North West Region - Integrated Care System Chairs

Applicant Information Pack

. Cheshire & Integrated Care System Chair . Greater Manchester Integrated Care System Chair

For an informal discussion, please email [email protected] or [email protected] or call 0161 498 3413 to speak with Gillian Powell or Peter Mason.

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Contents

The Opportunity and Role Description 3

Background Information on the Cheshire and Merseyside ICS 12

Background Information on the Greater Manchester ICS 38

How to Apply 53

We value and promote diversity and are committed to equality of opportunity for all. We believe that the best boards are those that reflect the communities they serve.

We prioritise Equality, Diversity and Inclusion, team health and wellbeing and the principles of kind leadership in our 'ways of working'. All postholders will have a key role in nurturing this culture.

Our recruitment processes are conducted in accordance with the principles of Cabinet Office The Governance Code for Public Appointments to ensure that they are made on merit after a fair and open process so that the best people, from the widest possible pool of applicants, are appointed.

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1. The opportunity

Integrated care systems (ICSs) are partnerships of health and care organisations, local government and the voluntary sector. They exist to improve population health, tackle health inequalities, enhance productivity and help the NHS support broader social and economic development. They will take on statutory form following the implementation of proposed legislation from April 2022 and will comprise an Integrated Care Board (ICB) which will take on CCGs’ functions and broader strategic responsibility for setting healthcare strategies for the system. The ICB will work with an Integrated Care Partnership (ICP) committee formed jointly with Local Authority Partners. Together the ICP and ICB will become the ICS. We are looking for candidates who will develop these systems, first as the chair of the non-statutory ICS, and later as chair of the statutory ICB, and, subject to legislation, support the proposed establishment of each system’s new statutory arrangements.

Originally created as part of the NHS’s NHS Long Term Plan, there are 42 ICSs covering the whole of England, each serving between 500,000 and three million people. Each will hold substantial budget for commissioning high quality patient care and driving health and care improvements for their communities. The chair will lead a unitary board which will bring together leaders from across all parts of the NHS, local government, social care and the voluntary, community and social enterprise sector.

2. Role priorities, accountabilities, responsibilities and competencies

Please note: the following Role Description is dependent on legislation. Appointees will be taken on in the first instance as Independent Chair of the current Integrated Care System (ICS) and designate Chair of the anticipated NHS Integrated Care Board (ICB).

Final appointment to the role of Chair of the ICB, as described below, would be dependent on the passage of the Health and Care Bill, and any potential amendments made to that Bill. Indication is given where the role is initially for the ICS and anticipated to become for the ICB.

Priorities

The Chair is accountable for ensuring there is a long-term, viable strategy in place for the delivery of the functions, duties and objectives of the Integrated Care System / Integrated Care Board and for the stewardship of public money.

The Chair champions action to help meet the four core purposes of Integrated Care Systems; to improve outcomes in population health and healthcare; tackle inequalities in outcomes, experience and access; enhance productivity and value for money and help the NHS support broader social and economic development.

The Chair is an ambassador for and champion of effective partnership working with local government and NHS bodies, collaborative leadership and new governance arrangements across the Integrated Care System. Accountabilities

Independent, non-executive Chair of the ICS/ICB and accountable to the NHS England Regional Director for the development and delivery of the plan of the ICS/ICB.

The Chair would ensure the ICB is properly constituted and focused on improving outcomes in population health and healthcare, and encouraging greater partnership,

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integration and collaboration; both within the NHS and between the NHS and local government.

The Chair would have a responsibility to establish and lead the unitary board of the ICB; which has joint collective and corporate accountability for the performance of the organisation, ensuring its functions are effectively and efficiently discharged and for NHS resources deployed to other organisations.

The Chair provides strong leadership on issues that impact upon organisations and workforce across the ICS, including integration, the People agenda, Digital transformation, Emergency Preparedness, Resilience and Response (EPRR) and Covid- 19 challenges.

They will play a key role during 2021 / 2022 in preparing for the anticipated new statutory arrangements, with a view to ensuring that the ICB would meet its statutory duties, build strong partnerships and governance arrangements with system partners and take on commissioning functions from CCGs and NHS England.

Roles and responsibilities / competencies

Strategy and transformation

• Leads the board in setting a vision, strategy and clear objectives for the ICS/ICB in delivering on the four core purposes of the ICS, the triple aim and the body’s regulatory responsibilities. • Holds the ICS Leader / ICB Chief Executive to account for delivery of the strategy of the ICS/ ICB, the plan for the delivery of health services for the population and effective stewardship of public money. • Works with Local Government partners to establish the Integrated Care Partnership, establishing a strong relationship between the Board and the Partnership, and a dynamic which encourages a strong focus on health and care outcomes for the population.

Partnerships and communities

• Is an ambassador for system working and collective accountability, building strong partnerships and promoting effective dialogue across the ICS, with local government, NHS England and broader partnerships including the voluntary sector, to ensure joint planning and delivery, working through potential conflicts of interest. • Engages Chairs and NEDs in partners across the system to work in a collaborative manner and build consensus. • May act as the ICS Partnership Chair in addition to ICB Chair role. Otherwise, works with the ICS Partnership Chair to shape the new ICS Partnership and align the work of the ICB, with local government through the ICB. • Establishes shared strategic priorities within the NHS in partnership with local government to tackle population health challenges and enhance services across health and social care.

Social justice and health equalities

• Advocates and champions for diversity, health equality and social justice. Fosters strong partnership arrangements with local government and wider partners to deliver these aims.

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• Ensures the ICS is responsive to people and communities – and that public, patient and carer voices are embedded in all of the ICS’s/ICB’s plans and activities. • Promotes the values of the NHS Constitution a and role models the behaviours embodied in Our People Promise and forthcoming Leadership Way to ensure a collaborative, inclusive and productive approach across the system.

Sustainable outcomes

• Leads the system through aligning partners in the implementation of the Long Term Plan a and the People Plan, overseeing progress against their objectives. • Oversees the purposeful arrangements for effective clinical and professional care leadership throughout the ICS. • Fosters a culture of research, innovation, learning and continuous improvement, to support the delivery of high quality services for all. • Ensures the NHS plays its part in social and economic development and achieving environmental sustainability, including the Carbon Net Zero commitment.

Governance and assurance

• Responsible for leading the board and ensuring it has the necessary constitutional and governance arrangements and committee structures in place to ensure its effectiveness. • Leads and supports a constructive and inclusive dynamic within the board, bringing independent and respectful challenge to the work programme and prioritisation. • Actively brings in a range of voices to discussions, ensuring decisions take full account of perspectives from across the health and care system. • Acts as the guardian of effective system governance; establishing strong place-based arrangements together with local government and dynamic joint working and governance with local partners, championing subsidiarity of decision making. • Promotes open and transparent decision-making processes that facilitate consensus and manages areas of disagreement to deliver exceptional outcomes.

People and culture

• Responsible for appointing the ICS Leader / ICB Chief Executive and independent Non-Executive Directors (NEDs) with approval from NHS England, and ensuring they are supported and developed to maximise their contribution. Responsible for approving nominated ICB Partner member appointments. • Together with the ICS Leader / ICB Chief Executive, provides visible leadership in developing a healthy and inclusive culture for the organisation which promotes diversity, encourages and enables system working and which is reflected and modelled in their own and the board’s behaviour and decision-making. • Responsible for ensuring all members of the board, including the Partner members, comply with the Nolan Principles of Public Life and meet the Fit and Proper Persons test.. • As the ICS matures, the Chair would be expected to be actively engaged in NHS provider Chair and CEO appointments.

Scope and Scale

Information specific to each NHS region and individual ICS Chair vacancy are included in the individual ICS Locality Pack

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4. Person Specification

This section may be subject to change due to development of legislation.

In order to be considered for this role, you should have the following attributes:

Knowledge

• Extensive knowledge of the health, care and local government landscape • An understanding of different sectors, groups, networks and the needs of diverse populations • A deep understanding of the NHS triple aim (of improved population health, quality of care and cost- control), the Kark review, and commitment to the values of the NHS Long Term Plan, the NHS • People Plan, Nolan principles and the Standards for members of NHS Boards and Governing • Bodies in England • An awareness and appreciation of social justice and how it might apply within an ICS • Sound understanding of good corporate governance as well as the difference between governance and management

Experience

• Extensive experience of providing compassionate and inclusive leadership in a role such as a Chair or Non-executive Director, at board or equivalent level in a complex public sector organisation such as; an NHS provider, Local Authority or CCG or have suitable leadership experience independent of the system • Comprehensive experience of chairing complex professional meetings at a very senior level in a collaborative, efficient and effective manner • Considerable experience of navigating politically sensitive situations and environments • Significant experience of working with different sectors, groups, networks and building teams to deliver major transformation of public services • Broad experience of working across agency and professional boundaries, collaboratively with the board and other stakeholders to oversee services and consult on transformation initiatives • Experience of providing leadership and governance of a board, to identify and address issues, including underperformance and balance the competing objectives of quality, operational performance, and finance • Track record of promoting Equality Diversity and Inclusion in leadership roles at board level and across systems

Skills

• The ability to lead and build strong relationships across different sectors, and to adapt to changing situations • Exceptional communication skills and be comfortable presenting in a variety of contexts, with experience of dealing with the media and / or politicians on topics of healthcare or other public sector activities • Ability to remain independent and neutral to provide independent and unbiased leadership of the board with a high degree of personal integrity • Highly developed interpersonal and influencing skills, with the ability to lead in a creative environment which enables people to thrive and collaborate

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• Problem solving skills and the ability to identify issues and areas of risk, leading stakeholders to effective resolutions and decisions • The ability to thrive and innovate in a complex and politically charged environment of change and uncertainty • Confidence in constructively challenging information and explanations provided by others and negotiating when needed • Understanding of your own strengths and the strengths of others, and where these are best deployed to solve challenges

Values

• Demonstrates respect and adopts a compassionate and inclusive leadership style with a demonstrable commitment to equality, diversity and inclusion (in respect of boards, patients and staff). • Creates and lives by the values of openness and transparency • Works to espouse the values set out in the NHS People Plan, Nolan Principles and soon to be published Leadership Way. • Demonstrate a strong commitment to public sector and NHS values

Key Competencies

Outlined above in the roles and responsibilities / competencies section are the six competency domains that illustrate some of the key behaviours we expect an ICS Chair to exhibit.

The ICS Chair role and person specification have been agreed nationally and will provide a consistent framework for assessment based around the emerging Leadership Competency Framework. A summary person specification included as a graphic below groups the knowledge, experience, skills and values criteria within the competencies outlined above for ease of reference.

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Eligibility

The successful applicants will not have an ongoing leadership role at an organisation within the same ICS footprint. Applicants will need to stand down from such a role if appointed to the ICB Chair role. Elected officials including MPs and members of councils are excluded from the NHS ICB chair role.

Applicants should have strong connections with the area served by the ICS.

Given the significant public profile and responsibility members of NHS Boards hold, it is vital that those appointed inspire confidence of the public, patients and NHS staff at all times. NHS England / NHS Improvement makes a number of specific background checks to ensure that those we appoint are “fit and proper” people to hold these important roles. More information can be found on our website.

Applications will be assessed on merit, as part of a fair and open process, from the widest possible pool of candidates. The information provided by applicants will be relied on to assess whether sufficient personal responsibility and competence have been demonstrated in previous/other roles, to satisfy the experience, skills and values being sought.

We value and promote diversity and are committed to equality of opportunity for all. We believe that the best boards are those that reflect the communities they serve.

• 50% of the working age population and 77% of the NHS workforce are women • 14% of the working age population and 23% of the NHS workforce are from ethnic minorities • 16% of working age population and 5% of the NHS workforce are disabled • 2% of the population over 16 and 3% of the NHS workforce identify as LGB • 82% of working age adults and 79% of the NHS workforce are under 551

We want to increase the diversity of our NHS leadership and encourage applications from groups we know are all under-represented in these important roles. We prioritise Equality, Diversity and Inclusion, team health and wellbeing and the principles of kind leadership in our 'ways of working'. The successful applicants will have a key role in nurturing this culture.

Terms of appointment

This section may be subject to change due to development of the legislation.

• The remuneration for this role will be competitive with reference to other such senior roles in the NHS. • Initial term of appointment as current ICS chair and designate ICB chair until the establishment of the ICB. The subsequent term of office as ICB chair would be confirmed if and when the legislation is in place and would be in accordance with the provisions of the constitution of the ICB. • You will have considerable flexibility to decide how you manage the time needed to undertake this role. • On average, it will require a minimum 2.5 to 3 days a week, including preparation time, the occasional evening engagement and events designed to support your continuous development.

Page 11 Cheshire and Merseyside

Chair Appointment

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OFFICIAL-SENSITIVE Cheshire and Merseyside Footprint Overview • Population of approx. 2.6 million • The STP/ ICS area is the 2nd largest footprint in England* • Complex system and late developer in ICS terms • 17 Providers** • 9 CCGs • 9 Local Authorities • 9 Places

*Taken from 2016 Sustainability and Transformation Plan ** And NWAS Page 13

OFFICIAL-SENSITIVE NHS Southport and Southport and Ormskirk All Current C&M HCP Organisations Formby CCG Hospital NHS Trust (S&O) Sefton Council NHS Knowsley Alder Hey CCG NHS St Helens CCG Children’s NHS FT NHS South Sefton CCG The Walton Centre NHS FT St Helens Council Wirral Community Health Mersey Care NHS FT and Care NHS FT (WCHC)

Liverpool City Council St Helens and Knowsley Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust (STHKTH)

NHS Wirral CCG NHS Warrington CCG Wirral University Teaching NHS Halton Council Hospital NHS FT (WUTH) CCG NHS Halton CCG Wirral Metropolitan Liverpool Liverpool Borough Council University Women’s Knowsley Council Warrington Borough Council Hospitals NHS FT NHS FT The Clatterbridge Cancer Bridgewater Community Centre NHS FT (CCC) Liverpool Heart and Chest NHS FT (LHCH) Healthcare NHS FT (BCH) Countess of Chester NHS Cheshire CCG Warrington and Halton Hospital NHS FT (COCH) Hospitals NHS Trust (WHH) Key Cheshire West and Cheshire and Wirral Chester Council East Cheshire NHS Local Authority Partnership NHS FT (CWP) Trust Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG) Cheshire East Council Mid-Cheshire Trust Page 14 Hospital NHS FT OFFICIAL-SENSITIVE Cheshire and Merseyside Footprint Overview • 2.6 million people • Similar age structure to England • More young people in Liverpool • More older people in Sefton and Cheshire East

• Deprivation levels vary significantly across the sub-region

https://www.cheshireandmerseysidepartnership.co.uk/wp- content/uploads/2021/03/Ethnicity-profiles-in-Cheshire-Merseyside.pdf

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OFFICIAL-SENSITIVE Why the ICS opportunity is important to us

• We need to collectively respond to the needs of our population and communities: • High indices of deprivation • Complexity and variety of individual need • Inequalities of access and outcomes

• There is now pan system recognition and will for a system-wide step change - responding to shared challenges across health and care but ALSO beyond

• We need a framework which allows us to capitalise upon and embed increased democratic linkages and clear connections with communities

• We need a financially sustainable system that can respond to and support the system’s infrastructure needs

• There is growing international evidence that the only effective way to address these problems is through collaboration and integration

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OFFICIAL-SENSITIVE Life expectancy

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OFFICIAL-SENSITIVE Why the gap • Causes of death in the North West

• Causes of death and disability combined (DALYs) in the North West

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OFFICIAL-SENSITIVE Why are we doing this?

• The NHS has been largely organized to provide episodic treatment for acute illness • However it now needs, more than ever to deliver joined up support for increasing numbers of older people and those living with chronic conditions • There continues to be an unacceptable inequality in the health of our population and life expectancy is stalling • The wider determinants of health are well known but often tackled in silos • The integration of health and care has the potential to drive improvements in population health by reaching beyond the NHS to involve local authorities and other agencies to tackle the wider determinants of health that drive longer term health outcomes and inequalities.

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OFFICIAL-SENSITIVE HCP Vision, Mission and Aims

Vision: • We want everyone in Cheshire and Merseyside to have a great start in life and get the support they need to stay healthy and live longer Mission: • We will tackle health inequalities and improve the lives of our poorest fastest. We believe we can do this best by working in partnership Aims: • Improve the health and wellbeing of local people • Shift from an illness focus to a health and wellbeing model • Provide better joined up care, closer to home

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OFFICIAL-SENSITIVE Page 21

OFFICIAL-SENSITIVE How we see that collaboration can occur

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OFFICIAL-SENSITIVE Our emerging system

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OFFICIAL-SENSITIVE C&M ICS Programme Overview

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OFFICIAL-SENSITIVE Cheshire and Merseyside Overview

Primary Care Networks 51 Place 9 C&M HCP 1

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OFFICIAL-SENSITIVE Table from Designing integrated care systems (ICSs) in England Our Places or ICPs • Clinical care redesign (including (simplifying and standardising care pathways) • Forming provider partnerships and alliances (including GPs) to redesign and integrate services • Developing new provider models • Joining up council/ hospital/ community services • Closer working with LA and VCS partners on prevention and health inequalities • Population health management Integrated Place Based Care • Planning, managing and delivering services together for our populations in our neighbourhoods would enable us to focus on need be that a health need or a wider determinant of health need • Linking education, employment and service delivery in a Place/Borough enables us to shape our workforce and build resilience and opportunity in communities • Linking health skills and knowledge with housing and care across our neighbourhoods enables us to support our families in need or at risk of harm How • Will involve local discussion, influence or decision making • Alignment with appropriate governance structures – statutory roles like HWBB and OSCs but also decisions • Some local choices – our place development priorities are summarized within the annex

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OFFICIAL-SENSITIVE Provider Collaboratives Preferred approach: • Two provider collaboratives: one for acute and specialist services and one for mental health, learning disability and community services. Each to have a lead • The groups should be convened under a single provider collaborative ‘partnership’ where there are issues to be addressed that require all providers to be engaged • Initial priorities to be established Q2 onward 21/22 • Development of culture, infrastructure and shared decision making principles need to align to development of priorities • Collaboration should support efficiency, improved quality and the closer system working with opportunity to delegate

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OFFICIAL-SENSITIVE Annexes

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OFFICIAL-SENSITIVE Key Reference Documents • Integrating care: Next steps to building strong and effective integrated care systems across England • Integration and innovation: working together to improve health and social care for all • FRC guidance on Board Effectiveness https://www.frc.org.uk/getattachment/61232f60-a338-471b- ba5abfed25219147/2018-Guidance-on-Board-Effectiveness-FINAL.PDF • Recast ICS Strategy 2021-25 • Health and Care Partnership Memorandum of Understanding1 • Cheshire and Merseyside People Plan • Getting under the skin research and BAME action plan1 1 Supplied upon request

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OFFICIAL-SENSITIVE Our Place & Place Priorities HCP is committed to devolved decision making. Taking decisions closer to populations but also supporting integration around neighbourhoods and with local partners where appropriate. Responsibilities, teams and decisions will be established at a system level where it makes sense to do so and the greatest potential for improvement can be achieved. This means we need to be focused on developing our places as well as our ICS system: 1) Integrated Care Partnership (ICP) Governance: clearly defined formal arrangements for place partners to meet and work together to deliver outcomes set by the Health & Wellbeing Board (HWB) and ICS. 2) ICP nominated ‘Place Lead’ with remit for integrated working who will connect with ICS 3) Shared vision and plan for reducing inequalities and improving outcomes of local people approved by HWB (underpinned by local population health and socio-economic intelligence) 4) Agreed ICP development plan 5) Defined footprints (e.g. neighbourhoods) for delivery of integrated care, clinically led by PCNs working with social care, community, mental health, public health and other community groups. 6) Programme of ongoing public and wider stakeholder engagement at place Places will be expected to develop an integrated approach to commissioning between health and local authority (such as shared posts, joint teams and pooled budgets) to underpin and support the work of thePage ICP30 OFFICIAL-SENSITIVE Political Make up of C&M Councils Council Political Make Up Next Election Liverpool City Labour (maj) May 2022 Halton Labour (maj) May 2022 Sefton Labour (maj) May 2022 St Helens Labour (maj) May 2022 Knowsley Labour (maj) May 2022 Cheshire West and Chester NOC (Labour min) May 2023 Cheshire East NOC (Labour and Ind) May 2023 Warrington Labour (maj) May 2024 Wirral NOC (Lab min) May 2022

20 | Presentation title Page 31 OFFICIAL-SENSITIVE List of Cheshire and Merseyside MPs

• Chris Matheson (City of Chester, Lab) • (Bootle, Lab) • Fiona Bruce (Congleton, Con) • (Garston & Halewood, Lab) • Kieran Mullan (Crewe & Nantwich, Con) • (Knowsley, Lab) • Edward Timpson (Eddisbury, Con) • (Liverpool Riverside, Lab) • (Liverpool Walton, Lab) • (Ellesmere Port & Neston, Lab) • (Liverpool Wavertree, Lab) • (Halton, Lab) • Ian Byrne (Liverpool West Derby, Lab) • David Rutley (Macclesfield, Con) • (Sefton Central, Lab) • Esther McVey (Tatton, Con) • Damien Moore (Southport, Con) • (Warrington North, Lab) • Conor McGinn (St Helens North, Lab) • Andy Carter (Warrington South, Con) • (St Helens South & Whiston, Lab) • (Weaver Vale, Lab) • (Wallasey, Lab) • (Birkenhead, Lab) • Alison McGovern (Wirral South, Lab) • (Wirral West, Lab) 21 | Presentation title Page 32 OFFICIAL-SENSITIVE Place, CCG & Local Authority Continuity

Local Authority CCG Wirral Council Wirral CCG

CheshireWest and Chester Council Cheshire CCG CheshireEast Council

Halton Council Halton CCG

Warrington Council Warrington CCG

Liverpool City Council Liverpool CCG

St Helen’s Council St Helens CCG

Knowsley Council Knowsley CCG

South Sefton CCG Sefton Council Southport & Formby CCG

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OFFICIAL-SENSITIVE C&M Trusts Most Recent CQC Rating Trust Rating & Date Alder Hey Children's NHS Foundation Trust Good (April 2021) Bridgewater Community Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust Requires Improvement(December 2018) Cheshire and Wirral Partnership NHS Foundation Trust Good (June 2020) Clatterbridge Cancer Centre NHS Foundation Trust Good (April 2019)

Countess of Chester Hospital NHS Foundation Trust Countess of Chester:Requires Improvement (May 2019)

East Cheshire NHS Trust Good (October 2019) Liverpool Heart and Chest Hospital NHS Foundation Trust Outstanding (July 2019) Liverpool University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust Good (January 2021) Liverpool Women's Hospital NHS Foundation Trust Good (April 2020) Mersey Care NHS Foundation Trust Good (April 2019) Mid Cheshire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust Good (April 2020) North West Ambulance Service NHS Trust Good (June 2020) Southport and Ormskirk Hospital NHS Trust Requires Improvement (November 2019) St Helens and Knowsley Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust Outstanding(March 2019) The Walton Centre NHS Foundation Trust Outstanding (August 2019) Warrington and Halton Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust Good (July 2019) Wirral Community Health & Care NHS Foundation Trust Requires Improvement (July 2018) Wirral University Teaching Hospital NHS Foundation Trust Requires Improvement (April 2021)

23 | Page 34 OFFICIAL-SENSITIVE NHS Provider contacts

Alder Hey Children’s Hospital NHS FT Louise Shepherd CEO [email protected]

Bridgewater Community Healthcare NHS FT Colin Scales CEO [email protected]

Cheshire and Wirral Partnership NHS FT Sheena Cumiskey CEO [email protected]

Countess of Chester NHS Foundation Hospital Dr Susan Gilby CEO [email protected]

Clatterbridge Cancer Centre NHS Foundation Liz Bishop CEO [email protected] Truts East Cheshire NHS Trust John Wilbraham CEO [email protected]

Liverpool University Foundation Trust Steve Warburton CEO [email protected]

Liverpool Heart and Chest Hospital NHS Jane Tomkinson CEO [email protected] Foundation Trust

Liverpool Women’s Hospital NHS Foundation Kathryn Thompson CEO [email protected] Trust Mersey Care NHS Foundation Truts Joe Rafferty CEO [email protected]

Mid Cheshire Hospital NHS Foundation Trust James Sumner CEO [email protected]

Southport and Ormskirk NHS Trust Trish Armstrong-Child CEO [email protected]

St Helens and Knowsley Hospitals NHS Trust Ann Marr CEO [email protected]

Warrington and Halton Hospitals NHS Foundation Dr Simon Constable CEO [email protected] Trust Wirral Community Health and Care NHS FT Karen Howell CEO [email protected]

Wirral University Hospital Trust Janelle Holmes CEO [email protected] 24 | Page 35 OFFICIALThe -WaltonSENSITIVE Centre NHS Foundation Trust Jan Ross CEO [email protected] CCG Contacts

NHS Liverpool CCG Jan Ledward AO [email protected]

NHS Southport /Sefton CCG’s Fiona Taylor AO [email protected]

NHS St Helens CCG Mark Palethorpe AO [email protected]

NHS Cheshire CCG Clare Watson AO [email protected]

NHS Warrington CCG/ NHS Halton CCGs Andrew Davies AO [email protected]

NHS Knowsley CCG Dianne Johnson AO [email protected]

NHS Wirral CCG Simon Banks AO [email protected]

25 | Page 36 OFFICIAL-SENSITIVE Local Authority Contacts

St Helens Council Kath O’Dwyer CEO Katho’[email protected]

Warrington Council Steven Broomhead CEO [email protected]

Sefton Council Dwayne Johnson CEO [email protected]

Knowsley Council Mike Harden CEO [email protected]

Halton Council David Parr CEO [email protected]

Liverpool Council Tony Reeves CEO [email protected]

Wirral Council Paul Satoor CEO [email protected]

Cheshire West and Chester Council Andrew Lewis CEO [email protected] ov.uk

Cheshire East Council Lorraine O’Donnell CEO Lorraineo’[email protected]

26 | Page 37 OFFICIAL-SENSITIVE Chair Appointments – Greater Manchester ICS

NHS England and NHS Improvement

Page 38 Map of Area – Greater Manchester

Greater Manchester

Population size 2, 732,900 (2014) 2021 Estimated: 2, 846, 901 #Trusts 10 #CCGs 10 AND GLOSSOP #Providers 21

2 | Page 39 CCGs and the Local Authorities

CCG Local Authority (LA)

NHS Bolton Clinical Commissioning Group Bolton Council https://www.boltonccg.nhs.uk/ https://www.bolton.gov.uk/ NHS Bury Clinical Commissioning Group Bury Council https://www.buryccg.nhs.uk/ https://www.bury.gov.uk/ NHS Heywood, Middleton and Rochdale Clinical Commissioning Group Rochdale Borough Council https://www.hmr.nhs.uk/ http://www.rochdale.gov.uk/ NHS Manchester Clinical Commissioning Group Manchester City Council https://www.mhcc.nhs.uk/ https://www.manchester.gov.uk/ NHS Oldham Clinical Commissioning Group Oldham Council http://www.oldhamccg.nhs.uk/ https://www.oldham.gov.uk/ NHS Tameside and Glossop Clinical Commissioning Group Tameside Metropolitan Borough Council - https://www.tameside.gov.uk/ https://www.tamesideandglossopccg.org/ NHS Trafford Clinical Commissioning Group Trafford Council https://www.traffordccg.nhs.uk/Home.aspx https://www.trafford.gov.uk/Home.aspx NHS Salford Clinical Commissioning Group Salford Council https://www.salfordccg.nhs.uk/ https://www.salford.gov.uk/ NHS Stockport Clinical Commissioning Group Stockport Council https://www.stockportccg.nhs.uk/ https://www.stockport.gov.uk/ NHS Wigan Borough Clinical Commissioning Group Wigan Council https://healthierwigan.nhs.uk/ https://www.wigan.gov.uk/

3 | Page 40 Providers and CQC Ratings

Provider Current CQC rating and year of most recent inspection

The Pennine Acute Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust Good -2019 https://www.northerncarealliance.nhs.uk/• Providers Manchester• CQC NHS Foundation Trust Good - 2019 https://mft.nhs.uk/ Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust Outstanding -2018 https://www.northerncarealliance.nhs.uk/ The Christie NHS Foundation Trust Outstanding – 2018 https://www.christie.nhs.uk/ Greater Manchester Mental Health Foundation Trust Good – 2019 https://www.gmmh.nhs.uk/ Pennine Care NHS Foundation Trust Requires Improvement – 2018 https://www.penninecare.nhs.uk/ Tameside and Glossop Integrated Care NHS Foundation Trust Good - 2019 https://www.tamesidehospital.nhs.uk/ Stockport NHS Foundation Trust Requires Improvement – 2020 https://www.stockport.nhs.uk/ Bolton NHS Foundation Trust Good – 2019 https://www.boltonft.nhs.uk/ Wrightington, Wigan and Leigh Foundation Trust Good – 2019 https://www.wwl.nhs.uk/

4 | Page 41 Existing Organisations and Accountable officers (CCGs & Providers)

Provider Name Chair CEO CCG Chair Accountable Officer Bolton NHS Foundation Donna Hall CBE Fiona Noden NHS Bolton Clinical Dr Niruban Susan Long Trust Commissioning Group Ratnarajah The Christie NHS Chris Outram MBE Roger Spencer NHS Bury Clinical Dr Jeffrey Schryer Geoff Little Foundation Trust Commissioning Group Greater Manchester Rupert Nichols Neil Thwaite NHS Heywood, Middleton Dr Chris Duffy Steve Rumbelow Mental Health and Rochdale Clinical Foundation Trust Commissioning Group Manchester NHS Kathy Cowell OBE Sir Michael Deegan NHS Manchester Health Dr Ruth Bromley Ian Williamson Foundation Trust and Care Commissioning CBE The Pennine Acute Chris Outram MBE Patrick Crowley NHS Oldham Clinical Majid Hussain Dr Carolyn Wilkins Hospitals NHS Commissioning Group OBE Foundation Trust NHS Tameside and Glossop Dr Asad Ali Steven Pleasant Pennine Care NHS Evelyn Asante- Claire Molloy Clinical Commissioning Foundation Trust Mensah OBE Group Co-Chair Dr Ashwin MBE Ramachandra Salford Royal NHS Professor Michael Raj Jain NHS Trafford Clinical Dr Muhammad Sara Radcliffe Foundation Trust Luger Commissioning Group Imran Gareth James Stockport NHS Tony Warne Karen James OBE Foundation Trust NHS Salford Clinical Dr Tom Tasker Steve Dixon Commissioning Group Tameside and Glossop Jane McCall Karen James OBE Integrated Care NHS NHS Stockport Clinical Dr Cath Briggs Andrea Green Foundation Trust Commissioning Group Wrightington, Wigan Robert Armstrong Silas Nicholls NHS Wigan Borough Clinical Dr Tim Dalton Professor Craig and Leigh Foundation Commissioning Group Harris Trust

5 | Page 42 Local Authority Accountable officers

LA Leader Chief Exec DASS DPH Bolton Council David Greenhalgh Tony Oakman Rachel Tanner Dr Helen Lowey Greater Manchester Combined Authority Bury Council Eamonn O'Brien Geoff Little Adrian Crook Lesley Jones Rochdale Borough Neil Emmott Steve Rumbelow Claire Richardson Andrea Fallon Elected Mayor Andy Burnham Council

Manchester City Council Sir Richard Leese Joanne Roney OBE Bernie Enright David Regan Chief Exec Eamonn Boylan Oldham Council Arooj Shah Dr Carolyn Wilkins OBE Mark Warren Katrina Stephens Tameside Metropolitan Brenda Warrington Steven Pleasant MBE Stephanie Butterworth Jeanelle De Gruchy Borough Council

Trafford Council Andrew Western Sara Todd Diane Eaton Eleanor Roaf Salford Council Paul Dennett Tom Stannard Cath Gormally Muna Abdul Aziz Stockport Council Elise Wilson Pam Smith Mark Fitton Jennifer Connolly Wigan Council David Molyneux Alison McKenzie-Folan Stuart Cowley Kate Ardern

6 | Page 43 Greater Manchester Health and Social Care Partnership GM - CONFIRMED VISION, OBJECTIVES & PRIORITIES The GMHSC Partnership review reaffirmed our original vision & objectives which we are guided by. We have reaffirmed and refreshed our original objectives set out in Taking Charge To improve the health and wellbeing of all the residents of Greater Manchester . and the MoU.

-To use social value to tackle the inequalities around us and create lasting benefits for In doing so we have identified 4 main the people of GM, improve the local economy, whilst positively contributing (or at least minimising damage) to the environment; priorities -To close the health inequalities gap within GM and between GM and the rest of the UK faster; - To deliver effective & efficient integrated health and social care across GM; -To continue to redress the balance of care to move it closer to home where possible; 2. Guaranteeing - To strengthen the focus on wellbeing, including greater focus on prevention and 1. Tackling Constitutional population health; inequalities and Standards and -To ensure equality, diversity and inclusion are reflected in our leadership and guide our transforming eliminating priorities and all areas of our work population health unwarranted - To harness the breakthrough opportunities of digital technology for enhancing existing variation in care services and crafting novel services to give better outcomes to citizens and improved value for money; - To secure clinical & financial sustainability across the whole of the health and social 3. Connect health, 4. Achieve care landscape; social care, academia comprehensive - To contribute to growth and connect people to growth and maximise impact from and industry to system Sustainability health innovation and digital; - To further develop our partnership between the NHS, local government, universities discover, develop and across health and and science and knowledge industries for the benefit of the population. deploy innovation at social care for the Page 44 pace and scale long term. Greater Manchester Health GM ICS PROGRAMMEand Social Care Partnership OVERVIEW

1. Tackling inequalities and 2. Guaranteeing Constitutional 3. Develop and deploy 4. Achieve system Sustainability Priorities: transforming population health Standards and eliminating innovation at pace and scale across health and social care for unwarranted variation in care the long term.

Learning & GM Model Development Programme Insight

GM Model Design GM & Locality approach to People & GM and Place Health Functions, Financial Flows Culture Based Provider Innovation, Governance & Collaboratives Digital & Data Accountability

GM Model Implementation

GM & Local (ICS) Establishment & Safe transfer of functions GM System OD & Change Partnerships, HR & safe transition of our people Transition Communications & Engagement (aligned Transformation of functions & services workstreams) GM Operating Model MarchPage 452021 March 2022 * Governance currently under review as part of ICS GM Health & Social Care Development Partnership Governance*

GM Combined Authority and GM Mayor

GM Health and Care GM Reform Board Board Children’s Health and Wellbeing Baord

GM HSC Partnership Executive Board Health Innovation Manchester

Joint Commissioning Board Digital Collaborative Programme Finance Performance and Co-ordination Quality Board Provider Federation Executive Group Delivery Board Board Group Workforce Collaborative

Primary Care Advisory Board Strategic Estates Programme Governance Board

LCO Network

Page 46 GM Strategies Greater Manchester Health and Social Care Partnership

ORGANISATIONAL STRUCTURE – GM HEALTH & SOCIAL CARE PARTNERSHIP

Chief Officer

Executive Lead: Executive Lead: Executive Lead: Executive Lead: Medical Commissioning & Finance and Strategy & Workforce, OD & Executive Population Health Assurance Programmes System Leadership

Page 47 GM Strategies Greater Manchester Health and Social Care Partnership

LINKS TO GREATER MANCHESTER STRATEGIES Taking Charge – the Next Five Years – Our Prospectus: https://www.gmhsc.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/GMHSC-Partnership- Prospectus-The-next-5-years-pdf.pdf

Our People, Our Place – the Greater Manchester Strategy: https://www.greatermanchester- ca.gov.uk/media/1084/greater_manchester_summary___full_version.pdf

The Greater Manchester Model – Our White Paper on Unified Public Services for the People of Greater Manchester :https://www.greatermanchester- ca.gov.uk/media/2302/gtr_mcr_model1_web.pdf

Page 48 Whole region picture – North West

12 | Page 49 North West Region Mission Statement

13 | Page 50 North West Business Plan Summary

15 | Page 52 More information

The Government's White Paper on health and care reform place ICSs at the heart of the NHS. The four core purposes of an ICS are laid out in Integrating care: Next steps to building strong and effective integrated care systems across England, namely to improve outcomes in population health and healthcare; tackle inequalities in outcomes, experience and access; enhance productivity and value for money and help the NHS support broader social and economic development, all rooted in underlying principles of subsidiarity and collaboration.

Support in preparing your application:

• Building your application • Onboarding support, sources of information, useful reading • How we will handle your application and information • View all current chair and non-executive vacancies • Sign up to receive email alerts on the latest vacancies

NHS England / NHS Improvement respects your privacy and is committed to protecting your personal data. We will only use personal data where we have your consent or where we need to comply with a legal or statutory obligation. It is important that you read this information together with our privacy notice so that you are fully aware of how and why we are using your data

Making an application

For more information, you can get in touch with:

• Our advisors at Odgers Berndtson for an informal and confidential discussion about the ICS Chair role. Please email [email protected] or [email protected] or call 0161 498 3413 to speak with Gillian Powell or Peter Mason.

• Our Non-executive Talent and Appointments Team – for general enquiries about the selection process contact the team at [email protected]

If you wish to be considered for one of the roles please provide:

• Confirmation of the ICS Chair role you are applying for. You may apply for more than one role if you meet the criteria, but we strongly advise that you tailor and submit individual applications to be competitive

• a CV that includes your address and preferred contact details, highlighting and explaining any gaps in your employment history

• a supporting statement that highlights your skills and experience and allows insights on your values and motivations for applying for the role. You should outline your personal responsibility and achievement within previous roles that demonstrates you have the knowledge, skills and competencies to deliver this role, as outlined in the person specification (max 2,000 words)

Page 53 • the names, positions, organisations and contact details for three referees. Your referees should be individuals in a line management capacity (or senior stakeholders), and cover your most recent roles and employer, any regulated health or social care activity or where roles involved children or vulnerable adults. Your references will be taken prior to interview and may be shared with the selection panel

• a completed monitoring information form which accompanies this pack

• a completed self-declaration form confirming that you do not meet any of the criteria that would disqualify you from appointment

• tell us about any dates when you will not be available for the selection process This information should be emailed to [email protected] quoting “ICS Chair application” in the subject line and the reference number quoted in the individual ICS Locality Pack.

Preliminary selection: information provided by applicants will be relied on to assess whether sufficient personal responsibility and competence have been demonstrated in previous/other roles, to satisfy the experience, skills and values outlined in the person specification. Long-listed applicants may be invited for a preliminary interview. Feedback from any preliminary assessment will be given to the selection panel who will agree the applicants invited to interview.

Shortlisting: the selection panel will use the information provided by the applicants and feedback from any preliminary assessment to agree applicants invited to interview. Assessment will be based on merit against the competencies experience, skills and values outlined in the person specification.

Stakeholder event: shortlisted applicants will be expected to participate in a stakeholder engagement event or events to meet groups of key stakeholders. Feedback from these sessions will be shared with the selection panel. Further details and dates are included in the individual ICS Locality Pack on the website

Interviews: applicants will be asked to make a 5 -10 minute presentation to help the selection panel draw out the competencies, experience, skills and values outlined in the person specification. The formal interview will be 45 mins to an hour of open questions from the selection panel to showcase past experience and explore applicant’s values, motivations, creativity and ability.

Appointment: Selection panels will be asked to identify appointable candidates based on merit against the competencies experience, skills and values outlined in the person specification. The preferred candidate will be presented to NHS England and Improvement for appointment and the Secretary of State for Health for final approval of appointment.

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