Issue - meetings

Annual Public Health Report

Meeting: 12/07/2012 - Health and Wellbeing Scrutiny Committee (Item 20)

20 Annual Public Health Report pdf icon PDF 57 KB

The Director of Public Health, Dr Heather Grimbaldeston, to present the Annual Public Health Report.

Minutes:

Heather Grimbaldeston, Director of Public Health, did a presentation to the Committee on the main points of the Annual Public Health Report. 

 

The report was in chapters focusing on different areas:

 

*      Chapter 1 – this chapter concerned healthy lifestyle choices, healthy behaviours and reducing health inequalities.  It referred to national and local actions that had improved health and prevented illness caused by lifestyle choices and behaviours.  The Chapter introduced Public Health Outcomes Framework and Indicators for each lifestyle area.  There were 2 high level outcomes – increased healthy life expectancy; and reduced differences in life expectancy and healthy life expectancy between communities through greater improvements in more disadvantaged communities.  These outcomes were supported by a set of 66 public health indicators split over four domains covering - improving the wider determinants of health; health improvement; health protection; and public health and preventing premature mortality.   Dr Grimbaldeston referred to initiatives around stopping smoking which had seen the Stop Smoking Service exceed its target of 2425 by supporting 3205 smokers to stop.   There was still work to be done to try to reduce smoking in pregnancy rates.  There were a number of areas where health improvement or lifestyle services had been commissioned by the PCT or work had occurred in partnership to target areas of need and reduce health inequalities – breastfeeding Project Group; immunisation uptake rates had improved overall; and a Hospital Alcohol Liaison Team had been established at Leighton Hospital to identify and treat those admitted to hospital as a result of drinking or whose alcohol misuse compromised their care.

*      Chapter Two – provided a commentary on opportunities to improve the public’s health through making every contact count; taking an asset approach – eg looking to co-design service with communities; the Localism Act and the role NHS Commissioners played in improving public health.

*      Chapter Three – this chapter focused on public health support to NHS Commissioning, through support to the Clinical Commissioning Groups’ Commissioning Plans, priority setting systems and policy making and review.  Public health could contribute in a number of areas including addressing excess winter deaths through recommending an increase in flu vaccines in certain areas, addressing emergency admissions by children into hospital where it was felt over half could be avoided through measures such as reducing exposure to tobacco smoke and improving living environments. 

*      Dr Grimbaldeston further outlined the purpose of the Public Health Outcomes Framework (PHOF).  The public health system was to be refocused around achieving positive health outcomes and reducing health inequalities rather than being focused on process targets.  The vision of the PHOF was “To improve and protect the nation’s health and wellbeing and improve the health of the poorest fastest”.     

 

In discussing the presentation, Members raised the following points:

*      Whether smoking awareness was part of the school curriculum as it was suggested that there was a lack of teaching about the dangers of smoking?  In response, Dr Grimbaldeston agreed that there was a risk that success in smoking cessation initiatives could lead to complacency,  ...  view the full minutes text for item 20