scholarly journals North West London New Model of Care Project (NMOC) – improving inpatient mental health care for children and young people

BJPsych Open ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (S1) ◽  
pp. S199-S199
Author(s):  
Jovanka Tolmac ◽  
Alun Lewis ◽  
Azer Mohammed ◽  
Elizabeth Fellow-Smith ◽  
Johan Redelinghuys ◽  
...  

AimsSpecialised inpatient mental health services for children and young people are commissioned and managed by NHS England (NHSE) and provided by NHS as well as independent sector. The access to beds has been managed nationally with young people admitted far from home. There were capacity issues identified in London. To address these concerns, NHSE invited organisations to work in partnership to co-design and establish new models of care. This is one of the first of such projects, set up to manage the budget for children and young people's beds on behalf of NHSE and change the way of managing and monitoring admissions.Our aims:To reduce length of inpatient stayTo enable admission of young people as close to home as possibleTo improve resource efficiency, capacity and capability of managing young people in crisis in the community.MethodA number of changes were introduced, including engagement of community and inpatient clinical staff, repatriation to units closer to home and introduction of CRAFT meetings (early review meetings in inpatient units to enable timely and effective discharge planning and support back to local services). The implementation has been closely monitored by the project manager and clinical group, which included representatives from all organisations involved.ResultAfter four years, young people are admitted to hospitals closer to home and the length of inpatient stay has decreased by 18%. The number of admissions has decreased by 28%. Out of area occupied beds days have been decreased by 66%.Significant recurrent budget savings have been achieved. Over the past three years, these savings have been reinvested in developing crisis community support and more specialist community services within CNWL and West London Trust.ConclusionThere have been considerable benefits of multiple organisations working in partnership to improve patients care. The success of the project has created further opportunities for the development of services which provide safe and effective alternatives to admission (such as crisis services, home treatment teams and specialized community services). In summary, this collaborative model has improved the quality of care and experience for young people and reduced the need for psychiatric admission.

2015 ◽  
Vol 31 (2) ◽  
pp. 472 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ana Sainero ◽  
Jorge F. Del Valle ◽  
Amaia Bravo

<p>Research on mental health problems of children and young people in residential child care shows a high incidence. One of the strategies to improve the interventions is the use of tools of detection, so that biases in the referral to treatment could be avoided.</p><p>The objective of this study was to analyze the level of concordance between the information given by the young people and their social educators, using the CBCL (in case of educators) and YSR (for adolescents) in a sample of 138 young people aged from 11 to 18 who were in residential care. Also differences between the group of young people referred to mental health treatment and those without it were analyzed.</p>Results show low and moderate levels of concordance between the information given by the young people and their educators, with higher levels of agreement in externalized problems, in a similar way as the results found in research with samples of parents and children. Score differences are discussed according to the literature review, concluding that adults distinguish the clinical and non-clinical group clearly, but young people do not display significant differences. These findings indicate the need for giving more relevance to self-reports, to the adolescent own perspective.


Author(s):  
Sasha Shepperd ◽  
Helen Doll ◽  
Simon Gowers ◽  
Tony James ◽  
Mina Fazel ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Denisa Clisu ◽  
Imogen Layther ◽  
Deborah Dover ◽  
Russell M Viner ◽  
Tina Read ◽  
...  

Background: Increasingly more children and young people (CYP) present in mental health crises, many being hospitalised due to concerns around illness severity and lack of community services. To release the burden of admission, we systematically reviewed the literature on the effects of proposed alternatives to CYP in crises. Methods: Three databases (PsychInfo, PubMed and Web of Science) were searched for peer-reviewed papers in October 2020, with an updated search in May 2021. Results: We identified 19 papers of interventions delivered in the emergency department, the home, outside of home but outside of clinics and in hospital clinics. The best evidence came from in-home interventions, in particular multisystemic therapy (MST), which proved to be promising alternatives by improving psychological outcomes and decreasing length of inpatient stay. The quality of included studies was low, with less than half being randomised controlled trials and only half of these at low risk of bias. Conclusions: We could not recommend a particular intervention as an alternative to inpatient admission, however our review describes benefits across a range of types of inteventions that might be considered in multi-modal treatments. We also provide recommendations for future research, in particular the evaluation of new interventions as they emerge.


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