health commissioning masterclass various locations april-may 2015 emma baylin
TRANSCRIPT
Health Commissioning Masterclass
Various locationsApril-May 2015
Emma Baylin
EXERCISE
• Introductions
•What is your experience with commissioning /
tendering?
•What have been the biggest challenges?
•What are you hoping to get out of the day?
By the end of the day you will :
• Know more about the commissioning landscape and where tender opportunities might be available
• Be more aware of how to use evidence and data to build a case for our work
• Better understand how to be 'tender-ready' (e.g. in terms of systems and paperwork)
• Feel more able to create/ respond to opportunities for partnership working and consortia development
• Know more about other sectors’ drivers, motivations and culture
Secretary of State for Health and Department of Health
Nati
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Sub
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Loca
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NHS England (the Commissioning Board)Public Health
England
Care Quality Commission
Healthwatch England
Local authorities-• Director of Public
Health• Social services
Clinical commissioning groups (may be more than one per local authority)
Health and wellbeing boards• JSNA• JHWS• Commissioning plans
Area teams of NHS England
15 Public Health Centres (Leeds)
Local Healthwatch
4 regional commissioning sectors (NHS North)
Overview & scrutiny
Commissioning support Units
Clinical senates and networks
Providers
Policy Context
•Open Public Services •Personalisation and choice •Changing funding environment and structures •New commissioners•New investors•Outcomes focus• Integrated commissioning•New mechanisms (e.g. Payment by Results) •Localism
5 Year Forward View• Focus on "stronger partnerships with charitable and voluntary sector organisations" and an
understanding of the diverse roles the sector can play in supporting healthy people and healthy communities.
• Commitment to developing a shorter national alternative to the NHS standard contract, to grant funding and to multiyear funding.
• Recognition of the value of carers, volunteers and the wider VCS- to support people gain more control of their own care, and the commitment to work more closely with the VCS.
• Drive for more integrated care, between physical and mental health, between health and social care and between GPs and hospitals, between generalists and specialists.
• NHS England is in agreement with the findings from Due North, that there's a need for stronger public health-related powers for local government- help communities take more control over their wellbeing.
• Starting to break out of silo working and partner with DWP on work based health
Evidence into Action
• Early Intervention and prevention• Stronger partnership approach• Addressing all wider determinants of health • Mental and physical health are equally important to
wellbeing• Reduce health inequality and ensure everyone is able
to benefit• The importance of place and the strength of building
on all of a community’s assets
Voluntary Sector Strategic Review• Co-design in commissioning• Social value embedded in commissioning• The building of local VCSE infrastructure• Closer collaboration between statutory bodies &
grant giving trusts.• More support to VCSE organisations in
demonstrating impact (against suitable metrics) • Longer term funding • A focus on reducing inequalities and improving the
experience of the most disadvantaged• A simplified grants programme based on a smaller
set of aims
EXERCISE – Fact or Fiction?
• Commissioning is a separate process to providing grants
• A grant is a lump sum of money that is essentially a gift. It does not have a legally binding status
• Public bodies are allowed to give priority to local providers
• Methods for monitoring performance & QA schemes are required in order to pre qualify for submitting a tender
Answers• Commissioning is an overarching process, which includes
needs analysis, service design, procurement, delivery and evaluation. If needs best met through providing a grant, then this is what will be offered
• The funder can set out terms & conditions but a grant does not give rise to a legal partnership. With a contract the relationship is defined by contractual law
• This would go against EU treaty principles that all contracts must adhere to. Although difficult for LA to specify need for local knowledge, VCSE’s may be able to best demonstrate in-depth kowledge of user needs as part of their added value.
• The invitation to Tender doc will set out what is required. In majority of cases, performance monitoring, QA systems will be required along with other polices, references, & audited accounts (3yrs)
• Tenders will always be evaluated according to who can offer the cheapest price
• The commissioning agency has the right to insist on the transfer of existing staff from the current service provider to the that of the successful bidder
• Charities are allowed to apply for funding to deliver services outside of their objects and powers
• Voluntary Sector can influence the commissioning process
• Under EU rules, contracts can be awarded either on lowest price or most economically advantageous. This can take into account price, environmental and social criteria. Evaluation criteria & weightings must be set out clearly in the Invitation to Tender and used throughout tender evaluation
• TUPE – legislation protecting the rights of employees currently delivering service. If TUPE is applied to a contract, them staff will be transferred across with costing impacts. You will need to consider pension & redundancy arrangements.
• It can be tempting to follow a funding opportunity but the decision should always be governed by orgs mission, objects & powers. Changing a charity’s objectives is a legal process. Beware of mission drift!
• VCS can influence by feeding in evidence about needs of communities & helping to shape service design. Dependant on establishing good relationship with funder (LA / CCG)
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Challenging some assumptions…Procurement and Contracting are not the same as commissioning
• Procurement is the process of acquiring goods, works or services from (usually external) providers / suppliers and managing these through to the end of contract.
• Contracting is the process of negotiating and agreeing the terms of a contract for services, and on-going management of the contract including payment and monitoring.
• These two elements or tools amongst others, form part of the commissioning cycle. They do not constitute all elements of the cycle.
Commissioning Cycle
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Exercise• Where within the commissioning cycle does the VCS
have a role?
• Where are you currently engaged?
• What are the barriers?
BREAK
Data Sources
http://datagateway.phe.org.uk/index.html
http://www.phoutcomes.info/
http://healthierlives.phe.org.uk/topic/mortality
http://healthierlives.phe.org.uk/
http://www.apho.org.uk/default.aspx?QN=P_HEALTH_PROFILES
http://www.england.nhs.uk/resources/resources-for-ccgs/comm-for-value
Commissioning for Value
•To identify good practice using the best available evidence
•To help resolve uncertainty for the public, patients and professionals
•To reduce variation in the availability and quality of practice and care
The role of NICE
Evidence Guidance Quality
Standards
A NICE quality standard is a concise set of statements designed to drive and measure priority quality improvements.
A set of systematically developed recommendations to guide decisions for a particular area of care or health issue
Research studies - experimental and observational, quantitative and qualitative, process evaluations, descriptions of experience, case studies
NICE Guidance and Quality Standards
NICE Quality Standards
•Define high-quality, cost-effective care across a disease, condition or clinical area
•Presented as a set of specific, concise statements that:• act as markers of high-quality, cost-effective
patient care;• are derived from the best available evidence;
and• are produced collaboratively with the NHS and
social care, along with their partners and service users.
“As a commissioner, I can use NICE quality standards to commission the best quality, most cost-effective care, and to support more integrated health and social care services in
my area.”
“As a provider of care services, I can use NICE QS to ensure and demonstrate that I provide high quality care, based on the best available evidence. They help me in my auditing to improve the quality of services I provide, and support me in discussions I have with commissioners.”
“As a practitioner working in social care they: give me reassurance that the care and support I provide is based on the best available evidence; help me with practical support in my decision-making; and keep me up to date."
“As a provider of care services, I can use NICE quality standards to ensure and demonstrate that I provide high quality care, based on the best available evidence. They help me in my auditing to improve the quality of services I provide, and support me in discussions I have with commissioners.”
"As a user of care services, they support me in my choices about who provides care for me, and in knowing what to expect from a good quality care service."
Topic Guidance QS
Health and wellbeing of looked after children Published Published
Supporting people to live well with dementia Published Published
Autism in children and adults Published Published
Mental wellbeing of older people in care homes Published Published
Managing medicines in care homes Published Published
Challenging behaviour in people with learning disability May 2015 2015/16
Home care July 2015 2016/17
Older people with multiple long-term conditions Sept 2015 2016/17
Children’s attachment Oct 2015 2016/17
Transition between health and social care Nov 2015 2016/17
Transition from children’s to adults’ services Mar 2016 2017/18
Child abuse and neglect May 2016 2017/18
Mental health problems in people with learning disability Oct 2016 2017/18
NICE Quality Standards and guidelines for social care
•Concise information on cost-effective and evidence-based solutions for local government, public health and, from April 2014, social care
•For local authorities and their partner organisations in the health and voluntary sectors, in particular those involved in Health and Wellbeing Boards
•Demonstrate potential role of NICE guidance as the basis of solutions to public health issues and problems at a local level
•Derived from existing guidance
•Web-based format with links to other sources of information – but also printable
www.nice.org.uk/lgb
• Introduction
• Key messages
• What can local authorities achieve
• What is effective
• Examples of good practice
• Developing an action plan
• Costs and savings
• Background to recommendations
• Support
• Other useful resources
Local Government Briefings
.
• Web based guide to help health and social care organisations use NICE guidance & quality standards to achieve a high quality of care in local settings
• Suggests what an organisation can put in place, and what staff can do, to use NICE guidance & quality standards to improve outcomes and get the best value for money
• Includes helpful tips, links to other resources and shared learning examples of how other people have used NICE guidance and quality standards
Who is it for?
This guide is for anyone who is …• a commissioner or provider of health
or social care• responsible for ensuring that
evidence-based guidance is put into practice by their organisation
• involved in quality improvement• involved in planning, delivering and
scrutinising care services• leading on implementing a specific
piece of guidance• using a quality standard to improve
quality across a team or service.
NICE Into Practice Guide
Recommended examples from the QIPP collection
Advice and resources to help you:•establish how services/local pathways compare to NICE quality standards•locally prioritise quality improvement•support changes in services that fall short of the NICE quality standard•develop an action plan (or commissioning plan)•assess cost & service impact, and develop a business case•measure quality improvement•evaluate, provide assurance and share success
If you want to ensure that services you provide or commission are safe, effective, good value for money and striving for continuous quality improvement then this guide is a good starting point.
www.nice.org.uk/intopracticeguide
NICE Into Practice Guide
Would you like to understand how other people implement NICE guidance or use NICE quality standards in practice? Are you willing to share your own experience with others?
The NICE Shared Learning Database - part of the Local Practice Collection - contains hundreds of searchable examples covering a wide range of topics.
To search for examples or to make a submission, see the NICE Local Practice Collection at www.nice.org.uk/sharedlearning
NICE is particularly keen to hear your experience of using quality standards to improve the commissioning and/or delivery of high quality care.
NICE Shared Learning
EXERCISE
How would you use the data outlined to help your conversations with commissioners or during the tendering process?
i.PHEii.C4Viii.NICE
LUNCH
Three tips on how to influence commissioners (who I always think of as the customer, as they have the money!):Chriss Dabbs Unlimited Potential
• Listen – don’t talk! It is what the commissioner is buying that is important (not what you are selling). It is about what the commissioner wants, making life easier for commissioner and the commissioner’s perceived needs. Key questions for the commissioner: What is the main problem
you want to solve? How might we help you? [And getting them to the point when they ask themselves, “Why would we not use them?” – rather than “Why would we use them?”]
• Make your case in terms, formats and language that are most comfortable for the commissioner.
• Always offer more than the commissioner is asking for – added value, better outcomes, etc.
EXERCISE
•What makes a good sales pitch?
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Good selling is about:
• Building the right relationships• Being clear about what differentiates you/your
services• Adding value by the way you engage• Being able to evidence your capabilities• Listening and being responsive to your customer• Reaching mutual agreement • WIN-WIN-WIN
Partnership working and Consortia
Why consortia?
Barriers Facing Small Organisations
•The procurement process (long, complex, expensive)
•Unable to find out about opportunities •Contracts are too big •Pre-qualification •Cashflow
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Consortia – overcoming barriers
•Scale•Development of specialist tendering and contract
management infrastructure•Greater bargaining power•Adding value at the frontline•Building capacity
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Different Contracting Forms
•Provider•Managing Agent•Managing Provider• ‘Super Provider’• Joint venture
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ProviderCommissioner
Provider Provision of Services
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Commissioner
Managing Agent
Sub-contractors Provision of Services
Managing Agent
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Managing Provider
Commissioner
Managing Provider Provision of Services
Sub-contractors Provision of Services
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Managing Agent/ProviderContract top slice
Percentage of contract to pay formanagement of sub-contractors:
• Performance• Quality• Financial management
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‘Super Provider’
Provider Provider
Provider Provider
Provider Provider
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Super-provider:How does it work?
• Incorporation to form new legal entity•Providers become members of this company•Hub and spokes operating model
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Hub & Spokes operating model
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Ownership & Management Structure
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Exercise
•What are challenges in developing consortia?
•What key points must you keep in mind?
•What extra barriers / benefits come from partnerships with i) VCS ii) Public Sector iii) Private sector
Key stages of collaboration
• 1. IdentifyThink carefully whether collaborative working is appropriate for your organisation. Be clear about your own goals and understand your strategic environment. This will help you in identifying and approaching your partners.
• 2. PlanWork closely with your partners to develop your collaboration. Draw up shared aims, structures and agreements and develop positive relationships.
• 3. ImplementManage the collaboration effectively with a strong action plan and communications plan. Prepare yourself for any possible frustrating times ahead by building in effective problem solving and understanding some of the key challenges that may arise.
• 4. ReviewReview your collaborative experience and use what you've learned to prepare a forward strategy.
To bid or not to bid?
Show of hands
Tender Strategy
• Just interested or all in?•Partner up?•Decide who’s in charge?•Check points•Plan for procurement outcomes (good or bad)•Be brave
57 – Commercial Masterclass, Day One
Mission-Money Matrix
majority activity
stay out! proceed with caution
prime target
(love it here)
on mission
off missionmore moneyless money
58 – Commercial Masterclass, Day One
To bid or not to bid?
•Mission•Risk Management•Capacity•Collaboration•Financial• Legal
Deciding on a procurement
procedure
Advertising the contract Prequalification
Inviting tenders
Evaluating Tenders
Awarding the
Contract
End of the
Contract
Monitoring
Key Stages in a typical procurement process
Pre-qualification questionnaire• basic details of your organisation• financial information• business activities• references from previous clients• insurance details• details of any recognised quality management certificates• copies of your health and safety, equal opportunities and
environmental management policies• professional and business standing of the organisation and
its directors/trustees, for example, details of any criminal records or bankruptcies
• examples of relevant experience • first indications of how you propose to deliver the service.
Completing your tender
Exercise
•2 points that you need to consider before completing a tender application
•2 points to keep in mind while completing a tender application
•1 ‘Top Tip’
Benefits and Value for Money
•Core▫You must deliver the core specification.▫Demonstrate how, and your experience of delivery.▫You must do this at a competitive rate.
•Winning ▫What is the additionality you can offer?▫What can you identify for free?
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The 10 Steps
Commitment, passion, drive
Understand the changing landscape
Know your business – why us?
Introduction to Tender Documents
Create a ‘Tender’ Desk
Policies and Standards
Presenting Professional
tenders
Responding to Technical &
Quality questions
Do your research – who buys what?
Foster good relations to
influence commissioners
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7 8 9
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Tender Ready!!
Where to look• Public Tenders www.publictenders.net• Contracts Finder www.gov.uk/contracts-finder• Blue Light www.bluelight.gov.uk• Funding Central www.fundingcentral.org.uk
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