Reviewing a Transition Plan (Carers)
1. When to use this Procedure
This procedure should be used whenever you have been asked to review a Transition Plan for a carer/ young carer that is not a Support Plan.
2. The Purpose of Reviewing the Transition Plan
The purpose of reviewing the Transition Plan is to;
- Ensure that actions have been carried out as agreed;
- Discuss and agree timeframes for a proportionate assessment to confirm needs and eligibility or to commence Support Planning;
- Review progress towards outcomes in the plan and identify new outcomes;
- Establish any changes required to the plan; and
- Agree any further actions required to progress transition.
3. Who should be Involved
Unless there have been any changes in consent or the carer/young carer's situation it is normally appropriate to involve the same people in the Transition Plan review as were involved in developing the Transition Plan.
Consideration should be given as to the stage in transition where it would be helpful for a person with expertise and knowledge in adult Care and Support to become involved in reviews of the plan.
The advocacy duty
You should consider whether the advocacy duty applies whenever;
- A young carer lacks capacity or competence to be involved in the plan; or
- A carer or a young carer has substantial difficult being involved in the plan.
If a young carer is under 16
When a young carer is under the age of 16 you must involve;
- The young carer;
- The young carer's parents;
- Anyone who has parental responsibility;
- Anyone else that the young carer asks to be involved;
- Anyone else that a person with parental responsibility asks you to involve;
- Anyone else that you feel needs to be involved (with the consent of the young carer or anyone with parental responsibility).
If a young carer is over 16 but under 18
When a young carer is over the age of 16 you must involve;
- The young carer;
- Anyone with parental responsibility;
- Anyone else that the young carer asks to be involved;
- Anyone else that the young carer consents to be involved (for example a parent or family member that does not have parental responsibility);
- Where the young carer lacks capacity, anyone else that you feel it is in their best interests to involve.
If the carer is an adult (over the age of18)
When a carer is over the age of 18 you must involve;
- The carer;
- Anyone else that the carer asks you to involve;
- Anyone else that the carer consents to be involved.
4. Combining Transition Reviews
Where the carer/young carer with a Transition Plan is caring for a young person with a Transition Plan consideration should be given to combining the carer/young carer's Transition Plan review and the cared for young person's Transition Plan review.
Reviews can be combined so long as;
- The young person is in agreement; or
- The young person lacks capacity and a decision is made in their best interests (over the age of 16); or
- The young person lacks competence and a person with parental responsibility consents (under the age of 16); and
- The carer/young carer is in agreement; or
- The young carer is under 16, unable to consent but a person with parental responsibility is in agreement; or
- The young carer is between 16 and 18 years old, is unable to consent and the Local Authority makes a best interest decision to this effect; and
- Combining reviews is technologically possible.
5. Reviewing the Transition Plan
When to review
Unless an unplanned review is requested or required the Transition Plan review should be carried out to the timeframes agreed;
- When it was developed; or
- At the last review
The timeframe should be proportionate and appropriate to the specific transitional needs of the carer/young carer and their circumstances.
The timeframe should be flexible and bringing a planned review forward should always be considered whenever it is requested by anyone involved in the plan.
Method of review
The method of review should ensure the involvement of the carer/young carer and may be;
- Face to face;
- Telephone communication;
- E-mail communication.
Where the young carer lacks capacity (over the age of 16) or competence (under the age of 16) you should meet with them face to face to review the plan. This should be with the support of an appropriate person or an independent advocate.
What to include in the conversation
The Transition Plan review conversation should be proportionate and appropriate to the specific transitional needs of each carer/young carer. It should broadly consider the following things;
- Whether the outcomes in the plan are progressing as planned;
- Whether the support being provided to the carer/young carer to prepare for transition is working as intended, or whether changes are needed to the support;
- Where likely needs for Support from adult Care and Support have not yet been confirmed through a proportionate carer's assessment, when it may be of significant benefit to do so;
- Where likely needs from the age of 18 have been confirmed and found eligible, when it may be of beneficial to set an indicative personal budget and begin Care and Support Planning;
- Where likely needs have been assessed and found not eligible, what alternative options for support need to be explored;
- If there have been changes to the carer/young carer's needs or circumstances (now or likely in the future), what the impact on the plan is;
- Whether the plan is still an appropriate and proportionate way to support transition;
- Whether anyone else needs to be involved in then plan;
- New actions required to progress the plan;
- What monitoring of the plan may be required to ensure progress following the review;
- When the plan should next be reviewed.
Tools to support the conversation
There are a range of tools available to you to support effective conversations during the Transition Planning process. You should consider the tool/s that you feel are best suited to the carer/young carer and will maximise their engagement.
Click here to access a tri.x tool that can support a carer/young carer to think about what matters most to them, now and in the future.
6. Recording and Next Steps
Recording the review
You are responsible for establishing the current framework used by the service for recording purposes. If you are unclear you should speak to your line manager before proceeding to make a formal record of the Transition Plan review.
The timeframe for making a record
There is no statutory timeframe for making a record of a Transition Plan review, but this should be done in a timely way.
What should be included in the record
The review record should include;
- What progress has been made towards outcomes in the plan;
- What support has been provided to the carer/young carer to support them to manage the transition, and how this has worked;
- What has been discussed or agreed in regard to any proportionate assessment to confirm needs, setting an indicative personal budget or Support planning;
- Whether there are any changes required to the plan, including the carer/young carer's outcomes and the transitional support being provided support;
- Whether anyone else is going to be involved in the plan;
- What new actions have been agreed to progress the plan;
- How the Plan will be monitored and when the next review will be.
Providing a copy of the record
A record of the review should be provided to the carer/young carer and to anyone else who is involved in the plan.
You must also provide a copy to anyone else that the carer/young carer asks you to, unless you feel that doing so will place the carer/young carer, or a vulnerable adult or child at risk of harm or abuse.
Where the young carer is under the age of 16 you must also provide a copy to anyone who a person with parental responsibility asks you to provide a copy to.
If you feel that the record should be shared with anyone else you can only do so;
- The carer/young carer's consent; or
- In the case of young carers, the consent of a person with parental responsibility if they are unable to consent and under 16; or
- In the case of young carers, a Local Authority best interest decision if they are unable to consent and over 16.
If you are unsure whether to share a copy you should seek advice from your line manager.
Revising the Transition Plan
The process for revising the Transition Plan should be as simple as possible to reflect the fact that it may need to be revised on many occasions throughout its lifetime.
If you are not familiar with the process for revising a Transition Plan you should seek advice from your line manager.
Ending the Transition Plan
If the outcome of the review is to end the transition plan you should refer to the procedure below.7. Ending the Transition Plan
When to end the plan
The timeframe for ending a Transition Plan will be different for each carer/young carer and no legislation sets a time limit on ending or continuing a Transition Plan.
Some plans will end as soon as adult Care and Support begins to meet eligible needs, some may end before this time and some may continue beyond it.
Indicators that a Transition Plan may no longer be required include;
- All outcomes in the plan have been met with no further action required;
- The carer/young carer has no eligible need for adult Care and Support and has made appropriate alternative arrangements which do not require monitoring;
- The Transition Plan has been incorporated into an adult Support Plan and will be monitored as part of the statutory Support Plan review;
- The carer/young carer has successfully transitioned to adult Care and Support and there are no further transitional objectives to be met.
Any decision to end the Transition Plan must be agreed with;
- The carer/young carer;
- In the case of young carers under the age of 18, anyone with parental responsibility;
- In the case of young carers under the age of 16, any parent (regardless of whether they have parental responsibility).
Where the carer is over the age of 18 any decision to end the Transition Plan must be made with regard for;
- The views of the carer about ending the plan; and
- The impact of ending the plan on the carer's individual Wellbeing.
If the carer/young carer (or their parent/person with parental responsibility) is not in agreement with the decision to end the plan you must make them aware of their right to complain.
Ending the plan
If a decision has been reached to end the Transition Plan you should;
- Ensure that measures are in place to follow up on any on-going elements of the Transition Plan via other plans or adult Care and Support processes; and
- End the Transition Plan.