Children's Service Mapping

Provided by
Durham University Mapping Unit

Children's Trust profile

Southampton LA

1 Introduction

This report provides a profile of Children's Trust arrangements and services for children and young people within this Children's Trust area. It draws together information obtained from commissioners and providers of children's services in the 2009/10 children's services mapping exercise.

CSM is a voluntary exercise and therefore not all local authorities chose to take part. Few LAs would regard their map of services as complete, some choosing to limit the scope of what they mapped. This means that the data reported should be regarded as work in progress and may not be complete.

Further detailed information can be found on the CSM website at: www.childrensmapping.org.uk/results

2 Makeup of the Children's Trust

2.1 Introducing Children's Trusts

Children's Trusts are central to the reform of children's services as set out in Every Child Matters: Change for Children agenda, underpinned by the Children Act 2004. The most recent guidance 'Children's Trusts: Statutory guidance on cooperation arrangements, including the Children's Trust Board and the Children and Young People's Plan' (DCSF, 2010) defines a Children's Trust as:

"The Children's Trust is the sum total of co-operation arrangements and partnerships between organisations with a role in improving outcomes for children and young people" (p. 6)

2.2 Governance: Children's Trust Board

The Children's Trust Board became a statutory body as of April 2010 (Apprenticeships, Skills, Children and Learning Act, 2009). "The purpose of the Children's Trust Board is to bring all partners with a role in improving outcomes for children together to agree a common strategy on how they will co-operate to improve children's well-being and to help embed partnership working in the partners' routine delivery of their own functions. It also provides a strategic framework within which partners may agree to commission services together, with pooled or aligned budgets, but delivering the strategy remains the responsibility of the partners, both individually and together." (DCSF, 2010: 7).

An indication of who chairs the Children's Trust Board is given below.

Director of Childrens Services (DCS) 0
Lead for Children - Elected member of the council 1
Chief Executive of PCT 0
Independent person 0
Other 0

2.3 Partners in the Children's Trust arrangements

The Children Act (2004) identifies statutory partners, who are placed under a 'duty to cooperate in the making of arrangements to improve well-being' (section 10 (1) (b)) and 'other persons or bodies' (section 10(1) (c)) that should be included in the Children's Trust as appropriate. There is no statutory duty for the latter agencies to co-operate with the arrangements but they are identified as essential to the effective governance and should be represented at Board level as appropriate. Involvement will vary between local areas.

Partner representation on the Children's Trust is as follows:

Local authority Head of organisation (e.g. Director/CEO)
PCT (commissioners) Senior officer level
PCT (providers) Senior officer level
District councils in two tier authorities None
Police Senior officer level
Youth Offending Team Senior officer level
Probation Board/ service None
School representation Senior officer level
Further education and sixth form colleges Senior officer level
Jobcentre Plus None
Work- based learning sector (specialist colleges; work-based learning providers) None
GP representation Senior officer level
Providers of health care (including primary care providers; NHS Trusts and Foundation Trusts; CAMHS providers) Senior officer level
Private sector organisations Senior officer level
Third sector organisations Head of organisation (e.g. Director/CEO)
Sure Start Children's Centres Senior officer level
Housing sector Senior officer level
Adult services None
Youth custodial establishments None
Immigration service and National Asylum Support Service None
Children and Family Court Advisory Support Service (CAFCASS), HMCS and other partners within the family justice system None
Faith groups Senior officer level
Fire and rescue service None
Fire and rescue service None
Leisure and cultural services Senior officer level
Higher education institutions None
Others (Please specify) None
Other details

3 Vision of children's services

3.1 Children and Young People Plan

The Children and Young People's Plan (CYPP) is "the joint strategy of the Children's Trust partners on how they will co-operate to improve children's well-being (across the five outcomes)." (DCSF, 2010: 8). From April 2010, the Children's Trust Board has responsibility for preparing, publishing, reviewing and revising the CYPP (DCSF, 2010: 47).

The status of the Children's and Young People's Plan for this Children's Trust is as follows:

CYPP agreed and signed off by the Children's Trust Yes
CYPP published on the following websites LA. PCT. Children and Young People's Trust
CYPP deposited in local libraries Yes
Child friendly version of CYPP available Yes
Outline of actions to improve the outcomes for Children and young people with Special Educational Needs (SEN). Children and young people with disabilities. Children and young people looked after by the local authority.
CYPP sets out arrangements made by Board partners for cooperation on A workforce strategy to deliver priorities. Early intervention and preventative action. Safeguarding and promoting the welfare of children and young people. Reducing and mitigating the effects of child poverty. Improving the behaviour of children and young persons and attendance of pupils at school. Achieving education, early years, LAA and safeguarding targets (when available).
Children, young people, parents and carers were consulted during the preparation of CYPP Yes

4 Integrated strategies

4.1 Joint Strategic Needs Assessment

Strategic planning and commissioning arrangements are a central component driving the cultural change required across all services. These should be based on a combination of the Joint Strategic Needs Assessment, a thorough knowledge of the needs of local families, children and young people, and a clear vision of the quality of childhood to which the local area aspires and of the ways different services can best deliver improvements. (DCSF, 2008: 37)

The elements of the Joint Strategic Needs Assessment completed for this Children's Trust area are as follows:

Domain 1: Demography

Joint Strategic Needs Assessment carried out 1
Total child population 1
Age profile 1
Ethnic profile 1
Disability profile 1
Migration 1

Domain 2: Social and environmental context

Joint Strategic Needs Assessment carried out 1
Children living in poverty 1
Housing for families and young people 0
Employment of young people 0
Environment 0

Domain 3: Lifestyle and risk

Joint Strategic Needs Assessment carried out 1
Smoking 1
Eating habits 1
Breastfeeding 1
Substance misusing children 1
Physical activity 1
Sexual behaviour/ teenage pregnancy 1
Healthy weight/obesity 1

Domain 4: Ill health and disability

Joint Strategic Needs Assessment carried out 1
Prevalence of illness and disability in children/young people: diabetes 1
Prevalence of illness and disability in children/young people: cancer 0
Prevalence of illness and disability in children/young people: infectious diseases 0
Hospital admissions 1
Dental decay 1
Children in road accidents 1
Hospital admissions due to accidental and non-accidental injury 1
Children with long-term limiting illness 1
Children with disability 0
Vulnerable children 1

Domain 5: Services for children, young people and families

Joint Strategic Needs Assessment carried out 1
Health provision and use 1
Social care provision and use 0
Education provision and use 0
Voluntary sector provision and use 0
Private sector provision and use 0

Domain 6: Voice

Joint Strategic Needs Assessment carried out 1
Views of children and young people 1
Views of parents and carers 0
Community views 0

5 Finance

5.1 Spend and budget by commissioner

All of the statutory commissioners for this area are identified, along with their spend and budgets.

Commissioner Total Spend 2008/091 Total Budget 2009/101 Population 0-172
Southampton City PCT 33,549,058 35,047,999 0.428
Total
33,549,058 35,047,999 0.428
  1. Excluding individual care / spot purchasing
  2. ONS Mid-year estimates 2005 in 100ks

5.2 Spend and budget by provider

Only the top 10 providers are listed here. Note that these are all providers who are commissioned directly, jointly or through specialist commissioning.

5.3 Joint commissioning

All Children's Trust partners should pursue commissioning activities jointly and pool budgets, wherever appropriate, to shape local services to meet the needs of children, young people and families (DCSF, 2008: 40)

The following joint commissioning arrangements were in place in this Children's Trust.

Disability None
CAMHS None
Maternity None
Palliative Care None
Complex and continuing care None
Public health / Inequalities None
Substance misuse None
Youth offending None
Targeted youth support None
Family support None
Looked After Children None
Healthy Child Programme None
Teenage pregnancy None
Breastfeeding None
Other None

5.4 Type of commissioning

In some cases organisations may commission some services together, either through joint or specialist commissioning as shown.

6 Integrated Processes

6.1 Delivery of core offers

In the Children's Trust questionnaire, local authorities were asked to report on the agreements that they had in place for the delivery of core offers for particular aspects of children's services.

Children's centres

Childrens Trust agreement 1
Other joint agreement 0
Not yet agreed 0
Not applicable 0

Extended schools

Childrens Trust agreement 0
Other joint agreement 0
Not yet agreed 1
Not applicable 0

Disability

Childrens Trust agreement 0
Other joint agreement 0
Not yet agreed 1
Not applicable 0

Parenting support

Childrens Trust agreement 1
Other joint agreement 0
Not yet agreed 0
Not applicable 0

Targeted youth support

Childrens Trust agreement 0
Other joint agreement 0
Not yet agreed 1
Not applicable 0

Pathways UTS

Childrens Trust agreement 0
Other joint agreement 0
Not yet agreed 1
Not applicable 0

7 Staffing

7.1 Staff summary by provider

In this table we see which statutory providers are working in the area. The number of distinct services is shown, along with the total staff (whole-time equivalent) which work in those services. Because some services will work across other areas as well, the last column gives an apportionment of the total staff according to how much of its effort is spent working in this area.

Note that regional and national services are not included in this list, but only those services which have indicated that their catchment area is based around the PCT/LA or localities within that.

Health and Social Care Provider Services with defined catchment area Total staff fte in post Staff total apportioned Services Confirmed Complete
Portsmouth City Teaching PCT provider arm 1 1.000 0.051 100.0%
Southampton City PCT provider arm 31 423.175 343.120 100.0%
Southampton LA 22 401.170 30.610 0.0%
Southampton University Hospitals NHS Trust 2 425.800 242.706 100.0%
Unallocated
27 251.682 129.082 0.0%
Total
83 1502.827 745.568 41.0%

7.2 Total staff by primary service category

Each service is asked to define a primary service type for its provision from a list defined nationally. Whilst no such classification can work perfectly for every situation, it provides a useful comparative template across a wide range of organisations and types of provision. This graph shows how may staff have been mapped to which type of service.

None reported

7.3 Staff Groups

Within the staff apportioned to this area, the following graph shows the different types of staff involved. To get more detail on the breakdown of this, click the data table button at the bottom of the page.

8 Service characteristics

8.1 Disability Services

Some basic data about services for children with disabilities.

Health and Social Care Provider Number of services dedicated to children with a disability Staff (wte) in services dedicated to children with a disability/special needs
Southampton City PCT provider arm 8 85
Total
8 85

8.2 Age range of services

Each service can choose one or more age bands that it provides for, these are shown below.

8.3 ECM Outcomes

The 'Every Child Matters' (ECM) outcomes framework has five high-level outcomes as indicated below with 25 sub-outcomes. Services are asked to record which sub-outcomes they primarily aim to address and these sub-outcomes are aggregated into the high-level outcomes in this graph.