Why it’s important
We know you want to enjoy a long and healthy life. As well as providing high quality services for you when you are unwell, we are committed to supporting you to live the healthiest life you can by preventing illnesses as much as possible and addressing things that can lead to poor health and wellbeing.
By implementing these strategies, we will add to your healthy life years and improve overall health outcomes. Our ambition is based on adding five years of healthy life expectancy in our most deprived areas by 2043, aligned with national ambitions for life expectancy.
What we’ve been doing
We have a service called LiveWell Dorset. Through LiveWell you can get help to make healthy choices, look at the things that get in the way of being healthy, and make life better. The team are supporting people in moving more, managing weight, quitting smoking, and drinking less. You can access this service yourself or someone might put you in touch with them.
Right now, we are trying out new ways to help people with serious mental illness through LiveWell Dorset and our outpatient health villages. We are working closely with Active Dorset on a project which helps people with muscle and bone problems to be more active. The physical activity programme ‘movement for movement’ looks to support everyone to move a little more every day, with specialist help for those who would benefit most from moving more.
We have been helping pregnant people to quit smoking, and we have a service called tobacco dependency treatment to support them. We have expanded this support to all people staying in hospital and are testing it out for those who are getting long-term mental health services as outpatients.
Doctors in primary care can recommend a few national programmes to help people to lose weight. One is the National Diabetes Prevention Programme, which helps those who are at risk of developing diabetes.
Another is the Digital Weight Management Programme, designed for people who are overweight and have diabetes or high blood pressure. GPs and community pharmacies also offer NHS Health Checks to calculate the risk of cardiovascular disease and help lower it if possible. GPs take part in a national audit called the Cardiovascular Disease Prevent Audit to see how well we do as a system to identify and manage conditions like high blood pressure.
We encourage you to ‘know your numbers’ and get your blood pressure checked regularly.
We are committed to providing cancer screening and supporting people in their recovery from cancer. This includes making sure that people with serious mental illness, learning disabilities and those who are homeless are able to get to screening services. Screening programmes focus on identifying various types of cancer, such as cervical, breast and bowel cancer. They also target people who are more likely to develop other health problems such as eye screenings for diabetic retinopathy and screenings for abdominal aortic aneurysm.
We have been focusing on digital innovations. This helps us to make sure everyone has fair access to digital health services. We use these innovations to identify the right people who can benefit from digital tools for managing long-term health conditions. We also track the outcomes and results of using these tools for self-management of health conditions.