Setting up ICPs will allow primary medical services to be run
through the same contract as other health and care services
such as social care for the first time.
ICPs are designed to:
- bring care services together through a single contract,
so patients’ care is coordinated around them
- deliver more care in the community and patients’ homes,
improving access to services and reducing trips to hospital
At the moment it is complicated for different NHS
organisations to deliver integrated care while each
organisation holds its own independent contract with
commissioners.
The changes to the law introduced by the government today
will make sure ICPs have to follow the same rules as other
NHS or care organisations, for example around complaints
procedures and the reimbursement of travel expenses.
GPs who wish to integrate with an ICP can easily transfer
their services from previous contracts to a new ICP contract,
if they choose to do so.
The participation of any individual practice or GP is
entirely voluntary, and their role in an ICP will be for them
to decide.
The NHS Long Term Plan confirmed that NHS England would make
the ICP contract available for use from 2019. The contract is
expected to be held by statutory providers, such as NHS
foundation trusts.
Any bids for the contract will be reviewed by local
clinicians and NHS staff to ensure it is the most effective
and beneficial organisation for the local area.
Before the first contracts are awarded, proposals will be
scrutinised through the integrated support and assurance
process.
Minister for Health said:
As part of our Long Term Plan for the NHS, which is backed
by £20.5 billion extra a year by 2023 to 2024, we want to
make sure care fits around patients and not the other way
round. These new regulations are a crucial step towards
more integrated care for patients in England.
Integrated care providers will give local areas the power
to integrate care by bringing all the different healthcare
services provided to local residents into a single
contract.
For patients it should mean fewer trips to hospital and
more care in the community, and allows health and care
services to work together seamlessly with a greater focus
on preventative, proactive and coordinated care.