health equity Archives - Here https://hereweare.org.uk/blog/tag/health-equity/ Rated Outstanding by the CQC Tue, 29 Oct 2024 08:47:36 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.5 https://hereweare.org.uk/app/uploads/2024/03/cropped-Here_favicon-32x32.png health equity Archives - Here https://hereweare.org.uk/blog/tag/health-equity/ 32 32 World Stroke Day 2024: Alasdair’s story of recovery https://hereweare.org.uk/blog/world-stroke-day-2024/ https://hereweare.org.uk/blog/world-stroke-day-2024/#respond Tue, 29 Oct 2024 07:00:20 +0000 https://hereweare.org.uk/?p=15581 This World Stroke Day we wanted to share Alasdair’s story. In this video stroke survivor Alasdair and his wife Emma talk about their experience of what it was like to be invited to be a part of the Stroke Health and Wellbeing Service, and the difference this support had on Alasdair’s recovery to date.

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World Stroke Day 2024: Alasdair’s story of recovery

Graphic rub out of an older man wearing glasses, talking to camera about his story as a stroke survivor

World Stroke Day 2024

 

This World Stroke Day we wanted to share Alasdair’s story. In this video stroke survivor Alasdair and his wife Emma talk about their experience of what it was like to be invited to be a part of the Stroke Health and Wellbeing Service, and the difference this support has had on Alasdair’s recovery to date.

Delivering care to stroke survivors

The Stroke Health and Wellbeing Service was a pilot project set up as part of the National Stroke Service Model to test new, innovative ways of delivering care to stroke survivors. Working in partnership with NHS Sussex, Sussex Community NHS Foundation Trust, University Hospitals Sussex NHS Foundation Trust, NHS England, Stroke Association, Headway Sussex, Kent Surrey Sussex Academic Health Science Network.

You can learn more about the project on our service page – Stroke Care Pathway Design – Here

The project has now come to an end, but over the coming months we will be sharing more about this transformative pilot and its impact, showing what can be achieved through building strong, collaborative partnerships across the system, the role of Health Builders and the importance of including people with lived experience as a part of service design.

In the video above you’ll hear Alasdair talk about how much of an inspiration Shreddie, one of our Lead Health Builders was to him and his recovery. You can learn about Shreddie’s story in our case study – Health Builders, improving stroke services – Here

Photo of woman outside in a forest, wearing a waterproof and backpack smiling. Text reads: World Stroke Day Be #GreaterThan Stroke

Also of interest

Why have this evaluation of our CADs?

Why have this evaluation of our CADs?

Earlier this year we commissioned an evaluation of our Community Appointment Days. Laura Finucane, Clinical Director at Sussex MSK Partnership Central shares her reflections on the evaluation.

read more

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Personalised care made accessible from Sussex MSK Partnership https://hereweare.org.uk/blog/personalised-care-made-accessible/ https://hereweare.org.uk/blog/personalised-care-made-accessible/#respond Wed, 18 Sep 2024 09:42:13 +0000 https://hereweare.org.uk/?p=14867 We know that conveying complex medical information in a clear and accessible manner can be challenging. This is where Sussex MSK Partnership Central's animations step in, rethinking the way healthcare information is delivered to patients.

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Personalised care made accessible from Sussex MSK Partnership

Animated image of a man sat at computer talking on the phone asking 'How can we help you?'

In the realm of healthcare, patient education plays a pivotal role in ensuring individuals understand their conditions, treatments, and how to manage their health effectively.

Shaping services around the needs of our population

We know that conveying complex medical information in a clear and accessible manner can be challenging. This is where Sussex MSK Partnership Central‘s animations step in, rethinking the way healthcare information is delivered to patients. 

Their three short videos – Introduction to Musculoskeletal Health, What to Expect and How to Prepare for Your Appointment and Person Initiated Follow Up offer simplicity in messaging, providing people with a clear understanding of the term MSK and what to expect from the service.

 

Accessible videos for people receiving MSK care

Accessible information about the services we offer

Jo Hall, Professional Lead at Sussex MSK Partnership, reflects: 

 As part of Personalised Care and understanding what matters most to people, we know how important it is to support people with friendly, accessible information about the services we offer, what to expect, and how to prepare, to enable them to make the most of any contact they have with us. 

It also goes beyond this – helping inform people about MSK health and beyond, offering reassurance and signposting to support living well within their community. 

By simplifying medical jargon and presenting information in a visually engaging format, people can grasp crucial healthcare insights more easily.

Through colourful visuals and dynamic storytelling, patients are not only informed but also entertained, making the learning process more enjoyable and effective. 

Head shot of a white woman with dark straight hair, smiling. Photo is of Jo Hall, Professional Lead at Sussex MSK Partnership

“We gained a lot of insight from our communities at The Big Conversation, hearing that people didn’t understand what MSK meant, who we are as a service and what we offer. It made a big difference to work with them to shape our animation to suit the needs of the end user.” Jo Hall, Professional Lead at Sussex MSK Partnership

Speaking directly to people at their Big Conversation events allowed the MSK service to understand what the local population wants and needs when it comes to accessible healthcare, helping to shape their offerings. By incorporating feedback and insights from these events, Sussex MSK Partnership Central ensured their animations provide valuable information but also resonate with and cater to the diverse needs of the community they serve. 

The team worked on the videos with local designer Katie Merrien, Founder of CommuniKate Design, who breaks down complex information into digestible, visual narratives.  

 

Katie said: 

“Sussex MSK Partnership Central is one of the best organisations I’ve worked with. They are proactive and thoughtful about representation of and ensuring access for all demographic groups, and passionate about co-designing messaging with their service users to make sure it meets people’s needs.  

Creating the animations with the team was a really enjoyable, straightforward and informative process for me, and I know that residents will experience a lot of benefits as a result of our work together.” 

Photo of a woman with long, light coloured hair, smiling whilst sat at a desk holding a pen

The service has also produced offline assets, including posters and leaflets, to ensure those who don’t have digital access can still benefit from the content of the video.

Furthermore, with incorporation of British Sign Language (BSL) this adds an invaluable layer of accessibility for deaf or hard of hearing individuals, ensuring that no one is left behind in understanding their healthcare journey.

Also of interest

Why have this evaluation of our CADs?

Why have this evaluation of our CADs?

Earlier this year we commissioned an evaluation of our Community Appointment Days. Laura Finucane, Clinical Director at Sussex MSK Partnership Central shares her reflections on the evaluation.

read more

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Fern Bolwell’s reflections on the Sussex Health Equity Fellowship https://hereweare.org.uk/blog/sussex-health-equity-fellowship/ https://hereweare.org.uk/blog/sussex-health-equity-fellowship/#respond Thu, 29 Aug 2024 10:12:29 +0000 https://hereweare.org.uk/?p=14588 The Health Equity Fellowship is a nine-month programme delivered by NHS Sussex and Health Innovation Kent Surrey Sussex, which equips participants with the skills and knowledge to become key change agents within their organisations, promoting a focus on equity and reducing health inequalities.

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Fern Bolwell’s reflections on the Sussex Health Equity Fellowship

Image features people sitting on chairs in a sports hall reading information about the community appointment day they are attending.

Our work at Here focusses on bringing together service improvement, lived experience and data.

Last June we joined the Sussex Health Equity Fellowship, a brand new programme created by Sussex Health and Care and partnered with Kent Surrey Sussex Academic Health Science Network.

We were extremely keen to be involved and were thrilled that of the eight places offered two of our team were accepted onto the programme.

Fern Bolwell, Learning Lead and Tom Golden, Business Intelligence Analyst at Here both took part in the programme. We felt that having people from both an operational and data and a analytics perspective would of huge benefit due to how equity learning could be used by these different skills areas.

In this blog, Fern shares her more about the Fellowship and reflects on what both she personally and us as an organisation have learned from the experience.

Tom Golden
Fern Bolwell

What is the Health Equity Fellowship? 

The Health Equity Fellowship is a nine-month programme delivered by NHS Sussex and Health Innovation Kent Surrey Sussex. The programme aims to equip participants with the skills and knowledge to become key change agents within their organisations, promoting a focus on equity and reducing health inequalities. 

The Fellowship is delivered through a mixture of lectures, webinars, action learning sets, mentoring and connection to each other’s knowledge and experience. Alongside this, Fellows complete a work-based project with a goal of improving health equity.

Sussex Health and Care Health Innovation Kent Surrey Sussex Health Equity Fellowship

‘We know that our society is not fair and equitable, and many people face

 
 
 

systematised and institutional discrimination and cannot thrive in the conditions in which they live. We recognise the structural and cultural inequalities that are embedded in our wider society, and that this impacts our work in health and care. We recognise the inequities in the healthcare system and we want to work to address those.’ 

I have always been passionate about justice and fairness in society and ensuring everyone’s voices are heard and acted on. My professional goal is to realise this mission through the work that I am doing with Sussex MSK Partnership and ensure that health equity is always considered in each decision for the patients who need it most.  

For me the opportunity to be a part of the Fellowship came at a key moment of change for the Sussex MSK Partnership as we looked to the future and worked on how to deliver healthcare differently.

Equality and equity

What skills did we bring?

Sussex MSK Partnership had already set aside dedicated project groups to focus on health equity. This work has been divided into 3 workstreams – Data, Staff Support and Community.

I work across each project group and was able to see where each intersected and supported the other. We first focused on an evidence-based approach through both community outreach and data gathering to ensure the changes we make, make a difference where it is most needed.

The way we work at Here meant we were able to be agile and encouraged to be innovative and forward thinking in approaches to delivering healthcare. 

What have been the results? 

The Health Equity Fellowship gave me the opportunity to grow my capability in population health, innovation and evaluation. My understanding increased in applying an equity lens to change initiatives. As well as expanding my network and connecting me to experts in a wide range of relevant areas.

Following the fellowship, I presented at Sussex Partnership Foundation Trust and Sussex Medical School’s Anti Racism event to showcase our work at Sussex MSK Partnership. 

I felt truly inspired by the dedication of the team leading the Fellowship and emboldened by their hope, even when honestly discussing the real challenge and shocking impact of inequity and prejudice.  

During the 9 months of the Fellowship I was able to work on: 

  • Improving our data capture and reporting to be able to see, at a glance, differences between access, experience and journey of different groups of patients.
  • Used our data to inform where we should be supporting our community, through this evidence, we connected with Crawley Asian networks. 
  • Shared the learning from the fellowship and delivered training for all Here colleagues on health equity. 
  • Simplified the interpreter booking process to address inequity.
  • Created a new process to ensure patients with adjustments were flagged on our systems so that we can proactively support their needs.
Our self referral leaflet, translated into Tamil.

What is our learning and what are we taking forward from this? 

The Fellowship experience has extended my confidence, competency and language to challenge and advocate for health equity in projects, process, the workplace and the wider world. 

I actively seek out to surface where there are challenges for patients and colleagues based on protected characteristics.  focused on fixing, improving and most importantly sharing the learning and awareness for future prevention of inequity.

I am grateful to those who speak up and teach me. It has shifted my vision to a world where I am no longer blind to inequity. 

The fellowship really opened my eyes to the impact that bias, exclusion and discrimination has on the healthcare of certain demographics.

Coming from a background of data, the fellowship taught me the importance of collaboration and co-design. I learnt that data is useful in identifying trends that might suggest inequity but it is only when you go and meet members of the community that you understand the factors that may be causing an inequity in their healthcare.

Tom Golden
Business Intelligence Analyst at Here

Earlier this month Sussex Health and Care Fellowship held a webinar to share more information about the programme, Fern was invited to talk and share her experience – you can watch it in full below.

 

How can you get involved?  

The Sussex Health Equity Fellowship is now recruiting for a new cohort of Fellows – details on how to apply are below. 

 

  1. Health Innovation KSS website: https://healthinnovation-kss.com/news/sussex-health-equity-fellowship-opens-for-applications/ 
  2. LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:7224325761082552320
  3. Twitter: https://x.com/HealthInnov_KSS/status/1818563477654417445
  4. Applications close on 2nd September 2024, 11:59pm

Fern Bolwell, Learning Lead at Here

Also of interest

Reflecting on a decade of impact: A farewell to Sussex MSK Partnership Central

Reflecting on a decade of impact: A farewell to Sussex MSK Partnership Central

As we approach the conclusion of the Sussex MSK Partnership Central (SMSKPC) service, we’re taking a moment to celebrate the extraordinary journey we’ve shared. Over the past decade, this partnership has been more than a service – it’s been a community, a purpose, and a shared commitment to making a real difference in people’s lives.

read more

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