Items
No. |
Item |
133. |
Welcome and Apologies for Absence
To issue a welcome to those
present, and to confirm if there are any apologies for
absence.
Additional documents:
Minutes:
The Chair led on introductions and welcomed
everyone to the meeting, No apologies were received.
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134. |
Declarations of Interests
Members will be asked to
declare any interests they may have in the business to be
discussed.
Additional documents:
Minutes:
Councillor March declared that she had been
involved in the Community Wellbeing Champions programme.
|
135. |
Minutes of the Previous Meeting PDF 136 KB
The minutes of the meeting of
the Public Health & Health Integration Scrutiny Commission held
on 29th April 2025 have been circulated, and Members
will be asked to confirm them as a correct record.
Additional documents:
Minutes:
The minutes from the meeting on
29th April 2025 were agreed as a correct record.
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136. |
Membership of the Commission 2025-26
Members will be asked to note the membership
of the Public Health and Health Integration Scrutiny Commission for
2025/26:
Councillor Pickering (Chair)
Councillor Agath (Vice Chair)
Councillor Clarke
Councillor March
Councillor Singh Johal
Councillor Westley
Councillor Haq
Councillor Sahu
Additional documents:
Minutes:
The membership of the commission were
confirmed as follows:
Councillor Pickering (Chair)
Councillor Agath (Vice Chair)
Councillor Clarke
Councillor Haq
Councillor March
Councillor Sahu
Councillor Singh Johal
Councillor Westley
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137. |
Dates of the Commission 2025-26
Members are asked to note the commission
meeting dates as follows:
·
Tuesday 8th July 2025
·
Tuesday 9th September 2025
·
Tuesday 4th November 2025
·
Tuesday 27th January 2026
·
Tuesday 24th March 2026
·
Tuesday 28th April 2026
Additional documents:
Minutes:
The dates of the meeting of the Commission
were confirmed as follows:
8 July 2025
9 September 2025
4 November 2025
27 January 2026
24 March 2026
28 April 2026
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138. |
Scrutiny Terms of Reference PDF 63 KB
Members are asked to note the scrutiny terms
of reference.
Additional documents:
Minutes:
The Commission noted the Scrutiny Terms of
Reference.
|
139. |
Chairs Announcements
The Chair is invited to make
any announcements as they see fit.
Additional documents:
Minutes:
The Chair highlighted that scrutiny was an
opportunity for members to work together to act as a critical
friend and other’s views should be respected. The Chair
emphasised that the Commission valued youth representatives’
participation and the insights they provided.
It was noted that papers were to be taken as
read for the most effective use of time at the meetings.
|
140. |
Questions, Representations and Statements of Case
Any questions, representations
and statements of case submitted in accordance with the
Council’s procedures will be reported.
Additional documents:
Minutes:
It was noted that none had been received.
|
141. |
Petitions
Any petitions received in
accordance with Council procedures will be reported.
Additional documents:
Minutes:
It was noted that none had been received.
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142. |
Brief Introduction to Public Health and Health Integration Scrutiny Commission
The Director of Public Health, alongside key
health partners, will deliver a presentation providing the
Commission with an overview of local public health services and the
wider health and care system, including current structures and
areas of integration
Additional documents:
Minutes:
The Director for Public Health, in agreement
with the Chair, deferred this item for outside the meeting for the
members who required an introduction.
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143. |
Health Protection
The Director of Public Health will provide the
Commission with a verbal update.
Additional documents:
Minutes:
The Director for Public Health gave an
overview and presentation of the latest position of health
protection issues in Leicester including Bowel Cancer Screening,
TB, Measles, COVID-19 AND a vaccination summary. It was noted
that:
- The Director outlined the role of
public health in outbreak control, screening and vaccination
promotion, working alongside the ICB and NHS England.
- Health Protection relied heavily on
partnership work and relationships. The three areas of health
protection are:
1.
Communicable disease control
Outbreak control (e.g. measles, TB, diarrhoea)
Screening and immunisation
Infection prevention control
2.
Emergency preparedness and planning
3.
Environmental health
Annual work
highlights
Bed bugs IMT
Bed bugs look back exercise
Community measles outbreak
TB
Scabies
Respiratory infections in care homes
- Infection prevention
control
IPC audit of all care and nursing homes
Urinary tract infection quality improvement
NICE guideline development
Safe discharge guidelines
- Screening &
immunisations
Cervical cancer elimination strategy
HPV school vaccination
Childhood immunisations
Community engagement
Evaluation of LIST project
HNA final draft
LLR TB strategy development
ICB business case
Information sessions to multiple community groups and GP
practices
- Monthly
health protection CPD sessions for all staff.
- The importance of community
infection prevention was highlighted, with a shared responsibility
across systems, particularly in care home settings.
- Broader health protection work
continued throughout the year, with a strong focus on pandemic
preparedness, building on lessons learned from COVID-19. This
included ongoing exercises to ensure systems are equipped for
future public health emergencies.
- Environmental health and trading
standards played a key role, particularly in relation to food
safety and managing outbreaks. This included incidents such as bed
bugs in care homes, measles, TB, flu, and COVID-19.
- Specific cases were highlighted,
including one involving an individual with autism and recurring
urinary tract infections, which contributed to wider work on
infection reduction in care settings. This work aligned with NICE
guidance and included efforts to improve care quality and discharge
procedures.
- Screening responsibilities lie with
the ICB and NHS, but public health continued to support efforts to
improve uptake, particularly around HPV and childhood
immunisations. There had been an increased focus on engaging with
communities to build trust and confidence in vaccination
programmes, both locally and nationally.
- An update was provided on TB, a
health needs assessment and strategy were ongoing, with work
focusing on identifying and supporting individuals with dormant TB.
Leicester remained involved in the regional TB control group and
the LLR TB strategy group, with efforts aimed at increasing
visibility and consistency across the programme.
- Care home discharge notifications
were also discussed, with the recent measles outbreak used as a
positive example of effective partnership working. Nearly 600 MMR
vaccinations were delivered during the outbreak, and no new measles
cases had been reported since last summer. While MMR uptake had
dipped in recent years, some recent improvement was noted.
- The HPV school vaccination programme
continued, with visits to secondary ... view
the full minutes text for item 143.
|
144. |
NHS Transformation PDF 234 KB
The Senior Communications & Public Affairs
Lead for Communications and Engagement team at NHS Leicester,
Leicestershire and Rutland submits a report on the NHS
Transformation.
Additional documents:
Minutes:
The Deputy Chief Operating Officer of Integration and Transformation and
the Chief People Officer from the Integrated Care Board (ICB)
presented the update. It was noted that:
·
Last year £150million had to be saved from the
NHS budget, this was incredibly difficult but was achieved. This
year it was expected that £190million needed to be
saved.
·
These savings were expected to come from reducing
the workforce in non-patient facing roles and reducing the use of
agency and bank staff. Services were to be redesigned and
recommissioned to remove any duplication, to maximise productivity
and ensure value was being provided while promoting
equitability.
·
A big area of cost identified was prescribing so
medication was to be non-branded where possible.
·
These savings were a huge ask for the
NHS.
In response to comments from
members, it was noted that:
- The ICB was to
provide a paper for circulation on the savings to provide further
details.
- The £190million
savings were across the whole of the NHS – including the ICB,
LPT and UHL. £74million of the savings were the
responsibility of the ICB.
- Prescribing had cost
£205million, it was hoped £17.9million would be saved
from this through switches and optimisation.
- Lot of smaller chunks
were to be saved, including the staffing costs at the ICB.
£11million was to be saved from the system development fund
by closing down and stopping pilots.
- Other savings were to
be made by pathway redesigns to improve efficiency, but there was
lots of work to be done to make them happen and risks needed to be
considered.
- The pressure on
budgets had significantly increased in the last 10
years.
- There was the
possibility of underspends if there was good financial house
keeping.
- Some services which
were to be cut would not reach the threshold for public
consultation so it was important that the voices around the table
raised concerns.
- Saving
£150million was incredibly hard and required a continued,
concerted effort. It was public money though so there was a
responsibility to ensure value for money.
- The team were unable
to comment on national government announcements on NHS funding and
service expansion as no details were known yet, but it could be
that the extra funding was for a particular provision such as
digital innovation.
- Members were
concerned that Leicester was the worst city for GP rations, faced
significant health inequalities and had poorer health outcomes and
the impact of £190million cuts were going to have. The NHS
was in a difficult position of meeting the needs of the population
and improving health outcomes whilst balancing the
books.
- The ICB reassured
members that safeguarding was only going to move to provider level
once there was confidence in the handover, there were statutory
duties which the ICB had a legal duty to discharge.
- Further work was
going to occur on the full implications of the cuts as well as an
equality impact assessment.
- The Chair requested a
more in-depth update be brought back to the Commission in September
as the ...
view the full minutes text for item 144.
|
145. |
Oral Health PDF 4 MB
The Director of Public Health submits a
presentation on Oral Health.
Additional documents:
Minutes:
The Director of Public Health
submitted a presentation to update the commission on oral health in
Leicester. It was noted that:
- Leicester had
experienced persistently poor oral health outcomes across both
children and adults. Over one in three children examined were found
to have dental decay, and when enamel decay was included, the
figure rose to over 42% of five-year-olds.
- These early signs of
decay were particularly prevalent in the east of the city, which
consistently showed the worst oral health outcomes.
- Aylestone was an
outlier with much lower rates and required further
investigation.
- Leicester reported
the third highest oral cancer mortality rate in the country,
highlighting the serious implications of poor oral health for the
population.
- Analysis revealed
that areas with water fluoridation and comparable deprivation
levels had significantly lower rates of dental decay.
- Emergency tooth
extractions were notably higher among children in the east of the
city, suggesting that many were not accessing care until urgent
intervention was needed.
- A new enamel decay
indicator had been introduced to identify early warning signs
before decay progressed further. Four in ten children aged five
showed signs of enamel decay, and these were less prevalent in
fluoridated areas, indicating the potential of water fluoridation
as a preventative measure.
- Public health actions
focused on leading the Oral Health Promotion Partnership Board to
drive improvements and reduce inequalities.
- A formal request was
submitted to the Secretary of State to consider water fluoridation
across Leicester, Leicestershire and Rutland.
- Broader health
improvement initiatives were promoted through the Live Well
service, covering key areas such as diet, smoking including
smokeless tobacco and E-Cigarettes, alcohol and physical
activity.
- National campaigns
like Fizz Free February, National Smile Month and Mouth Cancer
Action Month were supported, alongside the distribution of oral
health resources for people of all ages.
- A major focus was
placed on the supervised toothbrushing (STB) programme for
children. This evidence-based initiative was offered to early years
settings and primary schools across the city and had contributed to
significant improvements in oral health before the
pandemic.
- However, the
programme was paused due to COVID-19, and while it had since
resumed, uptake had not yet returned to pre-pandemic levels. As of
quarter three in 2024/25, uptake reached 45% in early years
settings, 13% in primary schools and 33% in SEND schools. In total,
over 4,000 children were participating in daily toothbrushing
activities within their education settings.
- Efforts were made to
increase programme participation, particularly in priority areas,
by reallocating and recruiting staff, developing mentoring schemes
and enhancing educational resources.
- Surveys highlighted
common barriers such as limited time in the day, implementation
challenges and uncertainty over whether schools or parents were
responsible. A community-based approach was being developed to
address these issues and promote shared ownership.
- Leicester received
£119,088 in additional funding from central government to
support the rollout of supervised toothbrushing in the most
deprived communities. A collaboration with Colgate-Palmolive
provided thousands of toothbrushes and tubes of toothpaste to be
distributed to children. The funding enabled staffing and
... view
the full minutes text for item 145.
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146. |
Same Day Access
The Integrated Care Board (ICB) will provide
the commission with an overview of same day access.
Additional documents:
Minutes:
The Urgent and Emergency Care System Clinical
Director for LLR and the Deputy Chief Operating
Officer of Integration and Transformation, the Engagement and
Insight Manager and the Senior Engagement and Insights Lead from
the ICB presented the item. As part of the presentation, it was
noted that:
- There was lots of work across
services to improve access, whether this was GP practises, urgent
treatment centres, pharmacies or the Emergency Department
(ED).
- The number of patients who presented
at ED was growing 4-7% each year which had increased the pressures
on the NHS and pathways for access.
- There were peaks in the demand such
as winter or heat waves but a large proportion of the patients
required care that was not an ED issue and was more suitable for
presentation elsewhere.
- Patient presentation at the wrong
place was not just an ED issues, it was seen across all primary
care areas. It was ultimately down to patient choice but this was
putting a lot of onus on the patient, and where they presented may
be out of their control. All areas were needed to address this
challenge.
- Despite the ongoing funding
challenges that faced the service, extra capacity was being
provided. This included 100 extra urgent centre appointments per
day and an expansion of Pharmacy First appointments.
- When a patient presented at ED, they
were offered an appointment at another premises that was more
suitable. This was to prevent overcrowding in ED. It also reduced
risks to patients who came into the ED with time critical
illnesses.
- There had been work with health
partners and wider partners within the community to understand how
to direct patients and to right size services, to ensure access was
available where it needed to be. This had been hindered by
historical arrangements and old contracts. There were 3 hubs in the
city which were a suitable solution historically but Pharmacy First
and other new arrangements provided more suitable access. These
services were put into place as a safety net while the future was
considered.
- A clinical audit was planned to
assess use and the needs of the patients.
- Engagement was occurring with
communities on how services would best be accessed. The feedback
was to be reviewed and themes identified. There had been previous
work with communities, the Local Authority and Adult Education
Service on keeping people out of ED which had been very
successful.
- There was to be a focus on promoting
and educating NHS 111 services, Pharmacy First, self-care and
translation services. Through partnership working with GP’s
and PCN’s there was going to be interactive sessions and
practical workshops that would be facilitated by communities.
- It was important to work differently
with different audiences.
- There was funded engagement aimed at
those who lived on the main route into the city, families with
babies and young children under the age of 10, people within the
age categories of 21-30 and 31-40, homeless, asylum seekers and
refugees, Eastern European, Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic
Communities and ...
view the full minutes text for item 146.
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147. |
Community Engagement and Wellbeing Champions round-up PDF 115 KB
The Director of Public Health submits a report
to give an overview of workstreams and initiatives currently
underway across the Community Engagement and Wellbeing Champions
(CWC) project.
Additional documents:
Minutes:
The Director of Public Health
submitted a report on the Community Wellbeing Champions
Project and network. This project was created to bring community
organisations and trusted community figures together with Public
Health and other partners to share insight on health needs,
barriers, and enablers for the residents of Leicester, reach
communities with key messages and services, and collaborate on
addressing health and wellbeing priorities for the city. It was
noted that:
- A community engagement programme was
implemented in 2021 in response to concerns about non-compliance
with COVID-19 regulations and low vaccination rates.
- The aim was to better understand the
barriers faced by communities, respond to their needs, and provide
more effective access to information, support and services.
- The engagement work successfully
helped to increase vaccine confidence and ensure that key public
health messages reached communities. Building on that success, the
intention was to continue the programme beyond the pandemic,
recognising the strong relationships that had developed with
community groups and the genuine care partners had shown for the
people they worked with.
- A key strength of the programme was
its commitment to open, honest and trusted dialogue with voluntary,
community and social enterprise (VCSE) organisations.
- As of 2025, the network included 298
members, a slight decrease from previous years following the
introduction of a new sign-up process in February 2025.
- This process was designed to promote
more consistent working, strengthen collaboration, and improve the
quality of data and network profiling. Feedback from organisations
that had left the network was also gathered to inform ongoing
improvements.
- Communication was maintained through
a weekly email bulletin, which typically shared 10 to 12 items of
interest from public health, Leicester City Council, and other
network members.
- A monthly online forum had also been
established in October 2022 in response to member requests for a
regular space to connect and learn from each other. This was valued
highly by participants and complemented by attendance at wider
health and wellbeing conferences, where opportunities were taken to
build relationships and align work with city-wide priorities.
- The programme also supported the
delivery of community engagement grants, enabling VCSE
organisations to carry out activities that improved health outcomes
for local residents.
- In total, 32 organisations were
funded after committing to open their doors and run sessions for
their communities. An evaluation of this work was underway. A pilot
internship project had also emerged from the network’s forum,
providing a route for passionate individuals to learn more about
public health and contribute to projects. Three paid internships
were offered to volunteers and staff from member organisations,
each lasting four months and involving 15 hours of work per
week.
- Throughout, the programme promoted
an inclusive community engagement approach based on equal
participation and mutual respect. Efforts were being made to
enhance engagement with underrepresented groups, ensuring that
lived experiences continued to inform and shape all areas of
activity.
In response to comments and questions, it was
noted that:
·
It was noted that some relationships had been developed with social
prescribers across ...
view the full minutes text for item 147.
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148. |
Work Programme PDF 69 KB
Members will be asked to note
the work programme and consider any future items for
inclusion.
Additional documents:
Minutes:
NHS dental access was to be added to the work
programme. It was highlighted that the minutes from Joint Health
Scrutiny were available online if anyone wished to view them.
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149. |
Any Other Urgent Business
Additional documents:
Minutes:
It was raised that a letter to the Secretary
of State was recommended to consider concern son current GP access
and levels of patients at full council on 16th January
2025. This was not actioned immediately, but the letter had since
been sent.
There being no further business, the meeting
was closed at 20.36.
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