To bring together all parts of the system, to reduce & eliminate silo working. To build strong relationships where we can share resources, learning, challenges, and successes. To create spaces where we can take opportunities to try new and experimental ways of working more collaboratively, whilst challenging unnecessary policy which get in the way of positive change.
Our Mission
SCAA Members
It was through my collaborative work with partners that I met a number of the members of the SCAA, I have recently been asked to join to provide an oversight of housing and share my experience of the “housing system”.
I have worked in housing, in Devon, for over 14 years, from the front line through to supervisory roles. It has long been evident to me and my teams that “the system” often lets down the people it should be there to support, both our service users and our staff. However I know how compassionate and caring the staff who work in housing are, and how they want to help their service users thrive and succeed in all aspects of their life.
During the pandemic housing staff were often at the forefront with initiatives such as Everyone In and some teams remained one of the only front line staff still operating. As a result of the increase in workload and working under pandemic conditions we saw that a lot of staff felt burnt out. Now with the acknowledged housing crisis and caseloads increasing I want to find a way to better support staff across Devon and Cornwall so that they can deliver meaningful help. I believe that by working with my colleagues in the SCAA this can be achieved.
We challenge wherever we see or experience things that we do not think are just or in the best interest of the people we work with. We use our voice to elevate the voice and concerns of others and to raise key issues facing the people in the criminal justice system. We are committed to being part of a positive shift within the system to better address the needs of people with multiple and complex needs and it is for these reasons that we joined the System Change Action Alliance
I’ve recognised in my commissioning role that we have tended to commission services in silo’s and that traditionally we identify health problems and then look to respond with health interventions. Through my connections with the system and spending time in the field with various practitioners I’ve learnt that we need a more compassionate and flexible approach to supporting people living with multiple adversity.
I’ve been inspired by colleagues in the System Change Action Alliance and have found a friendly group of liked minded people who have given me confidence to test some of my thoughts and provided a safe space to challenge and evolve my work.
Through my interactions and experiences in a variety of settings, through listening to people and seeing first-hand how services and systems can get in the way of people leading more fulfilling lives, I have developed a strong belief that all those labels are actually really unhelpful and that if we stop and look at the person for who they are, rather than their ‘presenting condition’, ‘risk’ or ‘need’, we can improve outcomes for them and the people around them much more effectively.
I am excited to have found through the System Change Action Alliance a collective of people that share my beliefs and that want to work collaboratively to develop solutions in Devon and I am really optimistic that together we can drive system evolution.
Working in a community with some of the worst health inequalities in the country, Andrea observed a lack of focus on understanding the wide-ranging factors that were driving health inequalities or the flexibility and integration required to respond to them. The ‘One’ partnerships to improve service integration and ‘Flow’ programme which aims to provide support which flows around the person were both developed to address this. One Northern Devon is now an integral part of North Devon’s Local Care Partnership and Andrea also sits on the Devon Integrated Care Partnership Board.
Nicola Glassbrook
I am currently working as a Public Health Specialist at Devon County Council, covering Public mental Health (including Suicide Prevention) and Inclusion Health. I was drawn to Public Health as it has a strong sense of Social Justice, using evidence to show that a person’s health is as much to do with their childhood experiences, access to decent housing , employment etc as the healthcare they receive. Previously I worked in the Homelessness sector; as a hostel worker, then had the privilege to set up and manage an Outreach Service for Rough Sleepers.
I am grateful to be involved in the SCAA, as it represents a real opportunity to bring our skills and experience together to improve services for people who use them and people who work in them.
I then went to Liverpool Art Collage gaining a degree in fine art sculpture and spent the next 24 years teaching art design and technology in schools. I always felt art is a means for a child’s growth and confidence in life, not just skills to impart and learn. In the workshop, children would be busy developing their own ideas, from a huge oil painting to building an aircraft to play in or making a survival adventure kit for a den.
This came to an end when it came to light that some of the children I taught had been sexually abused and I was devastated I had not realised or known and protected them. My mental health unravelled and I ended up being admitted to psychiatric hospital and eventually retired on an ill health pension and mood stabilisers for years.
Sadly no one asked, “What happened to you?” they only told me what was wrong with me.
It would be another 10 years in and out of services, trying to hint, trying to say, before meeting a mental health worker who I trusted. I finally felt safe enough to say. I gradually came to realise the shameful secret I had kept for decades was a description of my childhood sexual abuse and the devastating effect it had had on my life. I had created another world alongside my everyday life until it overwhelmed me and my means to cope went from helpful to destructive. I explored this and the need for system change in The Alcohol 'Problem' podcast
Things changed for me when I went on a group therapy programme for male survivors of childhood sexual abuse with mental health problems. I learned that I was not alone, that others felt as I do and that I was not ill. I was traumatised and healing was possible. Understanding trauma has given me a language for recovery.
After the therapy group I, along with other male survivors, realised this was the beginning of recovery not the end. Unable to get further help, we formed a support group for male survivors called moMENtum with groups in Barnstaple and Exeter.
Not long ago a man in the group who had said nothing, gave someone in the group a piece of paper and asked them to read it. It was his disclosure of sexual abuse as a young child. Silenced for over 50 years, he hoped he would get the help he had so long needed; now he is but so many do not.
Along with others, I campaign for better awareness of childhood sexual abuse and trauma- informed understanding in practice and policy. I want services to understand the importance of survivors having the opportunity to meet other survivors as part of healing.
From my own experience and men approaching us at momentum, there are many people with complex lives and trauma, bounced between services. Some are denied support in both primary and secondary care. These men tell us they need services that are human and work with them, not at them, that can provide long term support that adapts as they change and heal.
Involvements: Devon Trauma Network; Drink Wise Age Well; Pathfinder Developments Sexual Abuse and Violence Devon; British Psychological Society Working With Historic Sexual Abuse; Truth Project: Independent Inquiry Into Childhood Sexual Abuse
I don’t just want to be in meetings discussing trauma-based practice. I want to be with organisations and individuals with professional and/or lived experience working together to make it happen. That is why I am part of this alliance.
“We know that the system can often feel fractured for people with multiple complex needs, the people we support would regularly tell us that they were left feeling more traumatized post an intervention than before they accepted support.”
If we really want to support people then we must focus on building strong trusting relationships which removes a them and us approach, we must ensure that our clients are at the heart of our decisions and recognise the value of lived experience across all our services and work more collaboratively. When you start to make these changes great things can happen.