Agenda and minutes

Joint Public Health Board - Monday, 30th May, 2022 11.00 am

Venue: Council Chamber, County Hall, Dorchester, DT1 1XJ. View directions

Contact: David Northover 224175  Email: david.northover@dorsetcouncil.gov.uk

Media

Items
No. Item

130.

Election of Chairman and Appointment of Vice-Chairman

Minutes:

As agreed at the last meeting, the Chairmanship of the Board should be maintained on a yearly basis. This was to provide some continuity in how meetings were run and a practical basis for the Board’s governance. Given that, it was

 

Resolved

That Mohan Iygenar retain the Chairmanship for this meeting and Cllr Peter Wharf be appointed Vice-Chairman.

 

At the next meeting of the Board, governance arrangements for the Chairmanship for the year 2022/23 would be affirmed, with Dorset Council assuming this role. It was intended that hereafter, the Chairmanship would rotate between the two authorities on an annual basis, following appointments made at their respective May annual Council meetings.

131.

Apologies

To receive any apologies for absence.

 

Minutes:

Apologies for absence were received from Cllr Karen Rampton (BCP).

 

An apology for absence was also received from Vivienne Broadhurst.

 

132.

Minutes pdf icon PDF 323 KB

To confirm the minutes of the meeting held on 16 February 2022.

Minutes:

The minutes of the meeting held on 16 February 2022 were confirmed.

133.

Declarations of Interest

To receive any declarations of interest.

Minutes:

No declarations of disclosable pecuniary interests were made at the meeting.

 

134.

Public Participation pdf icon PDF 102 KB

To receive questions or statements on the business of the committee from town and parish councils and members of the public.

Minutes:

There were no statements or questions from Town and Parish Councils nor
public statements or questions at the meeting.

 

It was hoped that the opportunity to participate in meetings would be taken and that Comms and Board members could play their part in encouraging this by the means available to them. It was noted that Comms actively raised the profile of the work of the Board and Public Health Dorset through social media and dedicated websites and this would be maintained. The Chairman, Vice-Chairman and the Director would pursue by what means this might best be achieved.

 

 

135.

Forward Plan pdf icon PDF 190 KB

To consider the Board’s Forward Plan.

Minutes:

The Board’s Forward Plan was received and noted. Whilst it was noted that
monitoring of Public Health Dorset commitments and obligations was
necessary, it was seen to be beneficial that the Business Plan was now a ‘live’
document, able to be modified, as necessary, to reflect changing
objectives as they occurred. What the Plan contained gave the Board a better understanding of the commitments coming up and when these were due to be considered.

136.

Directors Update on Public Health Activities

To receive a presentation from the Director for Public Health.

Minutes:

The Board received a presentation by the Director on public health activities, how these were being applied and what they entailed.

 

The presentation set out what developments were taking place with:-

·        Health Improvement

·        Health Protection and

·        Health Care Public Health

 

together with what influence could be brought to bear in their regard and the progress being made in delivering these services to achieve the necessary outcomes.

 

How Public health Dorset would integrate with the Integrated Care System was explained and what part it would play in being able to achieve successful outcomes.

 

In summary, the presentation covered:-

 

·        Health protection system - in transition following move to Living
with COVID-19

·        Supporting local system to be ready for Integrated Care Systems
• Recruitment to new executive posts for integrated care board
• Leading the development of the first Integrated Care Strategy
• Secured funding for population health management team (March 22)

·        Public health business plan – working with the team to identify
priorities, scope programmes, support recovery and resilience

 

An issue was raised by the Board about the Drugs Board, and its composition, in that it was considered that it should readily reflect the need for public health interventions and treatments in the first instance - given the issues to be addressed - and that, whilst the judicial regime had its part to play, an understanding of why these issues arose and what interventions and treatments could be applied at source, should be the principle driver.

 

Although an assessment would be necessary of what part the Police and Public Health, and other stakeholders should play on this Board - and to what extent - it was hoped that a practical resolution could be found, acknowledged and agreed upon whereby each contribution to how policy was developed was valid and relevant that would benefit all.

 

The Board thanked the Director for the update which provided them with a good insight on what progress was being made and how this was being done.

 

Noted

137.

Finance report pdf icon PDF 257 KB

To consider a report by the Director of Public Health.

Additional documents:

Minutes:

The Board considered the Finance Report on the use of each council’s grant
for public health, including the budget for the shared service Public Health
Dorset, and the other elements of grant used within each council outside of
the public health shared service.


The opening revenue budget for Public Health Dorset in 21/22 was £25.036M.
This is based on a combined Grant Allocation of £34.267M. Current forecast
outturn is £453K underspend, with more detail set out in section 10 of the report and in Appendix 1.

 

As at 31st March 2022 the ring-fenced public health reserve stands at £2.647M, with £1.046M potentially committed to different projects and
programmes.


The Board had agreed 2022/23 contributions from each local authority to
the shared service at their last meeting, including 60% of the 22/23 grant uplift - as set out in Appendix 2 of the report. This gave a 22/23 opening
revenue budget for Public Health Dorset of £25.615M.

 

What proportion each local authority retained of the grant to deliver other
services with public health impact was explained.

 

Each local authority retained a portion of the grant to deliver other
services with public health impact. The public health ring-fenced
conditions applied equally to these elements of the grant and therefore
the Board also monitored the use of the Grant in each council outside of
the shared service. In 2021/22 both councils broke even on their
retained grant. As with the Dorset council audit, the BCP audit showed
reasonable assurance on governance of the retained portions of the
public health grant (appendix 3).


For 2022/23, each council would retain additional funds equivalent to 40%
of the uplift to their public health grant. Plans for the use of the retained
grant in 22/23 were set out in section 13 of the report.


A range of additional grants and income were received by the shared
service in 2021/22 and are planned in 2022/23, with £0.8M additional
income spent in 2021/22, £1.4M of income carried over into 2022/23,
and an additional £0.9M income anticipated into the shared service in
2022/23. This excluded the Contain Outbreak Management Fund for
each council.

How future Covid 19 work, wider health protection work and Integrated Care
Services development were to be addressed was explained, as well as the
reasoning why allocations were made as they were.

 

The Board asked about the underspend, how this had come about and why this was the case. Officers explained that this had predominately arisen given the suspension of face-to-face health checks during the pandemic, but that a digital alternative had been able to be provide to some extent. It was anticipated that those monies would be able to be now spent again as more face-to-face assessments were again possible.

 

Resolved
The Joint Public Health Board is asked to:
1) That the 21/22 out turn of £706k underspend for the shared service and
break-even position for the grant retained within each council be noted.
2) That the 2022/23 opening budget for the shared service be approved.  ...  view the full minutes text for item 137.

138.

Health Improvement Services Performance Monitoring pdf icon PDF 310 KB

To consider a report by the Director of Public Health.

 

Additional documents:

Minutes:

The report provided the Board with a summary of performance for LiveWell Dorset, smoking cessation, weight management services, community providers, health checks and children and young people’s public health service (CYPPHS) performance; any supporting data is in the appendices

 

The Board recognised the positive progress and service improvements despite the challenges from the pandemic and workforce challenges including; digital delivery; delivering responsive services including the arrival of Afghan families under the resettlement programme; developing clinical leadership opportunities aligned to key priorities; scaling CO monitoring at mandated contacts; implementing ASQ 3 for the school age review and further scaling of parental mental health. Public Health Dorset also acknowledged the positive feedback from families and young people who use the Children and Young People’s Public Health Service

 

There continued to be significant participation in Early Help through a skill-mixed team to deliver evidence based interventions and support for more vulnerable families. Despite that being the case, the service had achieved positive progress and impact against the four key priorities of the service; smoking cessation; school readiness; physical activity and emotional and mental health.

The Board were pleased to see the progress being made, whilst understanding the challenges that the services faced in terms of demand, resources and funding. The Vice Chairman had taken the opportunity to visit South Walk House – now leased to the NHS from Dorset Council – in being an key establishment for the delivery of certain public health and clinical services - which complemented the services provided by Dorset County Hospital, GP’s and other medical providers.

 

The Board were generally pleased to see that face-to-face interaction had now resumed where practicable, whilst recognising that digital provision still had a significant and increasing part to play in the delivery of services. Whilst it was hoped that greater face to face meetings could take place, the Director considered that the balance between the two was appropriate in the circumstances.

 

A meeting scheduled on how digital access would develop considered beneficial to both Children’s services Cabinet Members and that they should be invited to this.

 

The Board asked that this report be made available to both Directors and Cabinet members for Children’s Services so that they might have the opportunity to consider and comment on the figures, with a view to any revision deemed necessary being accommodated.

 

The Vice-Chairman also asked that future monitoring reports include a “traffic light” indication of progress, so as to be more readily identifiable.

The Board recognised the need that resourcing of services was essential in their effective delivery and hoped that the ICS would provide some means for this being best achieved to meet future needs.

 

The Director confirmed that, integral to the ICS strategy, was the ability for local authorities, medical providers, and social care to readily collaborate the delivery of services to meet needs and demands and how resources could be best used. This way, challenges and risks could be identified and met with a more integrated approach.

 

The Board were satisfied with  ...  view the full minutes text for item 138.

139.

Health Protection Presentation

To receive a presentation from the Director for Public Health.

 

Minutes:

The Board received a presentation on Health protection and what this entailed, particularly in respect of managing the transition to Living with COVID-19.

 

The presentation covered:-

·        Testing,

·        Contract Tracing,

·        Outbreak support,

·        Surveillance and Epidemiology,

·        Communications & Engagement,

·        Behavioural Insights,

·        Vaccination programme (remit of Vaccination delivery Board), and

·        Contain Outbreak Management Fund (COMF) oversight

 

The emphasis being placed on what was being done and how this was being achieved and communicated was of importance and, whilst the UKHSA lead on this, the Comms section played an essential role in doing this also. Members agreed that engagement with key stakeholders was critical in ensuing the progress made was maintained - with emphasis being placed on schools and care homes being more aligned with councils in contributing to sharing access to information.

 

Moreover, the Covid-19 vaccination was just one of 32 vaccination programmes that were administered by health authorities and it was envisaged that this one would now sit within that suite and managed accordingly.

 

The Bord recognised that although what had been achieved in managing the Covid pandemic was seen as largely successful and had been delivered by some ingenious means, lessons had been learnt as to how to have better managed the pandemic which could now be applied to any future such situations which might arise - with the processes and technological data available providing invaluable in assisting this. Moreover the newly created ICS would have an essential role to play in how the delivery of interventions were managed efficiently to ensure that there was a natural cohesion between the delivery of health and social care outcomes.

 

Whilst the report provided the Board with a detailed analysis of what the findings were, and how these were being interpreted the vice chairman asked that a summarised account could well be more beneficial in future so as to ensure the most important and key aspects could be readily understood and received. Officers appreciated this advice.

 

The Board welcomed the progress made and understood what was being done and the reasons for this and endorsed how this was being achieved.

 

Noted

 

 

 

 



 

140.

Business Plan pdf icon PDF 151 KB

To consider a report by the Director of Public Health.

 

Additional documents:

Minutes:

The Board were being asked to consider and agree the Public Health Dorset business plan and priority work programmes for 2022-23 and to consider developing the forward plan for the board based on the work
programmes included in Appendix B.


Significant work had recently taken place to clarify the role and purpose of Public Health Dorset, especially given the imminent changes with the formal launch of integrated care systems. In addition, the plan identified the top 10 work programmes following a prioritisation exercise, which would help align capacity and resources to delivery over the ensuing year.
Appendix A contains the main report, showing how we are organising our
work. Appendix B set out a high-level delivery timeline with more detail about
some of the programmes and outputs that would need to be delivered in this
financial year.

The Business Plan identified what Public Health Dorset did, how it did it what was to be achieved and what was needed to do this. The context was set as to what the obligations were: health improvement, health protection; Healthcare public health; and healthy places - and by what means these would be achieved: the aims, the mission, the vision and the objectives.

 

The Board considered there to be a need for this Plan to be widely disseminated so that not only were the public aware of what was being done, but so as to engage directly other public bodies – though the Dorset Association of Parish and Town Councils – so this could readily be understood and publicised what these obligations were and so as to raise their profile as could be best achieved. On that basis the Board considered that the Plan should be given consideration when the DAPTC next had a briefing session with PHD/DC/BCP. Comms could play a significant part in facilitating this.

 

The Board elected members also recognised tht they had a role to play in promoting the business plan as they might.

 

The Board acknowledged the progress made in developing the business plan which they considered would achieve all that was necessary in delivering the desired outcomes for public health in Dorset, with the priorities identified being correct. On that basis they endorsed it. However, they understood that as it was a working document, it was flexible enough to be adapted, as necessary.

 

Resolved
1) That the Public Health Dorset business plan and priority work
programmes for 2022-23 be agreed.
2) That the forward plan for the board based on the work programmes included in Appendix B be developed accordingly.

Reasons for Decisions

Recovery from the pandemic and the move to Living with COVID-19 has now allowed the public health team to take stock and consider priorities for the coming year. Previous attempts at finalising the business plan were hampered by a high degree of uncertainty, plus ongoing responsibilities for responding to COVID-19. Publishing the high-level plan, and an outline timeline showing key deliverables for our work for 2022-23 is an important step in delivering an effective  ...  view the full minutes text for item 140.

141.

Urgent items

To consider any items of business which the Chairman has had prior notification and considers to be urgent pursuant to section 100B (4) b) of the Local Government Act 1972. The reason for the urgency shall be recorded in the minutes.

 

Minutes:

There were no urgent items for consideration.  

142.

Dates of Future meetings

To determine – and confirm – the dates of future meetings of the Board:-

 

·        July 2022 – date and venue to be determined

·        1 December 2022 – venue to be determined

·        16 February 2023 – venue to be determined

 

 

Minutes:

The Board noted the dates of future meetings:-
· July 2022 – to be postponed until early September - date and venue to be determined
· 1 December 2022 – venue to be determined
· 16 February 2023 – venue to be determined