The future of primary care – future models of care, integrated care and Fuller Stocktake
10 October 2022
Join us and Reset Health for a special event featuring Professor Claire Fuller looking at new models of primary care and how the recommendations of the recent Fuller Stocktake report on integrated primary medical services can be taken forward by systems.
The Fuller Stocktake, which was published in late May this year, outlines:
- a new vision for primary care driven by a population health management approach
- what can be done to accelerate the implementation of integrated primary care
- a series of recommendations for local and national leaders
The event will bring together system leaders and primary care providers from across England’s 42 ICSs to discuss:
- Future care models
- The key challenges facing primary care and their solutions
- The key recommendations of the Fuller Stocktake report
- How system leaders can utilise and act on the framework for action
- Share areas of good practice happening across ICSs
Join us as we explore the answers to these questions together with an expert group of speakers including:
- Professor Claire Fuller, Chief Executive, Surrey Heartlands Integrated Care System
- Simon Hall, Principal Consultant, Good Governance Institute
- Grant Harrison, Co-Founder & Chief Strategy Officer, Reset Health
The session will be chaired by myself Professor Andrew Corbett-Nolan, Chief Executive at the Good Governance Institute.
To register, please complete the short registration form below
About the contributors:
Prof. Claire Fuller, Chief Executive, Surrey Heartlands Integrated Care System
Professor Claire Fuller, a practicing GP, is Chief Executive of the Surrey Heartlands Integrated Care System (ICS) which came into effect formally on 1st July 2022. Prior to that, Claire was Senior Responsible Officer for the ICS, a role she held since 2017, alongside that of Interim Accountable Officer for NHS Surrey Heartlands CCG (from 2020).
In November 2021 Claire was invited by NHS England Chief Executive Amanda Pritchard to lead a national piece of work looking at primary care within integrated care systems to identify what was working well and why. The output became known as the Fuller Stocktake and was co-signed by all 42 ICS Chief Executives who committed to the recommendations. Next steps for integrating primary care: the Fuller stocktake was published in May 2022.
Claire champions true citizen and professional engagement (of the broadest remit) and believes in a population health management approach to improving patient outcomes. She is also a firm advocate of the need to join up the public sector to ensure involvement of the wider determinants of health in reducing health inequalities for the people that live in Surrey.
Claire has been a practicing GP since 1995, spending most of her career in Surrey, with a spell in Northumberland, where she worked in a single-handed rural practice.
Claire regularly speaks nationally about the importance of multi-professional leadership, integrated care and population health, as well as the impact and implementation of the Fuller Stocktake. She has been HSJ Clinical Leader of the Year and is regularly named in the HSJ list of most influential people in the NHS. She is a member of the NHS Assembly and the NHS People Board.
Claire has also been appointed as Visiting Professor in the Faculty of Health and Medical Science at Surrey University for the period April 2021 to April 2024.
Prof. Andrew Corbett-Nolan, Chief Executive, GGI
Professor Andrew Corbett-Nolan is the Chief Executive of the Good Governance Institute, which he founded in 2009. He is well-known as a leading thinker and commentator on modern governance, and a practical facilitator and coach to boards across the public and third sectors.
Andrew’s leadership of GGI is associated with developing a mature understanding of the challenges for boards in the modern world.
Heavily influenced by the work of Professor Mervyn King, Andrew sits on the board of the Johannesburg-based Good Governance Academy which is working to influence the curricula of business schools and universities globally. And in 2020 he became a Salzburg Global Fellow for his work promoting good governance as a means of creating social value, securing a prosperous future that is better and fairer for all.
Simon Hall, Principal Consultant, Good Governance Institute
Simon Hall joined GGI on secondment in June 2022 as principal consultant (system strategy). Before GGI he worked as transformation director in the North East London ICS, where he led the Covid vaccination programme, delivering 3.6 million jabs to local people.
Simon has 34 years’ experience in the NHS, local and central government. He is experienced at navigating the balance between system and place, and developed the system response to the NHS Long Term Plan for NE London. He also serves on the London HIV Fast Track Cities Leadership Group (to eliminate HIV and the stigma attached to it) which won the International Excellence Award for HIV Services in October 2021.
Simon has led transformation programmes across all of north east London including cancer services, maternity, end of life care, children and young people’s health and care, and sustainability. As managing director of Tower Hamlets CCG (2016-18) Simon established governance arrangements for joint commissioning, led the transformation of GP services focused on quality improvement methodology, and led the Tower Hamlets Together Vanguard. During his leadership of the CCG, it achieved an Outstanding rating from NHS England twice, was nominated for 2017 Health Service Journal CCG of the Year, and achieved high rankings for patient and public involvement and staff satisfaction.
Simon has always been a community activist and has been actively involved in a number of voluntary organisations and societies at board level since 1986. Since 2018, he has been a trustee of Metro (an equality and diversity charity in south east London) and has been its treasurer since 2019. He is also an experienced trustee of a multi-academy (schools) trust, with schools in the London Boroughs of Tower Hamlets and Greenwich. He is also a passionate internationalist and a proud parent.
Grant Harrison, Co-Founder and Chief Strategy Officer, Reset Health
Grant designed, launched and managed Tesco Clubcard becoming the youngest Tesco Director at 32 years old in 1997. His subsequent career built on customer experience and innovation and then moved into healthcare, setting up Virgin Pulse in the US and leading Customer Innovation at Humana in Louisville, Kentucky.
Grant is now the Chief Strategy Officer and a Founder of Reset Health. Reset Health uses time-restricted eating, intermittent fasting, psychology and nutritional guidance to literally reset the body’s metabolic physiology over a period of 12 weeks. During this period, Reset Health offers
24/7 support from its specialist clinical team and every participant is allocated a mentor who has already been through the process to provide support and guidance based on their real-life experience.
Using video, instant messaging and phone calls instead of face-to-face consultations means the programme is much easier to fit into a busy working life. Once this vital change has been made, the Reset Health support system continues for a further nine months to help ensure that diet and lifestyle changes stick.