurbishment to bring them up to or above the standard. Homes in the private rented sector do not have to meet the standard but are required to meet Housing Health and Safety Rating System standards. Private landlords whose properties contain hazards as assessed by the system, in particular landlords with tenants on means tested or disability benefits, can be compelled to improve their properties by local authorities.

New evidence: A Cochrane systematic review by Thomson et al. (2013) sought to establish whether physical improvements to housing affected health and socioeconomic outcomes. The authors searched for studies of the effects of rehousing and any physical change to housing – for example, heating installation and general refurbishment – on physical or mental health, wellbeing or quality of life. Thirty-nine quantitative and qualitative studies were identified, but meta-analysis of the data was not possible because of extreme heterogeneity among the studies.

Assessment of the studies by intervention type suggested that warmth and energy efficiency improvements to housing (19 studies) benefited respiratory health and had some positive effect on general and mental health. The studies of rehousing or retrofitting houses mostly looked at housing-led neighbourhood renewal (14 studies) and had mixed results, with only one small study reporting a significant improvement in general health. The limited evidence available on provision of basic housing in low or middle income countries (3 studies) reported unclear or small health improvements, as did the poor evidence on rehousing from slums (3 studies). Three studies reported lower levels of school absence in children after housing improvements, with 1 additionally reporting a link between housing improvements and a significantly lower number of days off work among adults.

The authors generated a model using the 9 studies with the best available data to analyse the overall effect on health of modern day improvements to housing. These studies suggested that warmth or energy efficiency improvements, which are often part of rehousing or retrofitting projects, can lead to improvements in health in high income countries. Analysis of the qualitative data identified in the search suggested that improvements in thermal comfort and affordable warmth allow residents to use more of their indoor space, which can promote improvements in diet, privacy, and household and family relationships.

Commentary: “This study strengthens the evidence of the link between improvements in housing – particularly in warmth and affordable warmth – and improved physical and mental health. It shows the key role of housing in the dynamic between poverty and poor health, and how improving housing can benefit school attendance and reduce absenteeism from work; for example, through improved respiratory health and improved relationships within the home.

“The significance of this evidence for practice is that primary care health professionals and others with a responsibility for improving health and wellbeing should focus not just on individual lifestyle factors but also on supporting improvements in the environment. Such improvements might include interventions to tackle fuel poverty and to improve the energy efficiency of homes.

“Local authorities becoming responsible for public health, improved integration of health and social care in the care of the elderly, and local authorities taking commissioning responsibility for the public health of children ages 0 to 5 years will potentially support health and social care practitioners in improving the health of their patients, clients and communities.” – Sabrina Fuller, Head of Health Improvement, NHS England

Study sponsorship: Chief Scientist Office, Health Department, Scottish Government; and Nordic Campbell Collaboration (NC2), Norway.

 

Categories
Public Mental Health Well-Being

No health without mental health: mental health dashboard

By Department of Health (December 2013)

The first annual mental health dashboard aims to show progress against the objectives set out in the ‘No health without mental health’ strategy. The dashboard includes information on: mental health services; the physical wellbeing of people with mental health problems; and experiences of stigma and discrimination.

Click here to view this dashboard

Categories
Public Mental Health Social Care Well-Being

Welfare advice for people who use mental health services: developing the business case

By Centre for Mental Health (2013)

This report calls for every mental health service to secure specialist welfare advice to help to support recovery and to intervene early when difficulties emerge. It recommends that health and social care commissioners should ensure that their plans include welfare advice provision and that the government should consider including welfare advice in its outcomes frameworks for the NHS, social care and public health.

Click here to view this report

Categories
Children Healthy Child including NCMP & CDO Public Mental Health Well-Being

Overlooked and forgotten: a review of how well children and young people's mental health is prioritised in the current commissioning landscape

By Children and Young People’s Mental Health Coalition (2013)

This report offers support and recommendations to health and wellbeing boards on how they can prioritise and address children and young people’s mental health. It is based on a review of 145 joint strategic needs assessment (JSNAs) and 142 joint health and wellbeing strategies (JHWSs).

Click here to view this report

 

Categories
CCGs Healthy Settings Public Health Advice to NHS Commissioners Well-Being

Health and wellbeing boards: one year on

By The King’s Fund (2013)

Health and wellbeing boards have made good progress in establishing themselves but face a critical year which could define whether they develop into system leaders or are relegated to a side show according to The King’s Fund second survey of boards. The report, based on a survey of nearly half of the 152 health and wellbeing boards, shows that local authorities have brought strong leadership to establishing the Boards and report good relationships with CCGs. Most have prioritised public health inequalities allaying concerns about the transfer of this remit to local authorities. However, there is little sign they have begun to grapple with immediate issues such as reconfiguration and integrated care with the latter only mentioned by 9 respondents.

Click here to view this briefing