South West London CCG Annual Report and Accounts 2020/21
protection lead, and includes representatives from the NHS, local authority social services and education departments. All partners review and provide an update on the status of identified risks and raise new risks and concerns. In September 2020, we implemented Identification and Referral to Improve Safety (IRIS) in Croydon. This is a training and support programme for GP practices, giving staff the confidence and skills to talk to patients about domestic violence and abuse. The other five South West London boroughs’ domestic violence forums are reviewing how the IRIS system is working in Croydon with a view to implementing in their boroughs. The designated professionals continue to work collaboratively across the statutory partnership with local domestic abuse services to disseminate updated guidance relating to this issue and represent the CCG at all commissioned domestic homicide reviews. NHS South West London CCG is represented and proactively involved with the London domestic violence and abuse clinical reference group to ensure national updates are reflected at a local and regional level. Modern slavery and human trafficking Modern slavery is the recruitment, movement, harbouring or receiving of children, women or men through the use of force, coercion, abuse of vulnerability, deception or other means for the purpose of exploitation. Individuals may be trafficked into, out of or within the UK, and they may be trafficked for a number of reasons, including sexual exploitation, forced labour, domestic servitude and organ harvesting. We are committed to ensuring that there is no modern slavery or human trafficking in any part of our business activity and, in so far as is possible, to hold our suppliers to account to do likewise. Prevent Safeguarding duties include the Prevent strategy, which aims to protect vulnerable individuals from being groomed into terrorist activity or supporting terrorism. Visit gov.uk to report illegal or harmful information, pictures or videos you’ve found on the internet about terrorism or extremism. All of our safeguarding mandatory training now includes Prevent. The Learning Disability Mortality Review (LeDeR) The Learning Disability Mortality Review (LeDeR) programme supports local areas to review the deaths of people with learning disabilities (deaths include from age 4 and above), helping to promote and implement the review process, and providing support to local areas to take forward lessons learned in the reviews to make improvements to service provision. The LeDeR also collates and shares anonymised information about the deaths of people with learning disabilities so that common themes, learning points and recommendations can be identified and taken forward into policy and practice improvements. Our LeDeR steering group is attended by representatives from adult social care, 98 | NHS South West London Clinical Commissioning Group
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