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Keep it Local for better health: West Yorkshire Health and Care Partnership becomes the first ICS to sign up to Locality's campaign

West Yorkshire Health and Care Partnership today becomes the first Integrated Care System to sign up to Locality's Keep it Local campaign. By following the six Keep it Local principles they will be able to tackle health inequalities, prevent illness and invest in the local economy. It marks a powerful new approach to delivering local health services.

West Yorkshire Health and Care Partnership has become the first Integrated Care System (ICS) in the country to adopt Locality’s Keep it Local principles.

It comes following the publication of Keep it Local for Better Health: How Integrated Care Systems can unlock the power of community in February.

The guidance, developed as part of Locality’s membership of the government’s VCSE Health and Wellbeing Alliance, explains how the long-standing Keep it Local approach for local authorities can also be adopted by local health systems.

Through in-depth research and case studies with local and national health systems, local authorities, and local VCSE organisations, the guidance explains how to achieve the six Keep it Local principles in the health context:

  1. Think about the whole system not individual service silo
  2. Co-ordinate services at a neighbourhood level
  3. Increase local spend to invest in the local economy
  4. Focus on prevention now to save costs tomorrow
  5. Commit to your community and proactively support local organisations
  6. Commission services simply and collaboratively so they are “local by default"

Over the next 12 months, Locality will be supporting West Yorkshire Health and Care Partnership to embed the Keep it Local approach, building on its existing great practice working with the local VCSE sector.

We know that our local VCSE organisations, particularly our grassroots and small organisations, are experts in developing services to tackle health inequalities and key to prevention and generating good health and wellbeing in our communities.

Kim Shutler
West Yorkshire ICB VCSE member

Cathy Elliott, West Yorkshire ICB Chair said:

‘Keep it Local’ complements the vision and behaviours of our West Yorkshire Health and Care Partnership. The NHS has long faced challenges in tackling health inequalities in our local communities, and we are facing incredibly challenging financial pressures in health and care at a time when public needs have increased.

The ‘Keep it Local’ principles of prioritising local partnerships and investment help to support our health and care work in collaboration, especially via our Memorandum of Understanding on effective working with the VCSE sector and fulfilling our fourth purpose as an integrated care system in contributing more broadly to local social and economic development.

Through ‘Keep it Local’ I am pleased that we’re building on how we want to continue to innovate and transform as a Partnership.”

Kim Shutler, VCSE Member of the NHS West Yorkshire Integrated Care Board and Senior Responsible Officer for the Power of Communities Programme said:

“We welcome the West Yorkshire Health and Care Partnership becoming the ‘Keep it Local’ Integrated Care System in England. We know that our local VCSE organisations, particularly our grassroots and small organisations, are experts in developing services to tackle health inequalities and key to prevention and generating good health and wellbeing in our communities.

That is why the NHS in West Yorkshire have invested in the VCSE sector. However, VCSE organisations operate in increasingly difficult environment. A truly ‘Keep it Local’ approach will make it easier to support and work with our local VCSE organisations and increase local spend to invest in our local economy.”

Tony Armstrong, Chief Executive of Locality said:

“We are delighted to welcome West Yorkshire Health and Care Partnership as the first Keep it Local ICS in the country.

“With all five councils in West Yorkshire already part of the Keep it Local network, the region is a true trailblazer for community power in public services.

“We look forward to working with the ICS over the next 12 months to turn the six principles into practice. There is clear evidence that by following these principles areas can deliver better services for local people, reduce pressure on public services, and invest in the local economy.

They are also perfectly placed to help achieve other ICS priorities, including shifting to prevention, tackling health inequalities, achieving broader social and economic development, and embedding the VCSE sector within the local health system.”

Read more on the West Yorkshire Health and Care Partnership website here.