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This item was published during the term of a previous administration that ended in April 2007

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Local health checks rolled out

14/02/2007

A £10 million new wave of preventative care programmes is to go live later this year, it was announced today.

Services will be developed in south Glasgow, Aberdeen, Fife, North and East Ayrshire, Inverclyde and West Dunbartonshire. The move expands on an initial wave of programmes which was announced in October.

'Keep Well' services are already operating in Glasgow, Edinburgh, Dundee and North Lanarkshire.

In advance of a parliamentary debate on local health services, Health Minister Andy Kerr said:

"We are moving from a culture of treating ill-health to preventing it, as locally as possible. This means targeting resources where they are needed most and designing services which are easier for the public to use.

"Keep Well is a new and ambitious approach to engage with people who have not traditionally made best use of health services - reaching out to those who may be at risk and learning wider lessons for the NHS.

"I am delighted that a further wave of Keep Well services will become operational later this year.

"These enhanced services will mean more direct and targeted interventions than ever before. These will be world leading services, aimed at those with high risk factors such as high cholesterol, high blood pressure, poor diet, smoking, alcohol misuse and inactive lifestyles.

"Services will aim to offer appointments in evenings and weekends to ensure there are no barriers to access, outreach workers will contact patients through phone calls and other means."

Background:

This is the second wave of the programme announced by Health Minister Andy Kerr in November 2005 (programme name now changed from Prevention 2010 to Keep Well). The first wave of services are located in five Community Health Partnership areas in the four NHS Board areas which have the largest populations in the 15 per cent most deprived areas of Scotland, as identified by the Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation - Glasgow (North and East), Lanarkshire, Dundee, and Edinburgh.

The aim of the programme is 'to increase the rate of health improvement in deprived communities by enhancing primary care services to deliver anticipatory care: identifying and targeting those at particular risk of preventable serious ill-health; offering appropriate interventions and services to them; and providing monitoring and follow-up.' This followed a commitment to provide such services in Delivering for Health, the Executive's long-term vision for the NHS.

People who may be at risk of heart disease will be invited to attend a health check looking at factors such as blood pressure, diabetes and cholesterol, as well as lifestyle issues such as smoking, diet, alcohol and weight management. For those who need it, treatment and services as well as regular monitoring and follow-up across a range of community providers will be available.

The services will benefit from the new SIGN cardiology guidelines for the NHS in Scotland, which for the first time consider deprivation as a risk factor when determining treatment.

The programme will be nationally evaluated and the learning disseminated before extending the approaches to primary care services for all those at risk of preventable ill health across Scotland.

Over the next two years, the Scottish Executive will invest:

  • £1 million in Grampian to develop the Keep Well approach to deprived areas in Aberdeen City
  • £2 million in Fife
  • £2 million in Ayrshire & Arran
  • £5 million in Greater Glasgow and Clyde

As part of the agreements in place with Boards, the Keep well services will be mainstreamed and funded by local partners following the initial two-year Executive funding.

Page updated: Wednesday, February 14, 2007