We discussed in last week’s blog the importance of federations establishing a mandate from their practices, but that is only half of what is needed. To have influence, federations also need to build relationships with other organisations.
A common misconception is that attendance at meetings is the same as having a voice. It is not. If a GP sits through a meeting and has no impact on the outcomes then general practice has not had a voice. In fact it is worse, because other organisations can point to the fact that general practice was represented, even though it didn’t influence any of the decisions made.
This is not an uncommon situation. Understaffed federations, often reliant on the goodwill of a small number of individuals, are asked to attend a plethora of system wide meetings as the NHS works up a head of steam in its shift towards integrated care. It becomes a case of finding someone to go, and the poor GP who attends sits there, often without a clue what is going on.
The reality is, of course, that while meetings are often the end point of a decision making process, they are rarely the start of it. In a world of integrated care, the starting point is much more about relationships.
I was working in an area where the federation formed a strong relationship with the local acute trust. The Chief Executive of the hospital was supportive of the local GPs. They worked together on creating a primary care front door at A&E. When the federation needed someone to host the employment of the pharmacists to work in practices, the hospital stepped in. Then the CCG put community services out to tender. The hospital Chief Executive and the federation leadership had a conversation and decided to put a (ultimately successful) bid in, in a model whereby the hospital hosted the contract, but looked to primary care to provide leadership as to how it would be delivered in the local areas (which is exactly what the GPs had been asking for).
This change came about not because of what happened in meetings, but because the federation had built a relationship with the local hospital. To have a voice, to have influence, federations need to build relationships.
There are some really important relationships federations need to have in place. The LMC for one. Federations and the LMC need to work hand in glove together to ensure the voice of general practice is as strong as it can be. Practices are not going to trust the federation if the LMC doesn’t.
Other local federations in the same area are also key. Ultimately they are not competitors but collaborators seeking (more or less) the same thing. Disagree in private, work out a way forward, and agree in public. If general practice is arguing with itself around the integrated care table, the power of any individual federation’s voice will be lost.
And as in the case of the federation who ended up being able to control the shape of community services in their area, a strong relationship with at least one local statutory organisation (whether it is the hospital, or the community trust or the mental health trust matters less) means when the bigger opportunities come along, the federation is in a realistic position to be part of the conversation.
These are the two foundations federations need to develop to create a strong voice: a mandate from their practices; and strong relationships across the health and social care economy. Next week we will explore how federations can turn these foundations into a voice which has impact.
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