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The voice of Scotland’s vibrant voluntary sector

Published by Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations

TFN is published by the Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations, Caledonian Exchange, 19A Canning Street, Edinburgh EH3 8EG. The Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations (SCVO) is a Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organisation. Registration number SC003558.

Third sector and community groups set out urgent action needed to support prevention work

 

A statement has been published jointly by charities across Scotland. 

A partnership of third sector and community organisations have come together to set out the urgent action required to achieve the prevention-centred system needed to tackle Scotland’s growing health inequalities crisis.

Published jointly by Edinburgh Community Health Forum, Health and Social Care Alliance Scotland (the ALLIANCE), Scottish Community Development Centre, and Voluntary Health Scotland, the statement comes as major policies and frameworks have set out prevention as a key approach to how public services should operate.

Preventative approaches mean identifying and tackling root causes before negative outcomes occur. 

For health inequalities, that means dealing with the underlying causes that see some people in our communities experiencing less time in good health.

To achieve this, the statement sets out the importance of a clear definition and understanding of prevention, calling for a a clear, specific, and consistently applied definition of prevention if we’re to see this way of working properly applied across all levels of policy delivery. 

That means resources being allocated to prevention and the impacts of this approach being measured properly to capture the positive impact.

The groups called for efforts to tackle the ‘hard-to-do’ aspects of policy implementation that take us beyond ambitions and into reality, including proper co-production with communities, long-term investment, transparency and accountability, courageous leadership, evidence gathering, and working across silos.

They also underlined the need for a whole system approach with a properly resourced third sector, pointing to the complexity of prevention - requiring a whole system approach that includes the public, third and community sector – and those who directly experience health inequalities.

They wrote: “We welcome the renewed prevention policy intent from Scottish Government and COSLA but stress it is now crucial that these ambitions are translated – without delay – into specific, fully resourced, and measurable actions at the national and local levels.

“We call for an approach that honestly and courageously acknowledges the precarious state of our public, third and community sectors. We need to explicitly address the more challenging elements like investing in – and sharing power with – the third and community sector, and most importantly the individuals and communities experiencing the real life, day to day impact of poverty and health inequalities.”

 

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