Going round in circles? Joint working between primary health and social care

Author:

Coleman Anna,Glendinning Caroline

Abstract

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to examine research evidence on collaboration between primary and adult social care in strategic, rather than operational, activities at two different time points, following large-scale changes within the health and social care environments; and discuss the prospects for the future. Design/methodology/approach – This paper reports evidence from two substantial longitudinal studies (Dowling and Glendinning, 2003; Checkland et al., 2012) which followed the development of Primary Care Groups and Trusts (PCG/Ts) and Clinical Commissioning Groups (CCGs), respectively. Each used a combination of national surveys and local in-depth case studies to trace the early development of new structures and ways of working following major changes in the NHS and local government. Findings – PCG/Ts had limited success in collaborating with adult social care partners. Health and Well-being Boards offer a new overarching organisational framework for collaborative strategic working between GP-led CCGs and adult social care services. Mandated joint strategic needs assessments also provide a shared framework within which commissioning decisions by both CCGs and social services are made. However, there remains evidence of long-standing barriers, particularly differences in geographic boundaries and in organisational and professional cultures. Research limitations/implications – Evidence from both studies is based on the early years of the respective new organisations; later evidence may have yielded a different picture. Originality/value – This is the first paper reflecting on developments in strategic relations between primary and social care from researchers involved with two longitudinal investigations of the early development of PCG/Ts (1999-2002) and CCGs (2011-ongoing).

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

Public Administration,Sociology and Political Science,Health (social science)

Reference31 articles.

1. Baggott, R. (2004), Health and Health Care in Britain , 3rd ed., Palgrave McMillan, Basingstoke.

2. Checkland, K. , Coleman, A. , Segar, J. , McDermott, I. , Miller, R. , Wallace, A. , Petsoulas, C. , Peckham, S. and Harrison, S. (2012), “Exploring the early workings and impact of emerging clinical commissioning groups”, Final report, PRUComm, University of Manchester, Manchester.

3. Coleman, A. (2014), “Health and wellbeing boards: a new type of partnership”, INLOGOV, Birmingham University, available at: http://inlogov.wordpress.com/2014/01/28/health-and-wellbeing-boards/ (accessed 5 January 2015).

4. Coleman, A. and Rummery, K. (2003), “Social service representation in primary care groups and trusts”, Journal of Interprofessional Care , Vol. 17 No. 3, pp. 273-280.

5. Coleman, A. , Checkland, K. , Segar, J. , McDermott, I. , Harrison, S. and Peckham, S. (2014), “Joining it up?”, Health and Wellbeing in the New English National Health Service Organisation: Early Evidence from Clinical Commissioning Groups and Shadow Health and Wellbeing Boards Local Government Studies , Vol. 40 No. 4, pp. 560-580.

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