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The Commissioning and Delivery System for children and young people’s mental health Lisa Williams, Consultant and member of the BOND Consortium.

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Presentation on theme: "The Commissioning and Delivery System for children and young people’s mental health Lisa Williams, Consultant and member of the BOND Consortium."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Commissioning and Delivery System for children and young people’s mental health Lisa Williams, Consultant and member of the BOND Consortium

2 What we mean by the commissioning and delivery system Earlier intervention mental health services How do the VCSOs fit in to this, and to the pilot? What is happening to the market? What we heard from Tees Valley

3 Tier 4: Inpatient Care Infrequent competition amongst larger MH provider trusts Some variety of providers More frequent tendering + increasing competition (usually LAs, NHS) Numerous providers + commissioners Large + small organisations More VCS Less clinical governance Smaller contracts Frequent tendering Tier 3: Clinical/ medical care (diagnosis/ medication) Tier 3/2 interface: Primary MH services LAC, YOS, other targeted CAMHS Tier 2/1 interface: ‘Generic’ School + community based e.g. counselling + IAG services Related services e.g. drop-in, youth support, family support Limited contestability Increasing levels of competition

4 Access Service ‘tiers’ 14

5 Mental health expertise Service ‘tiers’ 14

6 Mental health expertise Service ‘tiers’ 14 Access ?

7 Mental health expertise Service ‘tiers’ 14 Access GP LA School

8 Mental health expertise Service ‘tiers’ 14 Access School Counselling Activity based Mediation Young Carers D.V. Drop in Mental Health Services

9 Feedback from Tees Valley pilot participants In groups: What is your role? Does this model match your local experience? What are the key issues for you?

10 Quality All have safeguarding in place Several generic quality schemes e.g. IIP, PQASSO Others – NICE, MATRIX, CORC Commissioners tend not to specify quality measures & can change with each tender Accreditation to professional bodies – varies depending on service e.g. BACP All identified a level of CYP involvement in service quality development

11 Range from 0% to 100% Majority experience reductions (up to 1/3) Around half total income via local public service contracts Majority of this NHS and LA Rest is trusts, foundations, grants etc Very small % from schools for some

12 Mainly competitive tendering and grants Schools – tend to favour spot purchasing and fees for direct services Some consortia bidding (relatively successful) All interested in bidding for more contracts

13 Funding Competition vs partnership Statutory service domination of partnerships Commissioners concerns about quality from VCS (focus on clinical services) Capacity to compete –process excludes smaller organisations or less ‘networked’ VCSOs New requirements e.g. PBR, outcome measures Business planning on shifting sand– personnel, policy, environment Lack of leadership and strategic direction

14 How can we strengthen our position in the market place and compete more effectively? Should we specialise more, or be more holistic and focus on access? What are the best ‘vehicles’ for delivery e.g. social enterprise, community interest companies, mutuals, consortiums etc? Why don’t commissioners value what we do as much as more medical/clinical services? How can we access schools when there are so many with such varied levels of interest?

15 Ensure services are ‘safe’ and high quality? Fully understand the market, let alone develop it? Use commissioning to develop services for the most difficult to reach groups? Ensure timely access to appropriate MH expertise in the right part of the system? Know what is the best value for money? Influence other commissioners so that they don’t make cuts which then impact on services I commission?

16 How do we identify students with a mental health problem? How can we get help quickly? Why can’t we refer to CAMHS? And why can’t we have information back from CAMHS about pupils? How do we know what works and what’s the difference between services? What impact will emotional and mental health support have on pupils’ attainment? What services should be offered to schools, what should we have ‘in house’, and who should pay?


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