Although someone else had a thread about the B&H Integrated Community Equipment Service (ICES), I'd like to add my view as a user of the service, and ask the good of NSC to help by signing the petition. My son regularly receives equipment from ICES and they always provide an excellent, adaptable and friendly service. When you call , they know about your order, give you up to date information and a delivery slot. It is often the case that services such as these are outsourced and you lose that customer-orientated approach. I spend a great deal of time negotiating the various services, teams, hospitals trying to chase up referrals, find out information etc. In-house services such as ICES are essential as thay are not part of a bigger corporate machine where personal service is forgotten. Although many of you won't have needed their services yet, most of you (that live here) will at some point as they help so many people (elderly as well as disabled) across Brighton and Hove.
If this is something you don't mind supporting, please sign this petition:
http://www.petitionbuzz.com/petitions/equipmentservice
Thanks
Further information if you'd like to know more:
ICES provides daily living equipment and adaptations to support people living in their own homes (within Brighton and Hove), following assessment by a suitably qualified prescriber (e.g. Nurse, OT, Physio). ICES is jointly commissioned by the Clinical Commissioning Group and local authority. The service is provided and run by the local Community NHS Trust with staffing comprising of NHS and local authority employees. The service itself receives referrals from local health trusts and social services staff, and prescribers from children’s services.
This service is vital to support childrens and adults who need equipment to increase or maintain independence and in some cases achieve a quality of life. At present the service sits within the public sector and has established relationships with local services, prescribers and service users. Having an in-house service has greater benefits than outsourcing to a private company, where flexibility and personal service are lost through the bureaucracy of contracts. Within the present arrangment prescribers can contact ICES directly, carry out joint visits with technicians, meaning greater flexibility, emergency response (particularly for facilitating hospital discharges, or providing equipment such as a hospital bed for end of life care) which ultimately means better outcomes for service users. Being in house faciltates this and enables a local service to be provided by local staff to local residents.
If this is something you don't mind supporting, please sign this petition:
http://www.petitionbuzz.com/petitions/equipmentservice
Thanks
Further information if you'd like to know more:
ICES provides daily living equipment and adaptations to support people living in their own homes (within Brighton and Hove), following assessment by a suitably qualified prescriber (e.g. Nurse, OT, Physio). ICES is jointly commissioned by the Clinical Commissioning Group and local authority. The service is provided and run by the local Community NHS Trust with staffing comprising of NHS and local authority employees. The service itself receives referrals from local health trusts and social services staff, and prescribers from children’s services.
This service is vital to support childrens and adults who need equipment to increase or maintain independence and in some cases achieve a quality of life. At present the service sits within the public sector and has established relationships with local services, prescribers and service users. Having an in-house service has greater benefits than outsourcing to a private company, where flexibility and personal service are lost through the bureaucracy of contracts. Within the present arrangment prescribers can contact ICES directly, carry out joint visits with technicians, meaning greater flexibility, emergency response (particularly for facilitating hospital discharges, or providing equipment such as a hospital bed for end of life care) which ultimately means better outcomes for service users. Being in house faciltates this and enables a local service to be provided by local staff to local residents.