14th May 2025
On 7th May, colleagues from across East London NHS Foundation Trust (ELFT) came together for a Trust-wide session focused on advancing equity in healthcare. Hosted in collaboration with the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI), the event brought together service users, staff, and leaders to explore how we can reduce disparities in access to care—particularly the stark differences in missed appointments between our most and least deprived communities.
Why This Work Matters
Across ELFT, data shows that service users from the most deprived neighbourhoods are around 4.5 times more likely to miss their appointments than those from more affluent areas. This translates to over 1,200 missed appointments every two weeks, with significant consequences—not just for service productivity, but for the people most in need of care.
The Pursuing Equity Programme is addressing this challenge by combining quality improvement methods, lived experience insight, and data analytics. Each participating team is testing ideas to close the gap and ensure that care is delivered more equitably across the system.
Insights from the Session
The event featured contributions from global and national leaders in healthcare improvement. Pedro Delgado (IHI) encouraged attendees to “go an inch wide and a mile deep” when working to understand the communities they serve. He also emphasised the importance of alignment between staff and service users—when staff feel excluded or unsupported, it can be difficult to lead equity work authentically.
Jason Leitch (Scottish Government and IHI) offered a national perspective, highlighting the expected 21% rise in Scotland’s disease burden by 2045, and underscoring the urgency of meeting people where they are—in both health and social contexts.
Both speakers stressed the importance of combining strategic ambition with locally grounded, practical action. Change, they reminded us, must be both scalable and adaptable.
Learning from Each Other
A highlight of the session was hearing directly from ELFT teams about the work already underway. From peer support workers making reminder calls, to community-based outreach in a homeless women’s shelter, the ideas being tested reflect the diversity of local needs. These stories sparked reflection among attendees, many of whom were surprised to learn that other teams were working on similar challenges. There was a strong sense of opportunity in coming together as a learning community to share ideas and build on what’s working.
The programme now has 9 teams showing improvement, all who are testing a combination of the change ideas described below.
Key messages from the event
Several key messages emerged from the session:
Building on this idea, we also got the group to discuss how we should spread successful ideas and sustain the gains we’ve made. People emphasised:
To support success, teams highlighted the need for:
Sustaining gains over time would require embedding changes into routine practice, using data to monitor progress, and maintaining connections through learning forums. Ideas included:
Looking Ahead
The Pursuing Equity Programme continues to provide structured support for teams, including:
Equity is not a separate strand of our work—it must be embedded in everything we do. By continuing to test, learn, and share, we can create services that work better for everyone, especially those who have historically been left behind.
GALLERY OF TEAM’S POSTERS
18th July 2018
20th May 2019
22nd March 2016
21st January 2021
31st March 2023
18th March 2019
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