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2018 SURF Annual Conference, 23rd August 2018 SURF Annual Conference, 23rd August

2018 SURF Annual Conference, 23rd August - PowerPoint Presentation

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2018 SURF Annual Conference, 23rd August - PPT Presentation

Jamie Ballantine SURF SURF Sponsors surfconf18 Andy Milne SURF Which of the following sectors best describes the organisation you are representing today Community Group Central Government National Public body ID: 795052

surf health local regeneration health surf regeneration local amp community government public inequalities nhs housing scotland mccartney impacts employment

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Slide1

2018 SURF Annual Conference, 23rd August

Slide2

Jamie Ballantine, SURF

Slide3

SURF Sponsors

Slide4

#surfconf18

Slide5

Andy Milne, SURF

Slide6

Which of the following sectors best describes the organisation you are representing today?

Community Group

Central Government / National Public body

Local Government / NHS board

Private sector

Third sector

Academic institution

Other

Community Group

Central Government / National Public body

Local Government / NHS board

Private sector

Third sector

Academic institution

Other

Slide7

In broad terms. which geographical area is your organisation concerned with?

Scotland-wide

A region, district or city

Small town or neighbourhood (pop. under 10k)

Scotland-wide

A region, district or city

Small town or neighbourhood (pop. under 10k)

Slide8

‘Governance and Power’

A SURF Debate 24.5.18

Slide9

Elaine Cooper, SURF

Slide10

Aileen Campbell MSP, Scottish Government, Cabinet Secretary.

Slide11

Reeni Kennedy Boyle, Bute Island Alliance

Slide12

Coffee, chat, pastriesMusic by

Fèis Phàislig

Slide13

Token Gestures Coin Game

Slide14

Coffee, chat, pastriesMusic by

Fèis Phàislig

Slide15

Token Gestures Coin Game

Slide16

Gerry McCartney,NHS Health Scotland

Slide17

Inequalities and regeneration

Gerry McCartney

Consultant in Public Health &

Head of Public Health Observatory

NHS Health Scotland

Slide18

Inequalities and regeneration (…and some health)

Gerry McCartney

Consultant in Public Health &

Head of Public Health Observatory

NHS Health Scotland

Slide19

These data have been updated using the

ScotPHO

profiles published in June 2015 comparing the life expectancies in

Broomhill

(close to

Jordanhill

station) and

Parkhead

&

Barrowfield

(close to Bridgeton station) intermediate zones.

Slide20

Education based Relative Index of Inequality (RII) for all-cause mortality, females

30-74 years, early to mid 2000s

Source:

Eikemo

T.A. &

Mackenbach

J.P. (

Eds

). EURO GBD SE: the potential for reduction of health inequalities in Europe.

Final Report. University Medical

Center

Rotterdam, 2012

Slide21

Source:

Eikemo

T.A. &

Mackenbach

J.P. (

Eds

). EURO GBD SE: the potential for reduction of health inequalities in Europe.

Final Report. University Medical

Center

Rotterdam, 2012

Education based Relative Index of Inequality (RII) for all-cause mortality,

males

30-74 years, early to mid 2000s

Slide22

Inequality in mortality between best and worst 10

%

of local authorities in Great Britain

(sources: Thomas 2010 and Dorling 2010)

Slide23

What causes health inequalities?

Wider environmental influences

Economic & work

Physical environment

Education

& learning

Social & cultural

Services

Individual experiences

Fundamental causes

Global

forces &

political

priorities

leading to:

Unequal distribution of

power, money and resources

Effects

Inequalities in

health

Slide24

Wider environmental influences

Economic & work

Physical environment

Education

& learning

Social & cultural

Services

Individual experiences

Fundamental causes

Global

forces &

political

priorities

leading to:

Unequal distribution of

power, money and resources

Effects

Inequalities in

health

Regeneration could do this!

Slide25

What do we know about the impacts of regeneration from the research evidence?

A lot of the research is low quality

The better quality evidence usually looks at the health impacts of regeneration

We are generally operating on the basis of:

received wisdom

good intentions

‘practice based knowledge’

rather than robust evidence

Slide26

Slide27

Good evidence & positive impacts

Refurbishment of housing

improves thermal comfort, health, social relations, absence from school/work

Specific housing interventions – wiring in smoke alarms, energy efficiency

Slide28

Uncertain impacts

Specific regeneration schemes (New Deal for Communities, Glasgow, Catalonia, DDA in Netherlands, Victoria)

Mixed tenure housing

Changing housing tenure

Employment and business support

Transport infrastructure and outcomes

Slide29

Mixed impacts

Gentrification and

residualisation

Can be an aim of regeneration (to achieve greater mixed tenure

) or consequence

Changes in outcomes in an area are often due to population movements

Interaction with existing community organisations

Slide30

Research implications

Robust evaluation of ‘regeneration’ activities is essential

…including the need for studies which follow people over time to account for movement in and out of areas

Need to assess the added value of regeneration on economic and employment outcomes by using careful comparison groups

Learning and evaluation needs to be an integral part of regeneration practice

Slide31

Policy implications

To narrow inequalities (health or otherwise) we need action at the level of political economy

…but ‘regeneration’ activities could make a real difference by addressing employment, housing, physical environment, social environment, service availability, etc.

Refurbishment and improvements of housing has a strong evidence base

The impacts of other aspects of regeneration are much less clear – evaluation and learning is really important

We can’t assume ‘regeneration’ will always be positive

Don’t forget that this

is all about

people

Slide32

Thank you for listening/heckling*Email:

gmccartney@nhs.net Twitter: @gerrymccartney1

Reference:

McCartney G, Hearty W,

Taulbut

M, et al. Regeneration

and health: a structured,

rapid literature review.

Public Health

(2017); 148: 69-87.

*delete as appropriate

Slide33

Gerry McCartney,NHS Health Scotland

Slide34

Reality Check – Voting Session

Slide35

What is

real Community Led Regeneration best at?

Improving community cohesion and cooperation

Improving local public services

Creating local employment and skills opportunities

Meeting essential needs of vulnerable local people

Building more successful and inclusive local economies

Something else

Improving community cohesion and cooperation

Improving local public services

Creating local employment and skills opportunities

Meeting essential needs of vulnerable local people

Building more successful and inclusive local economies

Something else

Slide36

What is most likely to help Community Led regeneration grow successfully?

Less form filling, red tape and reporting processes.

More and longer term core funding

More support for developing community leaders and entrepreneurs

More cooperation between local voluntary groups

Easier access to local government service contracts

Something else

Less form filling, red tape and reporting processes.

More and longer term core funding

More support for developing community leaders and entrepreneurs

More cooperation between local voluntary groups

Easier access to local government service contracts

Something else

Slide37

Gerry McCartney (NHS HS)Reeni Kennedy Boyle (Bute Island Alliance)David Cowan (Scottish Government)

Jim Gray (Formerly Glasgow CC)Robin McAlpine (Common Weal)

Slide38

Lunch and Community Marketplace upstairs

Slide39

Darren McGarvey,Author and Performer

Slide40

Darren McGarvey (Author)David Cowan (Scottish Government)Elaine Cooper (SURF)

Hazel Cross (Fife Council)Martin Cawley (Big Lottery Fund)

Slide41

James Robertson,Poet and Author

Slide42

Andy Milne, SURF

What’s Next?

Slide43

Reduced membership fee:

SURF membership is

only £50

(plus VAT)

for organisations and

only £20

(plus VAT) for community groups and individuals

A free way to promote your organisation

Influence decision makers

Be in the know

Further information on membership benefits and application forms are available at the SURF webpage:

www.surf.scot/join-surf/

Or alternatively contact Emma Scott directly,

emma@surf.scot or 0141 440 6392

Are you a member of SURF?

Slide44

Launched on

Tuesday 12th June

Open for applications until 5pm on

Monday 17th September

This year the 5 categories will be:

Community Led Regeneration

Youth Employability: Overcoming Barriers

Scotland’s Most Improved Place

Housing

Creative Regeneration

Annual Awards Dinner

at the Grand Central Hotel, Glasgow –

Thursday 6th December

Information available on the SURF website at:

https://www.surf.scot/surf-awards

/

Slide45

Caption Competition

Slide46

Community Marketplace (upstairs)

Slide47

Thank you for coming!

Please leave your badges and feedback forms at the door

www.surf.scot

@

SURFscot

SURF