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Caithness Geography

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... addressing quality issues and a spur to the development of more adequate data ... To be effective clinical governance will require data about the quality of care. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Caithness Geography


1
Caithness Geography
  • Caithness is the most northerly county in
    mainland Britain
  • It covers an area of about 700 square miles
    stretching from Dunnet Head in the north to the
    Ord of Caithness in the south
  • It has a population of around 27,500 and its only
    land boundary is with the County of Sutherland to
    the south and west, both are part of the Highland
    Region, administered from Inverness

2
Caithness Geography
  • The two main towns in Caithness are Wick, with a
    population of around 8,000, once famous as the
    herring capital of the world and Thurso,
    population around 12,000, with close ties to the
    U.K.A.E.A. site at Dounreay

3
Caithness Community Mental Health
TeamOperational policy (under amendment)
  • The Community Mental Health Team (CMHT) is based
    at Community Mental Health Services, Bankhead
    Road, Wick.
  • The team currently works from 9am -5pm Monday -
    Friday.
  • There is currently no out of hours service within
    the CMHT. Mental health officers are accessed
    through Area Social Work team, or social work
    standby
  • Currently looking at expanding hours

4
Core Statement
  • The CMHT is funded with mental health resource
    transfer monies and Primary Care Trust funding to
    enable comprehensive mental health services to be
    provided in the Caithness community and will work
    collaboratively with the Local Health Care
    Co-operative (LHCC)

5
Core Statement continued
  • Service to those who experience severe and/or
    enduring mental illness are prioritised.
  • Time limited intervention to those who experience
    mild to moderate problems are provided but may
    have a delay in response time

6
Service Elements
  • The community team has 3 service
    elements(a) Substance misuse service
    (CMHN)(b) Older Adult service (CMHNs)(c) Multidi
    sciplinary Generic Team (MDT)All interact with
    each other although each service has a different
    focus

7
Team Members
  • Community Mental Health Nurses
  • Social Workers
  • Technical Instructor
  • Accommodation Support Officer
  • Group Worker
  • Consultant Psychiatrist
  • Support Workers
  • Team Leader
  • Clerical Staff

8
Team Members (continued)
  • A clinical psychologist holds clinics in both
    Wick and Thurso, on a monthly basis, and provides
    consultation to CMHT members.
  • Various interventions are offered by the team
    depending on the individuals clinical need.
    These are offered on a 1-1, 2-1 or group basis.

9
Referrals
  • All adults aged from 16-65 years who experience
    mental ill health can be referred to the
    Community Team
  • Referrals are received by letter through the team
    manager. Urgent referrals may be telephoned to
    either the team manager or, in her/his absence,
    the professional on duty with the letter to
    follow.

10
Referrals
  • Referrals are considered at the weekly team
    meeting where allocation for initial assessment
    is completed
  • Primary addiction problems would be referred
    directly to substance misuse nurse.
  • Persons aged over 65 years with either functional
    or organic illness will be assessed by one of the
    older adult CMHNs and referrals made direct to
    them.

11
Do We Use Outcome Measures?
NO
12
AVON Mental Health MeasurePositive Aspects
  • 3 Statements surrounding
  • ease of use of AVON measure
  • usefulness of AVON measure in identifying areas
    of need
  • participants motivation in changing identified
    areas of need

13
AVON Mental Health MeasurePositive Aspects
continued
  • Provides information to better plan services
  • Allows client to build up a profile about
    themselves
  • Service users are central to individual needs
    assessment, enhancing their role will improve
    both process and outcome

14
AVON Mental Health MeasurePositive Aspects
  • Identifies unmet needs, thus a method for
    recording gaps in services etc.
  • From Staff perspective - forum for discussion -
    increase understanding of clients difficulties

15
AVON - User Mental Health Assessment Measure
  • Undertook small presentation to CMHT - HONOS
    AVON
  • Team Decided to look more closely at AVON measure
  • Rating scale devised and sent out to participants
  • Statements devised using the Likert rating scale

16
RESULTS of Questionnaire
  • AVON TOOL identified as easy to use
  • AVON tool useful in identifying areas of need
  • However, clients identified difficulty with
    motivating themselves to make changes

17
AVON Results
18
AVON Results
19
AVON Results
20
Evaluation of questionnaire (AVON)
  • Overall the AVON measure identified wider issue
    gaps
  • Central theme of unmet needs consistently
    appeared to surround stigma and discrimination
  • Users found the tool easy to use
  • Identifying area of need was useful, I.e.
    increasing understanding, insight into
    difficulties
  • Motivating clients to make change in areas
    slightly more difficult
  • Identified by Whitehead-Black report

21
CONCLUSION
  • This project has highlighted issues for the
    Caithness Community Mental Health Team,
    surrounding the ethos of what we are attempting
    to strive towards with clients.
  • There remains a great deal of work and innovation
    to changing community/public perceptions of
    mental illness.
  • Interesting and challenging times lie ahead, as
    we attempt to tackle identified areas of weakness
    and need, if we are to empower this client group.

22
CONCLUSION Continued
  • Need to develop method/database for recording
    unmet needs, to build up picture of gaps in
    service
  • The AVON will provide a starting point for
    addressing quality issues and a spur to the
    development of more adequate data
  • Highlight possible examples of good practice
  • Looking at database

23
CONCLUSION Continued
  • To empower clients to receive responsive or
    relevant services
  • To develop services that more fully reflect the
    needs and expectations of mental health service
    users
  • To be effective clinical governance will require
    data about the quality of care. This is a
    starting point (although no direct conclusions)

24
. And Finally
Historically, services for disabled people have
been constructed upon the erroneous belief that
they are unable to assume responsibility for
their own individual needs. Therefore, logic
dictated that if individuals cannot assume
responsibility they cannot participate, if they
cannot participate they are excluded from main
stream society and discriminated against
(Woods, 1990)
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