Agenda and minutes

Venue: West Offices - Station Rise, York YO1 6GA. View directions

Contact: Ben Jewitt  Democracy Officer

Items
No. Item

41.

Apologies for Absence (4:35pm)

To receive and note apologies for absence.

 

Minutes:

The board received apologies from the Director of Housing and Communities, City of York Council; no substitute was available.

 

The board received apologies from the Deputy Chief Fire Officer, North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service; no substitute was available.

 

The board received apologies from the Chief Constable and the Chief Superintendent, North Yorkshire Police.

 

The board received apologies from the Chief Executive, York and Scarborough Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust; who was substituted by the Director of Communications.

 

The board received apologies from the Managing Director, North Yorkshire, York and Selby - Tees, Esk and Wear Valleys NHS Foundation Trust, who was substituted by the Community Mental Health Transformation Programme and Delivery Lead.

42.

Declarations of Interest (4:35pm) pdf icon PDF 222 KB

At this point in the meeting, Members and co-opted members are asked to declare any disclosable pecuniary interest, or other registerable interest, they might have in respect of business on this agenda, if they have not already done so in advance on the Register of Interests. The disclosure must include the nature of the interest.

 

An interest must also be disclosed in the meeting when it becomes apparent to the member during the meeting.

 

[Please see attached sheet for further guidance for Members].

 

Minutes:

Board Members were invited to declare any personal, prejudicial or disclosable pecuniary interests, other than their standing interests, that they had in relation to the business on the agenda. None were declared.

43.

Minutes (4:35pm) pdf icon PDF 260 KB

To approve and sign the minutes of the last meeting of the Health and Wellbeing Board held on Wednesday, 19 March 2025.

Minutes:

Resolved:   To approve and sign the minutes of the last meeting of the Health and Wellbeing Board held on Wednesday, 19 March 2025, having noted and amended an error in item 38.

 

44.

Public Participation (4:36pm)

At this point in the meeting members of the public who have registered to speak can do so. Members of the public may speak on agenda items or on matters within the remit of the committee.

 

Please note that our registration deadlines have changed to 2 working days before the meeting. The deadline for registering at this meeting is at 5.00pm on Friday, 2 May 2025.

 

 To register to speak please visit www.york.gov.uk/AttendCouncilMeetings to fill out an online registration form. If you have any questions about the registration form or the meeting please contact the Democracy Officer for the meeting whose details can be found at the foot of the agenda.

 

Webcasting of Public Meetings

 

Please note that, subject to available resources, this public meeting will be webcast including any registered public speakers who have given their permission. The public meeting can be viewed on demand at www.york.gov.uk/webcasts.

 

During coronavirus, we've made some changes to how we're running council meetings. See our coronavirus updates (www.york.gov.uk/COVIDDemocracy) for more information on meetings and decisions.

 

 

 

Minutes:

It was reported that there had been one registration to speak under the Council’s Public Participation Scheme.

 

Flick Williams spoke on item 7; she expressed serious concern about the effect of proposed disability benefit cuts on health inequalities.

45.

Update on the York Drug and Alcohol Partnership: Strategic Priorities 2025/26 (4:40pm) pdf icon PDF 312 KB

This paper introduces the York Drug and Alcohol Strategic Priorities for 2025 / 26. These were agreed at the Drug and Alcohol Partnership Board in March 2025.  Each priority has a lead within a relevant organisation. The Health and Wellbeing Board are asked to support the priorities and consider how as partners they can support the delivery of the outcomes.

 

Additional documents:

Minutes:

The item was introduced by the Director of Public Health and presented by the Public Health Specialist Practitioner (Advanced).

 

The Director of Public Health explained that this report followed on from a national review of services surrounding drug and alcohol provision in 2021 which gave local authorities license to set up “combating drugs partnerships” which was locally represented by the York Drug and Alcohol Partnership (YDAP), of which he was the Senior Responsible Officer.

 

He also noted that in the past decade there had been a move from treatment to recovery-based systems when dealing with addiction.

 

The Public Health Specialist Practitioner (Advanced) presented the report and summarised the strategic priorities agreed at the Drug and Alcohol Partnership Board in March 2025.  Each priority has a lead within a relevant organisation. She noted that a fourth outcome (mental health) had been added this year.

 

The Health and Wellbeing Board were asked to support the priorities but also to consider how individual agencies within the wider health and well-being area could each offer support.

 

The board asked about the “What’s the Score” conversation tool, used by YDAP; what was the purpose of it and how was it used?

 

The Public Health Specialist Practitioner (Advanced) answered that this toolkit had been developed by their current provider Change Grow Live as part of their young people’s service – and it was a type of scratchcard which helps user’s establish their level of substance usage and whether this may be problematic. The intention was to roll this out fully to professionals who work with young people such as teachers and youth workers.

 

The board asked about the aim to increase the numbers of young people seeking support for substance misuse – the Public Health Specialist Practitioner (Advanced) said the numbers, set out nationally, were quite ambitious but were being delivered. These had started out at around mid-20s but were now approaching nearer 50.

 

The board asked how the partnership could work out where they need to be to capture any young people that weren’t coming forward to seek support?

 

The Director of Public Health answered that regarding unmet need indicators for drugs and alcohol versus the expected number of people seen in treatment, there was about a 50% gap for substances and 80% for alcohol in the adult population currently, so on this basis he would expect to see four times as many adults seeking help for alcohol treatment and using a similar methodology he would consider 20-30 young people citywide to be a much lower than anticipated number of young people seeking help.

 

The board asked whether there was capacity to deal with an increase in demand for support with drug and alcohol misuse among young people.

 

The Public Health Specialist answered that there was capacity to support more children and to provide early intervention, which would also avert further need for these people as adults.

 

The Director of Public Health added that with the old model Children's Services was more a wing of  ...  view the full minutes text for item 45.

46.

Better Care Fund (5:09pm) pdf icon PDF 418 KB

The York Better Care Fund (BCF) plan has been developed through a collaborative process, ensuring alignment with national priorities and local partnership objectives. The final plan was submitted on 28 March, meeting the national submission deadline. The York Health and Wellbeing Board is now asked to review and approve the plan as part of the BCF assurance process.

 

Additional documents:

Minutes:

The Corporate Director of Adults and Integration presented on behalf of the report author (Interim Head of All-Age Commissioning), advising that the final plan, submitted in March and outlined in the report, had been approved in the hour prior to the board meeting.

 

She explained that the York Better Care Fund (BCF) plan had been developed through a collaborative process, ensuring alignment with national priorities and local partnership objectives. She highlighted a few of its key points, noting that there were no significant changes to the scheme but that there had been some work with partners through the delivering capacity group and key stakeholders to understand the scheme names; it was identified there were a number of existing schemes that were called different things but doing the same thing. The number of schemes had not really reduced, rather they have been amalgamated under some of the BCF plan headings

 

The board expressed concern about funding for pay award increases being met internally, asking whether this would total to be a significant amount.

 

The Corporate Director of Adults and Integration was not able to confirm for 2025/26 as she did not have full information for the current year’s pay awards approved at this stage.

 

The board asked about “Move Mates” and the proposed redirection of its resources to other schemes; were these similar in terms of building confidence and promoting exercise outdoors?

 

The Corporate Director of Adults and Integration clarified that there were no other specific schemes undertaking the same activities as Move Mates, rather there were preventive schemes which the funding was being redirected towards, but given the overall budget had not increased significantly, it had not been possible to commission a significant amount of new services.

 

The board responded on this point of there being no great uplift in funding, asking whether or not this prompted further concerns.

 

The Corporate Director of Adults and Integration answered that funding was always a cause for concern and a balancing act, but that a significant amount of work, effort, consultation and engagement had gone into considering/funding each scheme, and continued review and evaluation was required through the year and beyond. It was not possible to source any additional funding for BCF at a national level, and the council had therefore provided significant additional funds over and above this.

 

The board suggested that there was more potential for Voluntary and Community Sector to get involved in this area.

 

The board noted that the largest BCF contribution listed on the tables as charity or voluntary sector was that to York Carer Centre Service and associated respite and other services and asked whether this funding all went into voluntary sector or whether these could be entered into two separate lines.

 

The Chief Executive, York CVS clarified that the Carers Centre receives £400,000 and this was only a fraction of the amount allocated.

 

The Corporate Director of Adults and Integration said she would clarify this information and follow up with board members after the meeting.

 

The  ...  view the full minutes text for item 46.

47.

Goal 1 in the York Joint Local Health and Wellbeing Strategy 2022-2032: 'Reduce the gap in healthy life expectancy between the richest and poorest communities in York' (5:24pm) pdf icon PDF 667 KB

As the Health and Wellbeing Board has now approved Action Plan 2 for the York Joint Local Health and Wellbeing Strategy, we will continue to report on all the Goals in turn, and this paper is intended to present to the Board the current data on Goal 1 around inequalities in life expectancy and healthy life expectancy in York, following a similar paper at the same stage in Action Plan 1. This is also in fulfilment of a Council Plan 2023-2027 objective to ‘Increase council-wide action to reduce health inequalities’ and report on this annually.

 

Minutes:

The report was presented by the Director of Public Health. He noted the focus on “healthy life expectancy” versus “life expectancy” and the links to poverty and associated factors in the York Inner parliamentary constituency. He went on to discuss what causes people in poorer areas to become ill and die earlier and what was being done to meet these residents’ needs.

 

There was a discussion with board members about the statistics.

 

The board noted the inequality of the poverty/health figures across the city and asked if these statistics and correlations could be shared with ward councillors since they have discretion with regard to ward health spending (eg. areas where loneliness, suicidality and food poverty are a serious issue and cause of early death or a reduction of quality of life).

 

The Director of Public Health agreed with this, acknowledging that ward action plans existed already but that these could be incorporated or taken into account to change focus or refine strategies or best practices. He suggested he would also take this forward with the Director of Communities.

 

The board asked when a change in this data was likely to reflect whether commissioned public health schemes were effective and things were improving, noting that it was difficult to measure the success of some schemes (like supervised tooth brushing, which may not show the benefits until years into the future).

 

The Director of Public Health answered that funding for the schemes on this list was drawn from several different sources; but of those funded by public health some such as the Health Mela offered less immediately tangible progress but were excellent large scale health outreach and word of mouth to 3000 attendees, others such as  mailings to get at-risk people to proactively sign up for the hypertension register could show hard statistics of a thousand people added and prescribed blood pressure lowering medication, meaning 17 fewer strokes a year and 6 deaths averted.

 

The board asked about the take up and effectiveness of the Health Inequalities Education Programme.

 

The Director of Public Health answered that he thought it had been very effective and he had seen really good changes of practice, and data showed that practices were finding more patients from private communities. Presentations from the Poverty Truth Commissioners and York Travellers Trust had been undertaken earlier today, and workshops and seminars had allowed professionals to facilitate training.

 

 

Resolved: That the board would:

i.        Note and comment on the current data on

inequalities in life expectancy and healthy life expectancy in York.

ii.        Discuss where and how the inequalities arise, and ‘where to look’ for solutions.

 

Reason:     To ensure the HWBB is actively and effectively delivering on the vision and ambitions set out within the Joint Local Health and Wellbeing Strategy 2022-2032.

48.

Update from the York Health and Care Partnership (5:48pm) pdf icon PDF 231 KB

This report provides an update to the Health and Wellbeing Board (HWBB) regarding the work of the York Health and Care Partnership (YHCP), progress to date and next steps.

 

The report is for information and discussion and does not ask the Health and Wellbeing Board to respond to recommendations or make any decisions.

 

Minutes:

The Executive Director of Communications, Marketing and Media Relations, NHS Humber & North Yorkshire Health and Care Partnership Invited the Interim Director of Place, NHS Humber and North Yorkshire Health and Care Partnership to assist her in presenting the item and answering questions.

 

The Executive Director of Communications, Marketing and Media Relations, NHS Humber & North Yorkshire Health and Care Partnership summarised the minutes of YHCP meetings noting that the children's plan which was draft at the time of being presented to the committee had now been approved by the partnership.

 

She also noted the restructure regarding the abolition of NHS England and the reform of the Integrated Care Board, due to delays surrounding the pre-election and bank holiday period this was all very new information but she highlighted that Humber and North Yorkshire ICB needed to make a reduction to costs of 47% with a revised allocation for Humber and North Yorkshire ICB of around £35million. The ICB would go back to being more of a strategic commissioner, setting out the strategy to improve population health outcomes and commissioning services and other activities to support this, rather than being involved in the delivery. She added that they would need to submit a plan by the end of May 2025.

 

The Interim Director of Place, NHS Humber and North Yorkshire Health and Care Partnership explained that the ICB Executive intended to continue to put existing agreements in place because this anchored its intended plans on a local level, even considering the national changes. He said that the report described the ways the ICB sought to go about doing this, and legal teams from the local authority and health had recently finished those documents for York and they were going through the final stages of ICB Executive approval.

 

The Corporate Director of Adults and Integration emphasised its support for the ICB, noting that taking an effective 50% cut to running costs must be extremely challenging and stating that they wished to support local citizens, particularly those who may be concerned that their healthcare or jobs could be threatened by these changes. Taking £35m from any system and will not lead to things getting better, and this was about mitigation rather than improvement.

 

The Chief Executive, York CVS noted the appointment of the new acting chair of the ICB, Jason Stamp who was previously the collaborative chair of Humber and North Yorkshire Voluntary, Community and Social Enterprise (VCSE), stating that this was particularly positive news for the voluntary sector.

 

The Executive Director of Communications, Marketing and Media Relations, NHS Humber & North Yorkshire Health and Care Partnership emphasised that the focus was on driving better outcomes through partnership working, and this would be a fundamental thread moving forward, with an emphasis on improving population health.

 

The Director of Public Health noted that the national report focused on a number of medical areas, but omitted areas such as social care, integration, and SEND. It would be important to secure these at a local level due to  ...  view the full minutes text for item 48.

49.

Health and Wellbeing Board Chair's Report (6:18pm) pdf icon PDF 294 KB

This paper is designed to summarise key issues and progress which has happened in between meetings of the Health and Wellbeing Board (HWBB), giving Board members a concise update on a broad range of relevant topics which would otherwise entail separate papers.

 

Minutes:

The Chair summarised the report, stating that due to time constraints, unless there were any further points of discussion she would take the report to have been read by other members of the board.

 

There were no objections, although the Chair went on to highlight that the roundtable discussion with primary care had meant a gap for pharmacy provision in Clifton had been formally recognised.

 

Resolved:   That the Health and Wellbeing Board noted the report.

 

Reason:     So that the Board were kept up to date on: Board business, local updates, national updates, and actions on recommendations from recent Healthwatch reports.

50.

Healthwatch York Reports: GP Surgeries in York: Accessibility Audit Findings and GP Practice Websites in York: Audit Findings (6:19pm) pdf icon PDF 150 KB

This report is for the attention of Board members, sharing two Healthwatch reports which looks at the results of website and surgery access audits completed by Healthwatch York volunteers.

 

Additional documents:

Minutes:

The Manager of Healthwatch York presented the board’s report, encompassing two Healthwatch reports looking at the results of website and surgery access audits completed by Healthwatch York volunteers.

 

She stated that this report contained a lot of good news on the accessibility of GP practices and websites. The findings showed that many GP practices have been getting things right; others had responded with enthusiasm and an intention to change based on Healthwatch’s findings.

 

The Director of Public Health asked whether specific recommendations had been fed back to the individual practices that had been audited and the Healthwatch Manager confirmed this was the case, and every single GP practice had received a report specific to their website and to each of their physical sites.

 

The Chair noted that the feedback concerning the impact of radios on people with hearing impairment was very welcome and drew attention to wider accessibility beyond simply mobility. The Healthwatch Manager responded that attention to this area of accessibility also benefitted neurodiverse individuals, and inexpensive changes such as putting a sign up to prompt those struggling to ask for assistance could also make a difference.

 

The Corporate Director of Childrens and Education highlighted the recent Ofsted report on the Childrens Social Care service, which was rated outstanding in all areas; he urged board members to seek this out online as it discussed the service’s partnership work, including health.

 

The Health and Wellbeing Board

 

Resolved:  To receive the Healthwatch York’s reports, “GP surgeries in York: accessibility audit findings” and “GP practice websites in York: audit findings”.

 

Reason:     To keep up to date with the work of Healthwatch York and be aware of what members of the public are telling us.

 

 

Feedback
Back to the top of the page