Trudi Grant
Activity Timeline
Meetings Attended Note this may include planned future meetings.
3 meetings
Lincolnshire Health and Wellbeing Board - Tuesday, 28 July 2026 - 2.00 pm
Health Scrutiny Committee for Lincolnshire - Wednesday, 13 May 2026 - 10.00 am
The Health Scrutiny Committee for Lincolnshire met on Wednesday 13 May 2026 to discuss the Maternity and Neonatal Programme's equity and equality transformation efforts, receive an update on Quality Accounts for 2025/2026, and review the committee's work programme. Key decisions included thanking the presenters of the maternity report and requesting a follow-up report in 12 months, agreeing to include the North West Anglia NHS Foundation Trust's Quality Account in the working group's considerations, and noting the confirmed items for future meetings while adding new items to the work programme.
Lincolnshire Health and Wellbeing Board - Tuesday, 10th March, 2026 2.00 pm
The Lincolnshire Health and Wellbeing Board met on Tuesday 10 March 2026 to discuss the NHS Joint Forward Plan, the refresh of the Joint Strategic Needs Assessment, the Lincolnshire Better Care Fund, and the Director of Public Health's Annual Report on the case for quality employment. The Board noted the requirements for NHS Integrated Care Boards to develop a Joint Forward Plan and acknowledged that the Derbyshire, Lincolnshire and Nottinghamshire (DLN) ICB Cluster had produced a plan aligned with the Lincolnshire Joint Health and Wellbeing Strategy. They also noted the refresh of the Joint Strategic Needs Assessment and agreed to remove the 'Neurological conditions' topic. The Board received an update on the Better Care Fund and noted the Director of Public Health's Annual Report.
Decisions from Meetings
0 decisions
No decisions found for the selected date range. Not all decisions are recorded, so this may significantly underestimate the number of decisions actually made.
Summary
- Meetings attended
- 3
- Average per month
- 0.6
- Decisions recorded Not all decisions are recorded, so this may significantly underestimate the number of decisions actually made.
- 0