Health and Wellbeing Vision Summary
Overview
This is a summary of the Health and Wellbeing Vision.
You can also view this as a pdf, see Health and Wellbeing Vision Summary (PDF, 206 KB).
Our Health and Wellbeing Vision
Work in partnership to improve the health, wellbeing and quality of life for children, adults and families and reduce health inequalities, to help people live longer and healthier lives.
Outcome: Best Start in life
What good looks like
Every child and young person has opportunities to thrive and reach their full potential.
Priorities
- Child development strategy for school readiness
- Adolescent health offer to improve their relationships and wellbeing
- Women's health strategy implemented
Outcome: Financial security
What good looks like
A thriving, sustainable and inclusive local economy in which the benefits and opportunities are distributed fairly across all communities.
Priorities
- Services tackling financial hardship
- Working with partners to tackle in-work poverty
- Lived experience of poverty into decision-making
- Influence government policy on poverty action
- Increase sustainable and healthy jobs
Outcome: Well-being & social connectivity
What good looks like
Cohesive and vibrant communities where all members feel included, valued, and supported.
Priorities
- Preventative and early intervention approach
- Person-centred approach to mental health treatment
- Suicide and self-harm reduction
- Children and young people long-term health conditions support
Outcome: Safe and healthy places
What good looks like
Settings that help people to be healthy and make the most of the good things around them.
Priorities
- Safe and sustainable homes
- Increase belonging and connection
- Adapt & mitigate climate change
Outcome: All residents live and age well
What good looks like
Residents live and age well by preventing, delaying, and reducing the burden of long-term conditions and the development and consequences of frailty.
Priorities
- Predict & prevent serious conditions and diseases
- Active, purposeful and independent communities
- Proactive models of care
- Happy, healthy older people
- Population Health Management (PHM) model in service redesign
Cross cutting themes
Fair delivery of service - Evaluate and understand and mitigate inequalities in access, delivery, uptake and impact.
Public involvement and community engagement - Continually engage and partner with the public and communities to co-produce services fit for their purposes.