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Supported Employment Demonstration Sites 2010/2011
A framework that commits to supporting disabled people into sustainable work.
• Raise awareness:
• Promoting employment opportunities for all; promoting health and wellbeing
• Invest to save
• Integrated into local employment services
• Focus on paid employment
• Improve quality and consistency of services.
Supported Employment Framework
75% of the 91 services identified and badged as ‘supported employment’ may not be operating within the definition’
‘The scoping study was also unable to suggest what level of employment outcomes are being achieved through
Supported Employment services. Thus there is no possibility at this time of benchmarking services.’
‘Value for money may not be universally delivered at present, but indications are it could be if a more standardised
approach is used’
Background to Framework
• Relationship between local strategic planning level and service providers
• Committed to paid employment for disabled people• A supported employment service that exhibits basice
features and principles of s.e.• A service with capacity to undertake development
activities, to collect and use monitoring data• Scottish Development Centre for Mental Health/
Mental Health Foundation (MHF).
Demonstration Sites
• Promoting clarity: what are the defining characteristics of supported employment
http://learning.susescotland.co.uk/about-us/definition-of-terms.aspx
• Benchmarking services’ activities
• Defining outcomes for monitoring
• Sharing Learning
The Framework’s Activities
Learning Portal
Supported Employment Services provide individualised support to secure people
with disabilities, long term conditions and multiple barriers to work a sustainable,
paid job in the open labour market.
What is Supported Employment?
‘Place and train’ approach not ‘train and place’...1. Focus on competitive employment as a primary goal2. Eligibility based on the individual’s choice3. Rapid job search, minimal pre-vocational training4. Employment team integrates with health and social
care5. Individualised support to enable real attention to
client preferences6. Availability of time unlimited support7. Individualised welfare benefits counselling.
Supported Employment Principles
The 5 Stage Approach to Supported Employment
The Framework for Supported Employment in Scotland
Engagement Vocational Job Finding Employer On / Off the Jobby SE Service Profiling Engagement Support and
Aftercare
Supported Employment Stages – supporting the aspiration towards 16+ hours of work
Helping Identifying Identifying the Finding out Providing help, disabled skills and preferred job about the informationpeople most preferences for through workplace and backup todistanced from work, giving employer environment, the employeethe labour work engagement, co-workers and theirmarket to experiences also providing and the employer,make that will help support to the ‘supports’ a developinginformed the individual employer person might independencechoices on make their need through naturaltheir own own supports in thefuture vocational workplace choices
• A scale to measure supported employment services against a model of good practice
• Effects of intervention depend on how it is delivered• Programmes that faithfully implement the key
elements of supported employment have better outcomes
• For supported employment, this means higher competitive employment rates
• A validated scale is available for employability services working with mental health services
Promoting good practice
• Three sections: staffing, organisation, and services
• 25 items define the critical components of supported employment
• Each item rated on a 5-point scale– ranging from 1 = no implementation to 5 = full
implementation
The Fidelity Scale
• MHF organised a fidelity scale training:– Participants agreed scale could fit to their skills and service– Participants saw improvements that could be made in their
service– Agreed fidelity assessment best by outsiders: peer process
• Reiterates integrated employability approach needed • Agreed assessment useful in Scotland and for generic
services• Scottish tool to be made available soon.
The Fidelity Scale in Scotland
• Staffing: Maximum scored for caseload < 20 • Organisation:– Zero exclusion criteria– Focus on competitive employment
• Exemplary services offered include:– Benefits planning/money advice– Ongoing work based vocational assessment– Individualised job search– Individualised follow on support in work
EBSE_FS reveals good practice
• Sustainable work for service users• Health gains for service users• Increased employability of service users• Reduced need for day care, L.A.s• People moving off out of work benefits, DWP• Freeing up families time, so more people
moving into work• Reduced staff turnover and enhanced
reputation for employers.
Outcomes of supported employment
The Paradigm Shift
• No grounds for selecting people on the basis of their ‘work readiness’ or ‘employability’
• Focus should be on employment through job matching based on client skills and preferences, rapid job search and support for as long as necessary
• Welfare systems support the transition to employment
• Health, social care and employment support should be integrated
• Sustainable funding.
• Briefly describe the performance monitoring system or (commissioning guidelines)of your agency/service
• What process does it explore?• What outcomes does it measure?• Which Supported Employment principles are
measured?• What do you think you should be measuring?
Exercise