Witnesses:
Liz
Bruce – Joint Executive Director for Adult Social Care and
Integrated Commissioning (Surrey County Council and Surrey
Heartlands ICS)
Ben Hill – Director of
Urgent Care (Surrey Heartlands ICS)
Dr Charlotte Canniff
– Joint Chief Medical Officer (Surrey Heartlands
ICS)
Jo Hunter –
Deputy Director of Recovery (Surrey Heartlands ICS)
Nikki Mallinder –
Director of Primary Care (Surrey Heartlands ICS)
Dr Pramit Patel – Primary
Care Network Leader (Surrey Heartlands ICS)
Dr Helen Rostill
– Deputy Chief Executive and Director of Therapies (Surrey
and Borders Partnership)
Daryl Gasson –
Executive Place Managing Director (NHS Frimley)
Stephen Dunn –
Director of System Delivery and Place (NHS Frimley)
Mark Eley –
Deputy Director of Operations (South East Coast Ambulance Service
NHS Foundation Trust)
Helen Wilshaw-Roberts
– Strategic Partnerships Manager (South East Coast Ambulance
Service NHS Foundation Trust)
Maria Millwood –
Non-Executive Director (Healthwatch Surrey)
Key
points raised during the discussion:
- Witnesses from Surrey
Heartlands and the South East Coast Ambulance Service (SECAmb)
presented slides (Annex 1). Witnesses from NHS Frimley also
presented slides (Annex 2).
- A Member asked about
the implications of the ICS restructuring on preparations for
winter this year (2022). The Joint Chief Medical Officer
(Heartlands) explained that there should be limited implications if
all partners worked together to create the capacity required. The
Director of System Delivery and Place (Frimley) added that NHS
Frimley were developing a five-year strategy which involved
significant stakeholder engagement during the summer regarding
working together on collective priorities.
- A Member queried the
measures in place to support the mental health of staff during a
period of increased pressure on the system. The Deputy Chief
Executive of Surrey and Borders Partnership (SABP) explained that
the system approach in place was the wellbeing hub which all staff
could access. Individual organisations were now considering the
cost-of-living crisis and how to support staff through that. SABP
had also been linking in with other organisations to support their
employee assistance schemes.
- In response to a
question on the fragility of the workforce, the Deputy Director of
Operations (SECAmb) explained that they were aiming to reach 2,555
frontline staff by March 2023. SECAmb currently had approximately
2,150 frontline staff, with 150 in training. There had been a small
reduction in overtime and the Deputy Director explained that it was
about being able to achieve balance and not exhausting staff,
whilst still offering the opportunity to earn extra money. Thus,
the overtime hours made available were reviewed weekly. New avenues
for recruitment had been developed and there had been international
recruitment events targeting trained staff.
- A Member queried
whether the countries SECAmb were recruiting trained staff from
were also short of staff. The Deputy Director of Operations
(SECAmb) explained that they were recruiting from countries where
they trained more staff than they were able to recruit. The Member
asked at what stage SECAmb would be fully staffed. The Deputy
Director responded by this time next year (October 2023), the
resources were planned to reach the target number of
...
view the full minutes text for item 32