SONAR Case Management System (CMS), known as SONAR, is the first Health and Justice (H&J) Case Management System with the objective of reducing reoffending by managing the interventions and outcomes of health and social care support more robustly to achieve better quality of life outcomes for the Service User, their relationships, family and friends and for the wider society as a whole. SONAR reduces costs, increases productivity, and improves outcomes regardless of the touch point, be it police, courts, prisons, probation, “signposting” to NHS and Local Authority services, charities, and other third-party organisations. By allowing each vested health, social care and other partners to update the Service Users Shared Case Record, key stakeholders, including probation, can ascertain at a glance examine historic case notes, review current engagement with services and identify where, if at all, the Service User in not engaging proactively with the support services available to them. This recording of engagement with Services, enables Commissioners to identify “weak links” in the support and rehabilitation journey the Service User is undertaking. The SONAR experience was designed by leading stakeholders from the blue light and H&J community, with a reassuring and intuitive look and feel. The technology roadmap of the software is to incorporate the latest technologies of Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning to predict the future healthcare needs of Health and Justice in the United Kingdon and beyond. SONAR will restore people’s lives through a simple, yet effective, shared case management record utilising SONAR as the core technology to collate, inform, signpost, analyse, enhance the support available from all organisations and agencies involved in the continuing rehabilitation of Service Users with a full real time reporting functionality including PID and non-PID reports. The ultimate goal of SONAR is to help to break the costly cycle of reoffending to the taxpayer, victims and to the relationships, family and friends of the Service User. And of course, the Service User themselves. |