Integrating health and social care at neighbourhood level in Manchester

A rapid review examining evidence, challenges and enablers of neighbourhood-level integration of health and social care in the city of Manchester.

Key messages

  • effective neighbourhood integration depends on strong leadership, shared goals and clear communication
  • relational and cultural factors, including trust and collaboration, are as important as structural change
  • professional identity differences and siloed working cultures remain major barriers
  • inconsistent data sharing limits coordination across organisations
  • evidence on neighbourhood-level integration remains limited, particularly in urban UK settings.

Policy implications

  • neighbourhood integration strategies should prioritise leadership development and shared vision
  • investment in relationship-building across professions and organisations may be critical to success
  • data sharing arrangements need to support joint working at neighbourhood level
  • local implementation should be accompanied by clear evaluation frameworks.

Gaps

  • limited empirical evidence describing how neighbourhood integration operates in practice
  • lack of robust evaluations, including outcome measures and long-term follow-up
  • insufficient inclusion of service users, carers and frontline staff perspectives.

Commentary
This rapid review highlights that neighbourhood health and care integration is shaped as much by relational and cultural dynamics as by organisational structures. Strong leadership, shared goals and effective communication are identified as central to aligning health and social care around local populations.

The persistence of siloed working and professional identity differences suggests that integration efforts risk stalling if cultural barriers are not addressed. From a care equity perspective, these barriers may disproportionately affect people with complex needs who rely on coordinated support across services.

Inconsistent data sharing further limits the effectiveness of neighbourhood integration. Without shared information, teams struggle to plan and deliver joined-up care, reducing the potential benefits of place-based approaches.

The review also draws attention to significant evidence gaps. Limited evaluation and weak inclusion of lived experience mean that it remains unclear how neighbourhood integration affects access, experience and outcomes for local communities.

Overall, the findings suggest that neighbourhood health and care in Manchester requires sustained investment in leadership, culture and evaluation alongside structural reform. Without this, integration risks remaining fragmented and uneven, limiting its contribution to equitable care.