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Coordinated individual plan

When several providers need to work together, a coordinated individual plan gathers actions and responsibilities so you get the right support at the right time.

Updated:

Please note that all forms, digital applications (e-services) and some linked websites are currently in Swedish. Contact Citizen Service if you need help in English.

What is a coordinated individual plan

A coordinated individual plan is used when several services need to work together around you. The plan gives an overview, assigns responsibility, and makes cooperation clear.

When the plan is needed

  • When you receive support from several providers at the same time.
  • When it is unclear who does what and when.
  • When actions need to be coordinated for the best effect.

Purpose

The plan is a tool, not a goal. It ensures you receive the support and actions you need in a coordinated and safe way.

The individual’s needs in focus

The plan must always be based on your needs and your life situation. The way of working is adapted to the support required and to your everyday life.

How the work is organised

  • Your situation is mapped together with you.
  • Necessary actions are planned and scheduled.
  • Responsible persons are appointed and contact routes are set.
  • The plan is followed up and updated when needed.

Plan contents and responsibilities

The plan must clearly answer: who does what, and when?

What must be stated

  • Which actions are needed to meet your needs.
  • Which actions each responsible authority will provide.
  • Which measures someone other than the municipality or the region will take.
  • Which authority has the overall responsibility for the plan.

Legal basis and examples

The municipality and the region must draw up a coordinated individual plan when they judge that actions need to be coordinated. This also applies to private providers that the municipality or region has agreements with.

Legislation

  • The Social Services Act, chapter 2, section 7.
  • The Health and Medical Services Act, chapter 16, section 4.
    You must be involved in the work with the plan. When a need has been identified, work should start promptly. The law sets a minimum level — more can always be done.

Who is covered — examples

  • Children in placements who often have many contacts that need coordination.
  • Asylum-seeking and newly arrived children and young people, especially those who have arrived without guardians and receive support from several services.

Do you want to access a specific document? Contact Citizen Service, and we will help you retrieve and read the full document.

Contact

Citizen Service

E-mail: kommunen@boden.se

Phone: +46 921 620 00