Grapevine leads Coventry partnership for Healthy Communities Together

Six areas in England have been chosen to join the first phase of a major grant-funding and development programme designed to improve the health and wellbeing of communities and tackle health inequalities.

The Healthy Communities Together programme, which was established by The King’s Fund and The National Lottery Community Fund, will support partnership-working between the voluntary and community sector (VCS), the NHS and local authorities, and will help them make the most of their combined capability to improve the health of their community.

A group of women with children put a large foam mat jigsaw together on grass

The areas were selected from more than 270 applications and will now benefit from leadership development support from The King’s Fund and up to £500,000 grant funding from The National Lottery Community Fund, the largest funder of community activity in the UK.

The six areas selected to take part in the programme are:

  • Coventry (Grapevine Coventry and Warwickshire and partners)
  • Croydon (One Croydon Alliance)
  • Gloucestershire (Gloucestershire Enabling Active Communities)
  • Leeds (Solidarity Network and Partners)
  • Newham (Well Newham)
  • Plymouth (Plymouth Octopus Project and partners)

The six areas chosen for the Healthy Communities Together programme demonstrated how their partnerships aim to tackle deep-rooted health inequalities. Each area will also work to improve the links between health and care services and the communities they serve so that local needs can be better met.

Through our Coventry partnership we, “want to bring the whole system together – starting from individuals and moving out to their families, friends, neighbours, local voluntary sector groups and services, and then up to secondary and primary care – through a series of large, place-based conversations to hear and understand the story of lived experience, to explore together what an improved story would look like, and to plan how to create it together.”

Click here for further details of the Healthy Communities Together programme and how we’ll first focus on mental health.

Charities and community groups often play a vital role working with disadvantaged communities to improve the lives of people with the worst health outcomes, and this role has come to the fore during the Covid-19 pandemic. Many of the applications to the programme showed how the sector’s extensive reach into the communities hardest hit by the virus is proving invaluable alongside the efforts of NHS and council services.

In Coventry, our partnership is made up of Grapevine, Coventry and Warwickshire Primary Care Trust, Coventry City Council and Coventry and Warwickshire Health and Care Partnership.

Across England, health charities, NHS organisations and local authorities are working towards the same goal, in the same place, often supporting the same people. Better co-ordination of their collective efforts is seen as key to improving the health of local communities. The experience and learning of the organisations involved in Healthy communities together will be shared beyond the programme to help shape progress towards more joined-up working across the country.

A woman sits at a table having coffee with a man

Click here to read comments about today’s announcement from The King’s Fund and The National Lottery Community Fund.

During the first phase of the programme, each site will receive £50,000 in development funding from The National Lottery Community Fund plus support from The King’s Fund to develop new ways of working and foster stronger relationships between organisations. A number of the areas will then progress to the second phase of the programme where up to £450,000 of additional funding will be made available to each area and leadership support will continue over the subsequent three to four years. In total, the programme will offer up to £3 million of grant funding and £850,000-worth of support.

The Healthy Communities Together programme forms part of efforts by The King’s Fund to improve health and care for people with the worst health outcomes. The programme also builds on The National Lottery Community Fund’s expertise in place-based funding, aiming to support local areas to develop effective and sustainable partnerships between the voluntary and community sector, the NHS and local authorities to improve health and wellbeing, reduce health inequalities and empower communities. The programme complements The National Lottery Community Fund’s wider support for health and wellbeing, which includes providing just under £100 million [1] to support social prescribing since 2014: supporting and enabling link workers, piloting new approaches and VCS-led activities and services that underpin social prescribing.

Thanks to National Lottery players, £30 million is raised every week for the UK’s good causes, and £41 billion has been distributed to 565,000 good causes across the UK since 1994.