Your browser is no longer supported. Please upgrade your browser to improve your experience.

VCSE health partnership takes gold at NHS Parliamentary Awards

Ellen Rudge, Comms Manager
Ellen Rudge
15 October 2024
colleagues posing after winning award

L-R, Kate Shields, Chief Executive Officer, NHS Cornwall and Isles of Scilly Integrated Care Board, Emma Rowse, Chief Executive, Cornwall Voluntary Sector Forum, Errol Cordle, Assistant Director Integrated Commissioning at NHS

The ground-breaking work of health, care and community services in Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly have today been recognised with a win at the national NHS Parliamentary Awards.

The ceremony in London highlighted the collaborative approach across the local integrated care system, which sees NHS and social care teams work with community and voluntary partners, at scale, to support residents.

Nominees were able to show “individuals or teams who go above and beyond to improve outcomes and experiences for patients living with and beyond these major health conditions or work to prevent them.”

The national awards are organised by NHS England, with nominations invited from all English MPs.

Among the partners involved in this work are disAbility Cornwall and Isles of Scilly, Home First, Age UK Cornwall, Volunteer Cornwall, CHAOS Group, Pentreath and Humans Cornwall, the Short Term Enablement Planning Service (STEPS), Cornwall Voluntary Sector Forum (VSF) and NHS Cornwall and Isles of Scilly Integrated Care Board.

Together they are helping people to stay independent in their own homes by providing support that avoids hospital admission or enables earlier discharge. This includes:

  • the Community Gateway helpline; which took 48,000 calls and provided 7,000 personal support plans over 1 year, and is open 365 days a year
  • the network of more than 50 community hubs; which has supported roughly 1 in 4 people in Cornwall
  • Penhallow ‘Home from Home’; which offers step down care for people leaving hospital
  • The Hospital to home reablement service; which supports 56 people a week to leave hospital

After Cornwall and Isles of Scilly won the regional awards earlier this year, judges said “This shows the huge potential of integrating community support into health and care services. A model that could potentially be emulated across the country.”

They commented on “a terrific example of what can be achieved by working with more than 60 voluntary organisations to make a real difference to people across Cornwall” and noted that “tens of thousands have been helped to stay well and to get home quicker after hospital treatment.”

Local residents, who have been helped by these services include James, who was helped with transport to appointments following a stroke, Margaret, who had food shopping after her hospital stay, and Bill, who was introduced to his local community hub after the loss of his wife.

Read more