Commitment for carers

Carers need to be valued

Ensuring that the 5.4 million people in England who care for a friend or family member are valued, recognised and supported, is enshrined in the Department of Health’s mandate to the NHS Commissioning Board (now NHS England). One key objective is particularly relevant – “to ensure the NHS becomes dramatically better at involving patients and their carers, and empowering them to manage and make decisions about their own care and treatment.”

To help achieve this, NHS England and NHS Improving Quality are working to develop a series of ‘commitments for action’ that NHS England will take forward. These will be agreed at a workshop in December, Commitment to Carers, which will bring together an invited group of carers and care representatives, healthcare professionals, commissioners, senior clinical managers, and allied health professionals.

The first step in this process is a listening exercise, to find out what carers need and want from the NHS.

The exercise will look to engage with carers of every age, and from every aspect of society. In order to reach as many people as possible and ensure a streamlined mechanism to respond, the listening exercise will take place online, utilising social media, existing networks and forums, and direct email.

Over the next five weeks, we will be asking a series of questions, and inviting carers to join the conversation, sharing thoughts, comments, and experiences. What carers tell us will determine the ‘commitments for action’ that we will take forward in order to ensure that carers are recognised, valued and supported.

We will ask one question (or set of questions) each week:

    How can the health service help you feel recognised, valued and included when caring for someone?

    How did health staff help signpost you to relevant information and advice when you first started caring for someone, and at key stages and transition points of your caring role?

    How can health services best tailor support for you and your family particularly when caring for someone?

    How have health services or professionals helped you look after your own physical health and emotional well-being particularly in your role as a carer?

The questions will be posted on the following websites:

Carers UK

Carers Trust

National Family Carer Network

AFIYA Trust

TLAP

MS Society

Marie Curie

Parkinsons UK

Independent Age

Macmillan

Rethink mental illness

Stroke association

Children’s Society

Mencap

Alzheimer’s Society

The Association of Directors of Adult Social Services (ADASS)

In Control / Partners in Policymaking

Carers Direct

Age UK

National Voices

We will also be using Twitter to gather feedback, inviting people to join the conversation using the hashtag #NHSThinkCarer. Questions will be posted each week on the NHS IQ twitter feed (@NHSIQ), and we will ask the above organisations to re-tweet to their followers.

You can also complete our questionnaire, or send your views to enquiries@nhsiq.nhs.uk

After the workshop, we will publish the commitments for action, and will also work to spread them throughout the health and social care system and other government departments, to ensure carer’s needs and wants are prioritised at every level.

– See more at: http://www.nhsiq.nhs.uk/improvement-programmes

Survey: http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/Commitment_For_Carers

 

Ensuring that the 5.4 million people in England who care for a friend or family member are valued, recognised and supported, is enshrined in the Department of Health’s mandate to the NHS Commissioning Board (now NHS England). One key objective is particularly relevant – “to ensure the NHS becomes dramatically better at involving patients and their carers, and empowering them to manage and make decisions about their own care and treatment.”

To help achieve this, NHS England and NHS Improving Quality are working to develop a series of ‘commitments for action’ that NHS England will take forward. These will be agreed at a workshop in December, Commitment to Carers, which will bring together an invited group of carers and care representatives, healthcare professionals, commissioners, senior clinical managers, and allied health professionals.

The first step in this process is a listening exercise, to find out what carers need and want from the NHS.

The exercise will look to engage with carers of every age, and from every aspect of society. In order to reach as many people as possible and ensure a streamlined mechanism to respond, the listening exercise will take place online, utilising social media, existing networks and forums, and direct email.

Over the next five weeks, we will be asking a series of questions, and inviting carers to join the conversation, sharing thoughts, comments, and experiences. What carers tell us will determine the ‘commitments for action’ that we will take forward in order to ensure that carers are recognised, valued and supported.

We will ask one question (or set of questions) each week:

  • How can the health service help you feel recognised, valued and included when caring for someone?
  • How did health staff help signpost you to relevant information and advice when you first started caring for someone, and at key stages and transition points of your caring role?
  • How can health services best tailor support for you and your family particularly when caring for someone?
  • How have health services or professionals helped you look after your own physical health and emotional well-being particularly in your role as a carer?

The questions will be posted on the following websites:

Carers UK
Carers Trust
National Family Carer Network
AFIYA Trust
TLAP
MS Society
Marie Curie
Parkinsons UK
Independent Age
Macmillan
Rethink mental illness
Stroke association
Children’s Society
Mencap
Alzheimer’s Society
The Association of Directors of Adult Social Services (ADASS)
In Control / Partners in Policymaking
Carers Direct
Age UK
National Voices

We will also be using Twitter to gather feedback, inviting people to join the conversation using the hashtag #NHSThinkCarer. Questions will be posted each week on the NHS IQ twitter feed (@NHSIQ), and we will ask the above organisations to re-tweet to their followers.

You can also complete our questionnaire, or send your views to enquiries@nhsiq.nhs.uk

After the workshop, we will publish the commitments for action, and will also work to spread them throughout the health and social care system and other government departments, to ensure carer’s needs and wants are prioritised at every level.

– See more at: http://www.nhsiq.nhs.uk/improvement-programmes/experience-of-care/commitment-for-carers.aspx#sthash.yPR0xAuJ.dpuf