Having read the Blueprint for Children’s Social Care John Seddon wrote the following letter to people listed as interviewees. Tis relevant to note that every reply John received stated clearly interviewee did not concur with the report’s recommendations.

thefrontline.org.uk/wp-content/upl…
"I’m writing to you because you were listed as an interviewee in A Blueprint for Children’s Social Care: Unlocking the potential of social work. Your listing as interviewee suggests you might concur with the report’s recommendations, but I am aware some of the interviewees don't.
I read the Blueprint owing to reading about the controversy surrounding its authorship in Private Eye. My first concern was that the Blueprint portrayed the UK pilots of Buurtzorg as successful.
If Buurtzorg Netherlands sets the standard the UK results are negligible, even nil and dysfunctional. The most important lesson learned was that senior management of the UK pilots had no idea of the change in philosophy – and therefore their behaviour – ...
... and frequently served to undermine what they regarded as ‘projects’.

I shared these findings with Brendan Martin (Buurtzorg UK) and Jos de Blok (Buurtzorg Netherlands) last summer.
It was in the form of a podcast. Brendan was reported by Private Eye to have withdrawn support for the Blueprint arguing that structure is the wrong starting-place. He’s right. Jos is aware that the problems the UK pilots have experienced are evident in other countries.
No surprise. Many counties copied the UK’s New Public Management agenda and have similar specification and inspection regimes. My colleagues in Scandinavia report the same issues with the Buurtzorg pilots there.
The Blueprint represents a manifesto for training people to operate in a new structure. If this goes ahead we will waste millions. And get nowhere. Care service is not a training problem – as is believed by politicians since Ed Balls – it is a system problem.
Private Eye reports that Frontline has received £72m for training; what has changed?

Social workers leave because the system gets in the way of their purpose. We need to change the system. Worse, the care we provide is frequently ineffective ...
... yet it ticks the boxes of current control systems; it’s the control systems we have to change and we can only do that by redesigning the system.
That’s what happened in Buurtzorg Netherlands and that’s what’s also happened in many UK care services. In both cases it started with leaders change the way they think about the design and management of the system.
I describe the differences in how that process occurred for Jos de Blok and UK leaders in the podcast.
But the consequences are the same. There are already many UK care services with results comparable to Buurtzorg. It should be no surprise, they are systems designed to give each and every care recipient the support that exactly matches their needs.
Matt Hancock says we need care services to work as systems, where needs of care recipients matter more than silos and, he says, this change should not take long. The evidence is already here.
It doesn’t take long when leaders understand what is required and, vitally, understand why their current controls are working against the purpose.
It is perhaps counterintuitive to believe that giving people precisely what they need results in lower cost in care services and other systems, greater capacity, and, most importantly, better lives. But the evidence is incontrovertible.
We won’t get there with a new structure and years of training in new team roles.

You can have the best of both: As we share the same ambition, we are collaborating with Buurtzorg UK.
Vanguard will help leaders get through the thinking challenge and Buurtzorg will help people realise the values and practices of outstanding person-centred services.
When leaders get it change is fast. The podcast describes how they get it.

Sincerely,

John

patreon.com/posts/buurtzor…

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More from @MarkHazard2020

18 Apr
When one joins the Civil Service, one enters the membership of a club.

A club with traditions, good and bad, going back centuries.

Its past members include Sir Geoffrey Chaucer, Sir Thomas More, Thomas Cromwell and Samuel Pepys.

Truly one stands on the shoulders of giants.
And it is a club one never leaves, even on exiting the employment of the Civil Service.

The code of omerta still very much applies, even in retirement.

GOD these days, in that other place, those Elysian Fields, sets us a good example.
Hodges, when you smear one of us, you insult all of us.

We are not journalists we are a family.
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