Evening Telegraph (First Edition)
Integration move ‘creating tensions’
A FLAGSHIP SNP reform designed to improve working between health boards and local authorities is putting them at loggerheads over funding, according to the leader of Fife Council.
David Ross, who heads up the minority Labour administration, also said there is “little evidence” the integration of health and social care is freeing up hospital beds amid the wider cash squeeze.
Dozens of new public bodies — called integration joint boards (IJB) — were set up a year ago in Scotland to improve collaboration between NHS boards and councils for meeting the demands of an ageing population.
Mr Ross said the council is “fully committed” to integration but added there are still major challenges to “making a real success of this approach”.
Those hurdles include disputes over who pays for what under a system supposed to eliminate those confrontations, councillors say.
“A lack of transparency in the joint funding arrangements for the IJB is creating tensions between council, NHS and the IJB that must be overcome,” said Mr Ross.
“We have seen little evidence of achieving the desired shift from acute to community care and there is a real question mark as to how far this is possible given the pressures on all parts of health and social care.”
NHS Fife chairman Tricia Marwick, who joined the board this year, said she has “reached out” to Mr Ross and others to discuss relations between the bodies.
“I have made it clear it is in all our interests to ensure relationships work well and it is my intention to continue these discussions so that together we can achieve the best outcomes for the people of Fife,” she said.
A Scottish Government spokesman said integration has already seen the average number of delayed discharges halve over the last six months in Fife.