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News
12 Mar 2025
Across Westminster, the CHWW movement has been making ground in a holistic way. Inspired by Brazil’s Family Health Strategy, the Community Health & Wellbeing Worker (CHWW) Programme has completed its official first year.
The results have been promising. From reducing hospital admissions to tackling loneliness, the programme is redefining how communities engage with healthcare, helping to erase this disconnect between services, and those most in need.
The CHWW model is simple yet innovative. Local, entrenched members of the community, (trained and paid) proactively visit around 120 households each month. These visits go beyond health check — they’re about building trust, nurturing relationships, and connecting residents to local services. The programme is hyperlocal, universal, and integrated. This means everyone gets seen regularly, with more time spent on households that need extra support.
Westminster now has two CHWW teams covering 76 micro-areas, or ‘villages’, with the highest need. To make robust evaluation by Imperial College London possible, 19 of these areas were randomly allocated a CHWW too.
In a nutshell, the results include a 7% drop in unplanned GP appointments, a 47% rise in vaccination likelihood, and an 82% increase in cancer and general screening uptake.
In its first year, the programme has reached up to 25% of households, with each CHWW making up to 10 visits a month. Integration with eight GP practices, St Mary’s A&E, and various community services has happened in an intuitive way. The average number of door knocks needed to achieve a visit has decreased from 11 to 5, showing that trust is building.
The impact on hospital admissions has been building too. Postcodes with a CHWW saw an 10% reduction in hospital admissions compared to the previous year. Residents are also reporting higher satisfaction with their GP and council services, a testament to the programme’s all-encompassing approach.
Behind the numbers are real stories of lives changed. Take the young man who wasn’t able to address a skin infection until it turned into an abscess. A CHWW noticed the worsening condition, and made sure he got treatment, preventing sepsis and a potential A&E admission.
Or Ms A, who was struggling with eye pain and couldn’t read her medication instructions. Her CHWW set up phone alarms, and checked in weekly, preventing a worsening deterioration of her eyesight.
Then there’s Mr S, a frequent A&E visitor because of anxiety, and issues with drug use. After a CHWW intervened, he began attending A&E less frequently and joined a patient support group. These stories highlight the programme’s ability to address mental and social wellbeing, rather than just physical health.
The CHWW programme operates under the ‘Octopus’ model, a framework designed to bring together health, local authority, and voluntary sector services. The model’s tentacles represent the many frontline roles that contribute to a person’s health and wellbeing, from GPs and social workers to community champions and faith leaders.
This model is flexible, agile, and holistic. It allows CHWWs to act quickly in urgent situations, whether it’s a mental health emergency or a new baby in the household. Importantly, CHWWs don’t discharge anyone; they’re a lifelong support point for their residents.
Looking ahead, the goal is ambitious but achievable: up to 76 CHWWs covering all areas of need in Westminster, reaching at least 60-70% of over 9,000 households. The programme aims to secure sustainable funding, boosting reliable support and continuity of care. Full integration with all GP practices, hospital trusts, and frontline roles in the borough is also on the agenda.
The programme’s success has already caught the attention of national media, with the BBC highlighting its innovative approach. It started out as a local healthcare initiative, but as Westminster continues to refine and expand the CHWW model — it’s becoming a blueprint strategy towards a healthier, more connected community that could be applied nationwide.
By putting human connection at the heart of care, beyond improving health outcomes across Westminster, this programme is also helping to build a community where everyone feels seen, heard, and supported.
As Dr Matthew Harris, one of the programme’s advocates, says: “This is about giving communities dignity and agency over their health and wellbeing.”
So, here’s to the CHWWs — Westminster’s community game changers, quietly tapping into personalised care and support, one doorstep at a time.
With thanks to NHS England, the City of Westminster, and all partners involved in making this programme a success.
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