MEAM Approach network communications guide

Similar documents
Local Healthwatch Quality Statements. February 2016

Communications and engagement for integrated health and care

Creating the change. Homeless Link s strategy to end homelessness. June 2018 to June 2021

Health and Wellbeing Strategy 2016 to 2021 Summary Document

Communications and Engagement Approach

Simple steps to start your own peer support group

City of Edinburgh Council

A future where everybody who develops breast cancer lives and lives well. Our vision, mission, values and five-year strategy ( )

DOING IT YOUR WAY TOGETHER S STRATEGY 2014/ /19

Aiming High Our priorities by 2020 HALFWAY THERE. Our priorities by 2020

Aspirations Programme Quarterly Report Q3 (01 October 31 December 2018)

Daffodil Month Workplace Campaign. Workplace Ambassador Toolkit

Does the Metropolitan Police Service, and/or any other security service, have the legal right to conduct themselves in a prejudicial manner?

Assessing the Risk: Protecting the Child

Making it Real in Cambridgeshire. Action Plan Review. June July

Patient and public involvement. Guidance for researchers

Violent Crime Prevention Board Strategy. 26 September Violent Crime Prevention using Vision to Champion Progress

Managing conversations around mental health. Blue Light Programme mind.org.uk/bluelight

Birmingham Homelessness Prevention Strategy 2017+

THE NEXT PIECE? Co-production in homelessness services. Report from the SHIEN national conference March 2015 SHIEN SHIEN

Norfolk Integrated Housing and Community Support service

Mental Health Charter for Sport and Recreation The next steps Action plan February 2016 (v2)

Communities tackling fgm in the uk

Autism Action Network Charter

Domestic Abuse & Mental Health

INTRODUCTION. Just because you know what you re talking about doesn t mean that I do

We worked with 12,900. clients last year. Self Help Services is a user-led mental health charity that helps people to help themselves.

Patient and Carer Network. Work Plan

Local Offer for Sunderland Care Leavers

THREE STEPS TO CHANGE LIVES. How we can act effectively to reduce suicide in Ireland

Your Voices Amplified

Year Strategy. Our purpose is to end homelessness

provides services for drug and alcohol users, families and carers.

Prevention Concordat for Better Mental Health An Overview January Julie Daneshyar North East Public Health England Centre

Response to the proposed advice for health and social care practitioners involved in looking after people in the last days of life

Consumer Participation Plan Summary

Mental Health Charter for Sport and Recreation

POLICY BRIEFING National Suicide Prevention Strategies

You said we did. Our Healthier South East London. Dedicated engagement events

Our approach to research

NIACRO Response. Strategy for Culture and Arts

Published December 2015

Youth Justice National Development Team. Youth Justice National Development Team Annual Report. Fiona Dyer

Safeguarding: everyone s business

An Active Inclusive Capital. A Strategic Plan of Action for Disability in London

Youth Democracy Coordinator- Midlands

fighting for young people s mental health #FightingFor Report

Opportunity knocks. A briefing on devolution and multiple needs in England August 2016

Ending Stigma with Recovery Messaging

Children and Young People s Emotional Wellbeing and Mental Health. Transformation Plan

Sacro Glasgow Supported Accommodation Service Housing Support Service

EasyRead guide to the PowerPoint slides. This is an EasyRead guide to the slides you will see on the screen.

A voice for positive change in NHS Wales

Joint Mental Health Commissioning Strategy for Adults

NATIONAL ADVISORS ANNUAL REPORT 2018 VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN DOMESTIC ABUSE AND SEXUAL VIOLENCE

Memorandum of Understanding

Research for Development Impact Network

The below activities have been allocated per section but can be applied to any stage award you choose to achieve.

Looking Forward. A free counselling service and peer support programme for older people (aged 60 plus) affected by sight loss

NHS Youth Forum Coordinator

National Inspection of services that support looked after children and care leavers

What can NHS Health Scotland do to reduce health inequalities? Questions for applying the Health Inequalities Action Framework

Emotional-Social Intelligence Index

PUTTING TAMARIKI FIRST

Evaluation of Satellite Clubs: FINAL REPORT

2. The role of CCG lay members and non-executive directors

POLICY BRIEFING. Making Every Contact Count: A Joint Approach to Preventing Homelessness

Changing the conversation on mental health

Hard Edges Scotland: Lived Experience Reference Group

MHANYS Mental Health Matters Day March 13, 2019 Social Media Toolkit

Instructions for 4-H Club Self-Assessments

Hunger & Homelessness Awareness Week November 11-19, Media Outreach Toolkit

September MESSAGING GUIDE 547E-EN (317)

Project Manager Mental Health Job Description and Application Pack

Services for women experiencing multiple disadvantage in England and Wales EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

AUTISM STRATEGY FOR ADULTS IN BIRMINGHAM

POLICY BRIEFING. Prime Minister s challenge on dementia 2020 implementation plan

Criminal Justice in Arizona

Summary of Purple communications research

ALCOHOL & OTHER DRUGS

Each Mind Matters Skills Building: Mental Health and Stigma Reduction February 7, 2017

Invitation to Tender

SECTION 3: WHAT DOES DIABETES UK DO?

batyr: Preventative education in mental illnesses among university students

Job Description. Inspire East Lancashire Integrated Substance use Service. Service User Involvement & Peer Mentor Co-ordinator

Next Steps Evaluation Report Executive Summary

Dorset Special Educational Needs and Disabilities (SEND) Communications Strategy. Final version agreed at SEND Delivery Board on 8 January

Local action on health inequalities. Introduction to a series of evidence papers

A SOCIAL JUSTICE CHALLENGE FOR 21 ST CENTURY SCOTLAND: MEETING THE HOUSING NEEDS OF PEOPLE IN AND LEAVING PRISON

BHFNC Summary of Change4Life one year on. The key messages physical activity professionals can take forward

Simply, participation means individual s involvement in decisions that affect them.

University Mental Health and Wellbeing Day

Tackling FGM in the UK: Views of People from Communities Affected by FGM

Harry Stevenson, President, Social Work Scotland. Annual Conference and Exhibition 18 and 19 June 2014

Scotland s Mental Health Charter for Physical Activity & Sport. People Active for Change & Equality funded by Comic Relief

Shaping our future. Our strategy for

ABOUT THIS DOCUMENT WHAT WE DO

May 16, Day of Action. Toolkit

Greater Gwent Citizens Panel annual report

Meeting The Needs Of Vulnerable People: Finalist

Transcription:

MEAM Approach network communications guide

Introduction This resource provides practical advice on communications for areas in the MEAM Approach network. We hope it helps you to promote the work of your partnership, influence local stakeholders and highlight your place within a national movement to coordinate services and change systems for people with multiple needs. The resource covers: Why communicate? The MEAM Approach network: narrative Key messages when discussing multiple needs Key messages for policymakers Use of logos Branding your local intervention Tone of voice Tips for using social media Things we ask and support we can offer We would like this to be a living resource developed over time. We would welcome your input for future editions.

Why communicate? Communicating through the media is a great way to raise the profile of your work and help influence the people you need to support it. Examples can be found in both MEAM Approach areas and the Big Lottery Fund s Fulfilling Lives partnerships. The Counting Every Adult service in Cambridgeshire recently appeared on a series of local television and radio news programmes. With the support of Danny, a person with lived experience, they were able to talk about the person centred approach that Cambridgeshire is using to better support people with multiple needs and how commitment across the partnership has enabled them to change the traditional system and ensure better outcomes for Danny. They featured on BBC Look East, BBC Radio Cambridgeshire and ITV Anglia. Inspiring Change Manchester were able to promote their Housing First work on BBC Radio 4 s Today programme. Matthew was interviewed about his Housing First tenancy and the wrap around support he continues to receive. Shelter, as lead partner, highlighted the issue of multiple needs and the different approach they are taking within the city. To help you talk about your work, we have developed a narrative and a series of key messages about multiple needs for different audiences. These are intended as a basic framework from which you can begin to develop your own messages. We encourage you to share this guide with any internal communications teams across your partnership.

The MEAM Approach network: narrative You can use this to help tell a persuasive story about why it s important to tackle multiple needs, and the network you re part of. People with multiple needs face a combination of problems including homelessness, substance misuse, contact with the criminal justice system and mental ill health. They fall through the gaps between services and systems, making it harder for them to address their problems and lead fulfilling lives. The Making Every Adult Matter (MEAM) coalition is made up of the national charities Clinks, Homeless Link and Mind. The MEAM Approach is a framework to help local areas develop effective, coordinated services for people facing multiple disadvantage, and promote lasting, embedded change to local systems. Twenty five local areas across England are using the MEAM Approach. Together we form a network that is increasing individuals wellbeing, reducing costs to public services and improving people s lives. We draw on our shared knowledge and practical experience to change systems, services and policy so that everyone experiencing multiple needs can reach their full potential and contribute fully to their communities.

Key messages when discussing multiple needs Use these points to help explain multiple needs to audiences who might not be familiar with the issue or your work. People with multiple needs face a combination of problems including homelessness, substance misuse, contact with the criminal justice system and mental ill health. They fall through the gaps between services and systems, making it harder for them to address their problems and lead fulfilling lives. It is estimated that 58,000 people face problems of homelessness, substance misuse and offending in any one year. Within this group, a majority will have experienced mental health problems. Women are under-represented in these figures, but despite this face significant and distinct challenges which need to be met. Similarly, people from black, Asian and minority ethnic communities experience a range of social inequalities which contribute to their experience of multiple needs. People s likelihood of experiencing multiple needs is increased both by growing up in circumstances of material deprivation, and experiencing abuse or neglect in early life. This group tend to be known to everyone, but often are served by no one as they are perceived to be hard to reach or not my responsibility. This can make services seem unhelpful and uncaring to someone experiencing multiple needs who is seeking help.

Key messages for policymakers National and local policy decisions have created an environment where it is more difficult than it should be for services to work together to address multiple needs. Government should develop a cross-departmental approach to multiple needs, ensuring that funding, accountability and outcomes structures prioritise recovery and rehabilitation and allow local areas to develop a flexible response. People with multiple needs should receive appropriate, flexible and personalised support to help them move towards independence. The most powerful advocates for changing policy and practice around multiple needs are people with lived experience of these issues. Government and decision-makers should listen to the voices of people with multiple needs and the frontline staff who support them, to ensure that policies properly reflect their experiences and meet their needs. You may also like to use MEAMs latest publication - Multiple Needs: Time for Political Leadership

Use of logos All MEAM Approach areas are entitled to use the MEAM Approach logo to show that they are working in partnership with the MEAM coalition and as part of the national MEAM Approach network. Please do not use the logos and branding of Homeless Link, Clinks, Mind or the MEAM coalition. Please also reference the support of the Big Lottery Fund. Further guidance on use of the Big Lottery Fund logo can be found here

Branding your local intervention We encourage you to consider a unique name for your programme of work. In line with the terms and conditions, please do not refer to your work as the MEAM service or similar. Agreeing a unique name can increase local buy in, consolidate the values of your partnership and help you promote your intervention. It can also illustrate clearly that you are not just creating another service but working to better coordinate existing services and the wider system in which they operate. It can also help distinguish your local intervention from the MEAM Approach itself. For example, you may say Lisbon s Improving Access programme is based upon the MEAM Approach framework. Current examples from the network include the Counting Every Adult Team in Cambridgeshire, The Waves Project in Halton and Improving Lives Together in Sunderland.

Tone of voice Across MEAM, we try and adopt a tone of voice that reflects our way of working, and encourage you to do the same. Collaborative: We know that we need to work effectively together, in order to help systems and services work better together Authentic: Everything we say should be based on evidence and experience Empathetic: We use language that shows we understand that we are talking about people s lives Pragmatic: We understand how to create change, but equally we are aware of the challenges faced by people with experience of multiple needs and those who work with them.

Tips for using social media Social media offers an opportunity to communicate the work of your partnership as it develops and the key messages you would like people to know about multiple needs in your area. Many councillors, MPs, journalists and other organisations are on Twitter so this can be a useful forum for sharing regular updates. When using social media remember to: Consider key messages and tone in your online communications. Tweet regularly on topics of interest to build follower numbers Engage in debate but don t enter into arguments Don t use twitter as a way to engage with people you have not met, especially if the message is a difficult or complex one. We encourage you to interact with our MEAM coalition Twitter account and together we can build the presence of our MEAM network. @MEAMcoalition

Things we ask and support we can offer Please inform your Partnerships Manager about your communications and in particular any planned media coverage. Partnerships Managers can support you with the development of your own key messages and how to communicate your values and approach. If you would like to discuss the content of your communications, ask for comments on draft documents or require help preparing for media interviews then please get in contact. The policy team can help you to frame your work within the national policy landscape and discuss any local policy communications you would like to create. In line with our terms and conditions, please do not make any public statement about the MEAM coalition or the Big Lottery Fund without speaking to us first.