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Adult Social Care Strategy Review - The Life You Want to Lead
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Thank you to everyone who helped shape the refreshed Adult Social Care Strategy. Your feedback has played a key role in its development.
You said - What we heard through the survey
We ran a public survey to understand whether the five priorities in the previous strategy still mattered. We received 262 responses, including 29 Easy Read responses.
People told us that the previous strategy’s priorities remain important. In particular, they said:
People need help at the right time, without delays or difficulties getting through.
Clear information is essential, especially about support and paying for care.
Skilled, consistent care workers make a big difference.
Unpaid carers need reliable support and breaks.
Being able to live well at home matters to most people.
We must focus on reducing inequalities, including digital exclusion, loneliness and barriers to accessing support.
More support is needed for autistic people, people with learning disabilities and young people moving into adulthood.
How other feedback added to this
Alongside the survey, we spoke with people who use services, carers, staff, voluntary and community groups, NHS Sussex, and colleagues from districts and borough councils.
They reinforced the survey themes and highlighted the importance of:
working together at community and neighbourhood level
designing support with people, not for them, and
Recognising the impact of people’s circumstances, including housing, on their social care needs; and
taking action to reduce local inequalities.
Together, this gave us a strong, consistent picture of what matters most. The feedback we obtained has directly shaped the refreshed strategy.
In response, we:
Confirmed that the previous strategy’s priorities remain relevant and important.
Strengthened our focus on early, joined‑up support, so people don’t have to reach crisis point before getting help.
Made clear commitments to providing plain‑English, accessible information, with non‑digital options.
Reaffirmed the vital role of unpaid carers and the need for dependable support.
Prioritised helping people to live safely and independently at home.
Highlighted the need for a skilled, supported workforce.
Built in a stronger focus on reducing inequalities and ensuring fair access to support.
Committed to working with people, carers, statutory partners, the voluntary and community sector at a community and neighbourhood level.
This means the refreshed strategy is clear, realistic and firmly rooted in what people told us matters.
What happens next
The strategy will be presented to Cabinet on 10 March 2026 for a final decision. Before this, it will be reviewed by the Health and Adult Social Care Scrutiny Committee (HASC) on 4 March 2026 (opens in new window), where councillors will examine the proposals.
If approved, the strategy will guide our work. Progress will be monitored through our usual governance processes—the checks we use to make sure work is safe, effective and on track. These include updates to the Cabinet Member for Adults Services, Cabinet and HASC.
Accessibility statement
If you need this information in an alternative format, please contact James Ironside by phone on 01243 642121. or email at WorkingTogetherAS@westsussex.gov.uk. If you are deaf or hard of hearing and have an NGT texting app installed on your computer, laptop or smartphone, you can contact us on 18001 01243 642121.
Please note you can use the Google Translate option in the top right hand corner to specify which language you would like to use to access this page.
Thank you to everyone who helped shape the refreshed Adult Social Care Strategy. Your feedback has played a key role in its development.
You said - What we heard through the survey
We ran a public survey to understand whether the five priorities in the previous strategy still mattered. We received 262 responses, including 29 Easy Read responses.
People told us that the previous strategy’s priorities remain important. In particular, they said:
People need help at the right time, without delays or difficulties getting through.
Clear information is essential, especially about support and paying for care.
Skilled, consistent care workers make a big difference.
Unpaid carers need reliable support and breaks.
Being able to live well at home matters to most people.
We must focus on reducing inequalities, including digital exclusion, loneliness and barriers to accessing support.
More support is needed for autistic people, people with learning disabilities and young people moving into adulthood.
How other feedback added to this
Alongside the survey, we spoke with people who use services, carers, staff, voluntary and community groups, NHS Sussex, and colleagues from districts and borough councils.
They reinforced the survey themes and highlighted the importance of:
working together at community and neighbourhood level
designing support with people, not for them, and
Recognising the impact of people’s circumstances, including housing, on their social care needs; and
taking action to reduce local inequalities.
Together, this gave us a strong, consistent picture of what matters most. The feedback we obtained has directly shaped the refreshed strategy.
In response, we:
Confirmed that the previous strategy’s priorities remain relevant and important.
Strengthened our focus on early, joined‑up support, so people don’t have to reach crisis point before getting help.
Made clear commitments to providing plain‑English, accessible information, with non‑digital options.
Reaffirmed the vital role of unpaid carers and the need for dependable support.
Prioritised helping people to live safely and independently at home.
Highlighted the need for a skilled, supported workforce.
Built in a stronger focus on reducing inequalities and ensuring fair access to support.
Committed to working with people, carers, statutory partners, the voluntary and community sector at a community and neighbourhood level.
This means the refreshed strategy is clear, realistic and firmly rooted in what people told us matters.
What happens next
The strategy will be presented to Cabinet on 10 March 2026 for a final decision. Before this, it will be reviewed by the Health and Adult Social Care Scrutiny Committee (HASC) on 4 March 2026 (opens in new window), where councillors will examine the proposals.
If approved, the strategy will guide our work. Progress will be monitored through our usual governance processes—the checks we use to make sure work is safe, effective and on track. These include updates to the Cabinet Member for Adults Services, Cabinet and HASC.
Accessibility statement
If you need this information in an alternative format, please contact James Ironside by phone on 01243 642121. or email at WorkingTogetherAS@westsussex.gov.uk. If you are deaf or hard of hearing and have an NGT texting app installed on your computer, laptop or smartphone, you can contact us on 18001 01243 642121.
Please note you can use the Google Translate option in the top right hand corner to specify which language you would like to use to access this page.
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Page last updated: 09 Mar 2026, 11:11 AM
Consultation Process
Consultation Open from Monday 8 September 2025
Adult Social Care Strategy Review - The Life You Want to Lead has finished this stage
Consultation is open for feedback via this survey.
Consultation Closed
Adult Social Care Strategy Review - The Life You Want to Lead is currently at this stage
Consultation closes at 11:55pm on Friday 31 October 2025. The survey can be completed up to this time.