What are new care models and how did they come about?

 

What is the new care models programme?

New care models were first announced in NHS England’s Five year forward view in 2014. The aim of the subsequent new care models programme is to ‘support and stimulate’ cross-organisational change across local health and care systems in England to contribute to the triple aim of improved patient care, reduced cost and better population health. Rules prescribing the ‘what’ of change have been limited, and restricted to categories of new care models to help create future blueprints for other areas to learn from. The programme follows on from a range of national initiatives with similar aims (see Appendix 1).

To help sites become new models, the national programme provided modest funding. This was allocated annually, based on the sites’ requests and on the NHS England-led programme team’s confidence in their plans. Funding ranged from around £500,000 to £8m per vanguard site per year., The programme gave sites flexibility as to how they spent this money, with some stipulations that increased over the course of the programme.

Through a national team, the programme also aimed to offer what the Health Foundation has described in a previous publication, Constructive comfort, as proactive support – support that focuses on enabling local systems to make the changes needed and gives them licence to test new ideas. The national support package of help and guidance covered 10 areas (see Figure 1), which were co-developed with the sites. Examples included communities of practice for the new care model types, access to workshops with expert advisors on specific areas of interest, and technical guidance on areas such as data interoperability.

Strong emphasis was placed on the design of the central programme on evaluation for local sites, to determine what works and how. , Sites were given funding to procure local quantitative and qualitative evaluations. They also had access to central evaluation support. This included deep-dive impact reports from the NHS England operational research and evaluation unit, as well as specialist analysis from the Improvement Analytics Unit – a relatively new partnership between NHS England and the Health Foundation that provides quantitative evaluation to show whether local change initiatives are improving care and efficiency.

Through this approach, the programme focused on learning how to make the new care models in the Five year forward view a reality. Some of this learning has since been distilled into published frameworks.,, These predominately describe the design of the care models and the technical aspects of change.

Figure 1: The 10 enablers from the national programme team

What do the new care models look like?

At its inception in January 2015, the new care models programme invited expressions of interest to become a vanguard from ‘areas and organisations that have already made good progress’. The programme assessed ‘good progress’ by looking at the positive characteristics of the applicants. These included:

  • evidence of established relationships between providers and commissioners
  • evidence of tangible progress in making changes across the health and care system
  • a credible plan to make further change at pace.

Sites had three types of vanguard model to choose from. The three models aimed to improve care for similar populations: predominantly older people, those with chronic conditions and those identified as being at high risk of admission. The sites have, therefore, made service changes that reflect the needs of these targeted populations, with a focus on improving the provision of care outside hospitals.

This report identified the following common components in the new models.

  • Improved care coordination and transitions – for example, integrated multidisciplinary teams in the community supporting patients with multiple conditions.
  • More care in the community – for example, specialist clinics in primary care and the development of community pharmacy.
  • Provision of crisis care and reductions in unnecessary hospital admissions – for example, rapid response and recovery services for those at risk of admission.

The size of registered populations varied across sites, as did the breadth of care redesign (Table 1). However, many of the models expanded beyond their initial parameters as the programme progressed. For example, some EHCHs developed plans for older people beyond care home residents, while some MCPs worked with acute providers. This suggests that the category of model pursued should not restrict options for future service changes and expansion.

What was the local context for the vanguard sites?

There is a wealth of literature on the importance of understanding local contexts when making change and improvement. But these contexts should not be regarded as restrictive backgrounds that predetermine how models develop. Sites should instead consider how context can be understood and broken down into individual components in a helpful way, and then altered if necessary.

There were some common but not universal factors in the social, organisational and historical context of the new care model sites at the time of their successful application to the programme. In the interviews carried out for this report, sites described the following features as supporting their local ambitions:

  • stability in senior leadership positions across organisations
  • a well-performing provider sector, based on national indicators
  • a positive working relationship between providers and commissioners
  • previous involvement with national initiatives focused on integration or primary care.

Sites did, however, also describe how these features had not always been present in their local systems and how the actions they had taken prior to the new care models programme had helped to create them. Many of the sites had started developing new models of care between 2 and 10 years before they became involved in the programme.

There were exceptions where these features were not present on application to the programme. All the sites also stressed they were subject to competing pressures, such as financial deficits and performance targets.

Table 1: Profiles of the three vanguard model types

Model

Description

Number of sites

Who led the application?

Scope of services

Initial population

Common services

Population size

EHCHs

An option for areas seeking to integrate with social care services, and with a specific focus on connecting care homes into health care, to provide a dedicated offer for older people

6

  • Clinical commissioning groups (CCGs – 3)
  • Foundation trust (1)
  • CCG/local authority (2)
  • Care homes
  • Primary care
  • Social care
  • Community services
  • Voluntary sector
  • Hospital services
  • Mental health services
  • Hospices
  • Ambulance services
  • Care home residents
  • Older people who are in community beds or recipients of care in the community
  • Enhanced primary care for care homes
  • Multidisciplinary teams (MDTs)
  • Reablement and rehabilitation
  • Improved end of life and dementia care
  • Improved transfers

2,500–200,000

MCPs

An integrated provider of out-of-hospital care

14

  • CCG (6)
  • GP organisation (5)
  • GP organisation/CCG (2)
  • Foundation trust (1)
  • Primary care
  • Community services
  • Care homes
  • Social care
  • Voluntary sector
  • Hospital services
  • Mental health services
  • Ambulance services
  • People with long-term conditions
  • Older people
  • Other vulnerable groups in the population identified at high risk of admission
  • Integrated community teams/hubs
  • Enhanced primary care services
  • Specialist care in the community/at home
  • Rapid response teams
  • Self-care and prevention services

100,000–300,000

(organised into localities of 30,000–50,000)

PACSs

Integrates the provision of hospital and mental health services – as well as primary community and potentially social care services

9

  • Foundation trust (3)
  • CCG (4)
  • CCG/foundation trust (1)
  • Trust/local authority (1)
  • Hospital services
  • Primary care
  • Social care
  • Community services
  • Care homes
  • Mental health services
  • Ambulance services
  • Voluntary sector
  • People with long-term conditions
  • Older people
  • Other vulnerable groups in the population identified at high risk of admission
  • Urgent and emergency care patients
  • Patients with elective care needs
  • Integrated community teams/hubs
  • Specialist care in the community/at home
  • Redesigned urgent care
  • Rapid response teams
  • Enhanced primary care services
  • Self-care and prevention services

250,000–300,000

(some organised into localities of 30,000–50,000)

Note: Descriptions taken from NHS England expression of interest document.

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