Transcript Document

Margi Butler, Head of
Commissioning – Mental Health &
Learning Disability, Warrington
CCG
Shaping the way for the Mental
Health Partnership Board
Why should commissioners strive to
achieve parity between physical
and mental health?
“Crisis can happen at any time - two o’clock in the
morning, Christmas Day - and people need help when it
happens. I don’t know what I would have done if crisis
care hadn’t been available to me when I needed it. You
wouldn’t say to somebody with a broken leg or a heart
attack that they have to wait to see a doctor during office
hours. It should be exactly the same with mental health.
We really need to close this gap and start seeing mental
health as important, and in need of the same amount of
care, thought and urgency, as physical health.”
Expert by experience
Parity of Esteem programme –
NHSE, 2013
The current design of our health system doesn’t ensure
‘whole-care’ packages
• Most people with Serious Mental illness don’t receive
physical health checks
• We run a national programme of health checks within
school, but we only check physical health
• There are significant delays in diagnostic treatment for
people with learning disabilities
• National audit of schizophrenia – only 29% of service
users getting proper metabolic monitoring
The Vision
What Parity will mean to me:
“Person
centred,
coordinated
care”
My family and I all have access to
services which enable us to
maintain both our mental and
physical wellbeing.
If I become unwell I use services
which assess and treat mental
health disorders or conditions on a
par with physical health illnesses.
What it looks like: person centred
coordinated care and my outcomes
Call to Action and PoE…
• Focussing effort and resources on improving
clinical services and health outcomes
• 3 areas identified as initial priorities for urgent
focus :
 IAPT
 Improving diagnosis and support for people
with Dementia
 Improving awareness and focus on the duties
within the Mental Capacity Act
How will this happen?
• Mental Health Focus and Delivery Group
formed on a task and finish basis
• The group brings together a range of
representatives from across the system in
order to provide clinical and managerial
leadership supporting delivery at a local,
regional and national level.
Warrington’s response…
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•
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Cross-reference with CtG and Achieving PoE
CQUIN for physical health
Psychiatric liaison service
Review of Primary Care Mental Health
services
• Member of Cheshire & Mersey Strategic
Clinical Network
• Much more to be done though!
Closing the Gap; priorities for
essential change in mental health –
DH, Feb 2014
• Supports “No health without mental health”, 2011
(long term change)
• CtG seeks to bridge the gap - “where people can
expect to see and experience fastest change”
• It identifies 25 aspects of mental health care and
support where government – along with health and
social care leaders, academics and a range of
representative organisations – expect to see
tangible changes in the next couple of years
Increasing access to mental health
services (12)
• High-quality mental health services with an emphasis on
recovery should be commissioned in all areas, reflecting local
need
• We will lead an information revolution around mental health and
wellbeing
• We will, for the first time, establish clear waiting time limits for
mental health services
• We will tackle inequalities around access to mental health
services
• Over 900,000 people will benefit from psychological therapies
every year
• There will be improved access to psychological therapies for
children and young people across the whole of England
Increasing access to mental health
services
• The most effective services will get the most funding
• Adults will be given the right to make choices about the
mental health care they receive
• We will radically reduce the use of all restrictive practices and
take action to end the use of high risk restraint, including face
down restraint and holding people on the floor
• We will use the Friends and Family Test to allow all patients to
comment on their experience of mental health services –
including children’s mental health services
• Poor quality services will be identified sooner and action taken
to improve care and where necessary protect patients
• Carers will be better supported and more closely involved in
decisions about mental health service provision
Integrating physical and mental
health care (3)
• Mental health care and physical health
care will be better integrated at every level
• We will change the way frontline health
services respond to self-harm
• No-one experiencing a mental health crisis
should ever be turned away from services
Starting early to promote mental
wellbeing and prevent mental
health problems (3)
• We will offer better support to new mothers
to minimise the risks and impacts of
postnatal depression
• Schools will be supported to identify
mental health problems sooner
• We will end the cliff-edge of lost support as
children and young people with mental
health needs reach the age of 18
Improving the quality of life of people
with mental health problems (7)
• People with mental health problems will live healthier lives and
longer lives
• More people with mental health problems will live in homes that
support recovery
• We will introduce a national liaison and diversion service so that the
mental health needs of offenders will be identified sooner and
appropriate support provided
• Anyone with a mental health problem who is a victim of crime will be
offered enhanced support
• We will support employers to help more people with mental health
problems to remain in or move into work
• We will develop new approaches to help people with mental health
problems who are unemployed to move into work and seek to
support them during periods when they are unable to work
• We will stamp out discrimination around mental health
Warrington’s Response
• Observation…. many cross-cutting themes
• Good work already underway in many
areas
• Local position statement to be developed
and gaps identified
• Event to look at the gaps and prioritise
them against local need.
Mental Health Crisis Care
Concordat, DH and Home Office,
2014
• A joint statement about how public services should
work together to respond to people who are in mental
health crisis.
• Sets out the principles and good practice that should
be followed by health staff, police officers and
approved mental health professionals when working
together to help people in a mental health crisis.
• It follows the refreshed Mandate for NHS England,
which includes a new requirement for the NHS that
“every community has plans to ensure no one in
mental health crisis will be turned away from health
services”.
The Concordat is arranged around:
• Access to support before crisis point
• Urgent and emergency access to crisis
care
• The right quality of treatment and care
when in crisis
• Recovery and staying well and preventing
future crises
The Concordat
• Expected that local partnerships of Health,
LA and Criminal Justice will agree and
commit to local Mental Health Crisis
Declarations.
• These will consist of commitments and
actions at a local level that will deliver
services that meet the principle of the
national Concordat.
Warrington’s Response
• Attended a meeting with Cheshire
Constabulary to consider a Cheshire-wide
approach
• Self-assessment (actions to enable
delivery of shared goals) is about to be
undertaken
• Operation Emblem, Psychiatric Liaison,
CJLT, Offender HNA
All leave cancelled for
2014/15!
Useful links
www.gov.uk/government/publications/mental-health-prioritiesfor-change
www.gov.uk/government/publications/mental-health-crisiscare-agreement
www.gov.uk/government/speeches/achieving-parity-of-esteembetween-mental-and-physical-health