The Strategic Director for Social Care &
Education submitted a report on the Transitions from
Children’s to Adults and set out the achievements of the
current Joint Health, Social Care and Education Transitions
Strategy which ended in 2024, and the plans for the development of
a new strategy going forward.
The Head of Corporate Parenting and the Head
of SEND Integrated Service presented the report. It was noted
that:
- The transition strategy was
developed to support children and young people (CYP) moving into
adulthood and to ensure families were better prepared for this
change and improving long-term outcomes.
- The original strategy covered
2019–2022, with the current strategy extended to
2022–2024. Planning for the next phase was underway.
- The strategy supported CYP who may
require ongoing input from both social care and health services
into adulthood, aiming to make transitional services more navigable
for families.
- The focus has been on:
Earlier identification of CYP needing continued support.
Improving collaboration between Children’s Services, Adult
Social Care (ASC), and health partners.
Outlining what support involves and how it will be achieved.
- Progress highlighted in the report
included better joint working and earlier transition planning.
- A checklist approach from age 14
onwards across a range of settings to include:
Planning from age 14 to give more time to prepare for adulthood
Enabled Independent Travel Training (ITT) so schools and colleges
can help CYP learn these skills.
Joint panels to manage complex cases and shared tools like the
Adult Social Care Checklist.
Built information guides and improved the Local Offer and Leaving
Care Offer websites to give clear and simple information.
Created ways to share views so all voices are heard when planning
support.
- A pilot employment programme
supported 75 young people through partnerships with Leicester
College, hospitals, hotels, and the Council. With 16 young people
retained employment after the programme and Families reported they
wouldn’t have achieved this without the programme, praising
localised support.
- Collaboration with housing services
led to the development of an information pack and clearer
transition pathways for young people.
- A joint workshop for families, ASC,
education, health and SEND was well received, followed by informal
drop-ins for further support.
- Feedback had suggested a need for
more specialist workshops for those with complex needs.
- Oakland School proposed adapting the
transition approach to support younger children as part of future
planning.
- The Council supports 600 CYP, with
124 having an Education, Health and Care Plan (EHCP). Around 100
are of school age with complex needs.
- Emphasis placed on the
Council’s role as a corporate parent, ensuring ongoing
support whether or not CYP meet ASC eligibility.
- Work continued to improve support
for adult care leavers, including over 300 aged 18–21 and 100
aged 21+.
- Work was underway to co-produce the
next strategy, identifying what had worked and what future
priorities should be. Focus areas include:
Internal improvement across services.
Continued support for care leavers.
Meeting the needs of those not eligible for statutory support.
In response to questions and comments from Members, it was noted
that:
The key priorities for the Cohort in the
2019-2022 strategy were all met and progress was made in all
areas.
AGREED:
- The Commission noted the
report.
- The new strategy would come to a
future commission meeting.