{"id":4416,"date":"2023-04-20T09:49:52","date_gmt":"2023-04-20T09:49:52","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/integratedcarejournal.com\/?p=4416"},"modified":"2023-08-23T13:56:03","modified_gmt":"2023-08-23T13:56:03","slug":"working-together-faqs-provider-collaboratives","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/integratedcarejournal.com\/working-together-faqs-provider-collaboratives\/","title":{"rendered":"Working together at scale: FAQs on provider collaboratives"},"content":{"rendered":"

Provider collaboratives are one of the cornerstones of the English health and care landscape.<\/p>\n

As of July 2022, provider collaboratives are mandatory for all NHS trusts providing acute and mental health services. Many NHS community and ambulance trusts have also been offered the opportunity to take part and non-NHS providers may also be included where this will benefit patients and makes sense for the providers.<\/p>\n

NHS England defines a provider collaborative as partnership arrangements involving at least two trusts working at scale across multiple places. Provider collaboratives represent a move away from competition to one of cooperation and collaboration \u2013 underpinned by the duty to collaborate in the Health and Care Act 2022 (the Act).<\/p>\n

In summer 2021, NHS England published guidance<\/a> to formalise the move to collaborative working, which sets out some minimum expectations for how providers should work together at scale in provider collaboratives. A supplementary toolkit<\/a> provides further support on setting up collaboratives, including potential governance models.<\/p>\n

Mills & Reeve<\/a> share insights from their learning and experience of working with provider collaboratives up and down the country on what makes a successful collaborative \u2013 the honeymoon period can fade fairly quickly as you get down to the difficult issues.<\/p>\n

Mills & Reeve have prepared 10 FAQs as a guide to the process of forming a collaborative.<\/p>\n


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1. Choose your partners carefully: who should you partner with?<\/h3>\n

The first step for providers is to work out who will form the collaborative. This will often depend on the purpose of the collaborative.<\/p>\n

For example, \u2018horizontal\u2019 collaboratives usually bring together providers that offer similar services (e.g., acute hospitals or mental health services) whereas \u2018vertical\u2019 collaboratives tend to involve organisations that provide different services (eg, collaboratives bringing together primary care, community, local acute, mental health and social care providers).<\/p>\n

Often existing relationships will make for a good partnership as you will have a shared history of other joint working or partnering.<\/p>\n

There is no \u2018one size fits all\u2019 and providers should come together in provider collaboratives in ways which make sense to achieve benefits of scale, provide resilience and deliver system priorities.<\/p>\n

Providers will also need to bear in mind how different types of provider organisation operate and take this into account when deciding how they will be treated within the collaborative and how this might affect the contractual structure.<\/p>\n

For example, independent sector (IS) organisations might be restricted by their banking covenants from underwriting another organisation\u2019s risk. Providers should therefore be mindful of these differences and work together to develop equity within the collaborative. This means giving each provider what it needs in order to reach a place of equality within the collaborative, as each provider is not necessarily starting from the same position.<\/p>\n


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2. Objectives: Do we need to define our priorities early?<\/h3>\n

Providers will need to consider the overall aims and objectives of the collaborative. This means thinking about the reasons and incentives that organisations have to enter into the collaborative in the first place, their ultimate goals and what they are actually seeking to achieve together. Be clear about your objectives.<\/p>\n

For example, is the collaborative a vehicle for contracting, or are the providers looking to create real change and improvements to the service for patients?<\/p>\n

Providers will also need to work out how place and provider collaborative arrangements interface, especially given that ICBs will be able to delegate functions and budgets to both types of partnership arrangement. Provider collaboratives will need to both agree objectives with ICBs and align priorities with place-based partnerships, as well as develop a shared understanding of their respective roles.<\/p>\n


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3. Capacity and complexity: How will the various collaboratives work together?<\/h3>\n

Providers are likely to be part of multiple collaborative arrangements and\/or alliances which will perform different functions and operate over a range of geographic footprints including neighbourhood, place, ICS and multi-ICS levels. The complexity and variety of different partnership models within any single system is likely to put pressure on already overloaded leadership teams, clinical services and operational teams.<\/p>\n

We have supported providers to develop cross-organisational support functions to pool resources and expertise in order to overcome some of these issues.<\/p>\n


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4. Governance: Be clear and transparent on your governance model. What do you need to think about when deciding on your governance structure?<\/h3>\n

Providers need to be clear and transparent on their chosen governance model. So, providers will need to agree on the voting and decision-making structure of the collaborative, and consider questions like:<\/p>\n