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Best Practice in Managing Risk in Mental Health Services

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Title: Best Practice in Managing Risk in Mental Health Services


1
Best Practice in Managing Risk in Mental Health
Services
  • Dr. Richard Whittington
  • University of Liverpool Mersey Care NHS Trust
  • CPAA Conference
  • Leicester, 28/11/07

2
Project team and advisors
  • Dr. Richard Whittington
  • Dr. Caroline Logan
  • Dr. Wally Barr
  • Mr. Andrew Brown
  • Dr. Maria Leitner
  • Dr. Rajan Nathan
  • Ms. Janet Davies
  • CSIP Expert Advisory Group

3
Aims
  • Overall, to
  • draw together current evidence and good practice
  • set out a practical framework of clinical risk
    assessment and management tools and methods for
    mental health trusts
  • Specifically, to
  • be helpful to services and support them in
    assessing and managing the clinical risks with
    service users with a range of presentations and
    needs
  • draw on current research and make clear the
    strength of evidence bases
  • cover the full range of risk from self-harm and
    neglect to forensic and risk to others

4
More aims
  • Specifically, to
  • be mindful of existing requirements trusts have
    to meet on risk management
  • highlight the importance of user and carer/family
    involvement in assessing and managing risk
  • consider race and gender issues and be
    appropriately culturally sensitive
  • draw attention to any specific issues around dual
    diagnosis
  • present an ethos of positive risk management and
    service-user focused practice.

5
When things go wrong
  • 35 year old male
  • Psychotic symptoms, substance misuse
  • Stranger killing
  • Occasional contact with various services
  • No structured / systematic assessment
  • Poor formulation of risks
  • Poor communication between agencies
  • Poor communication with family
  • Missed early warning signs and intervention
    opportunities

6
Violence and mental health
  • Violence and mental health
  • In-patient burden on services
  • Work-related trauma/injury
  • Discharge blocker
  • Anti-therapeutic environment
  • Community public concern
  • Median inpatient incidence 29
  • 18 violent one year post-discharge
  • Rate doubles with substance misuse

7
Homicide and mental health
  • 249 homicides by recent or current inpatients
    1999-2003
  • 9 of all homicides
  • Stable trend over time
  • 29 seen in week prior to homicide
  • ECPA
  • 95 care coordinator allocated
  • 42 missed last appointment
  • 43 attempts to engage

8
Suicide and mental health
  • High national policy priority
  • gt6,000 suicides by recent or current patients
    2000-2004
  • 27 of all suicides
  • 49 in contact with services in preceding week
  • gt800 involved recent or current inpatients
  • 31 occurred on the ward
  • 20 under non-routine observation at the time

9
English policy and legal context
  • National MH Risk Management Programme
  • Transition from old to new MHA
  • CPA
  • NPSA, adverse events
  • NICE
  • Carers
  • Diversity
  • National Suicide Prevention Strategy
  • Workforce
  • Supported decision making
  • MH Policy Implementation Guides

10
National standards for and against
  • Help staff know what is required and stay within
    the law
  • Enable assessment of the quality of decisions
  • Make decisions transparent and easier to
    communicate
  • Encourage a systematic and comprehensive approach
    BUT
  • Create illusions of certainty
  • Freeze the state-of-the-art and are hard to
    change
  • May stifle creativity
  • May create unnecessary work
  • Can never reflect all views

11
Process
  • July 2006 June 2007
  • Systematic review of violence risk assessment
    tools
  • Other systematic reviews
  • Policy review
  • Consultation with
  • Expert advisory group
  • Practitioners
  • Service users
  • Carers
  • International experts

12
Overview
  • Framework of best practice principles
  • Directory of tools
  • Philosophy
  • balancing care and risk needs
  • positive risk management
  • collaboration
  • building on strengths
  • the organisations role
  • Expectations
  • Benchmark and change practice
  • Consider incorporating one or more of the tools

13
16 Best Practice Points
  • Introduction
  • Fundamentals
  • Basic concepts
  • Working with service users and carers
  • Individual practice and team working

14
16 Best Practice Points Fundamentals
  • e.g.
  • 3. Risk management should be conducted in a
    spirit of collaboration and based on a
    relationship between the service user and their
    carers that is as trusting as possible.

15
16 Best Practice Points Fundamentals
  • e.g.
  • 5 Risk management requires an organisational
    strategy as well as efforts by the individual
    practitioner.

16
16 Best Practice Points Working with Service
Users and Carers
  • e.g.
  • 12. All staff involved in risk management must be
    capable of demonstrating sensitivity and
    competence in relation to diversity in race,
    faith, age, gender, disability and sexual
    orientation.

17
16 Best Practice Points Working with Service
Users and Carers
  • e.g.
  • 13. Risk management must always be based on
    awareness of the capacity for the service users
    risk level to change over time, and a recognition
    that each service user requires a consistent and
    individualised approach.

18
16 Best Practice Points Individual Practice and
Team Working
  • e.g.
  • 14. Risk management plans should be developed by
    multidisciplinary and multi-agency teams
    operating an open, democratic and transparent
    culture that embraces reflective practice.

19
16 Best Practice Points Individual practice and
team working
  • e.g.
  • 16. A risk management plan is only as good as the
    time and effort put into communicating its
    findings to others.

20
Issues in identifying tools
  • Actuarial and structured judgement approaches
  • Predictive validity
  • Clinical utility
  • Deployment in a UK context

21
Identified tools
  • Risk of violence, sexual violence, antisocial or
    offending behaviour
  • E.g. HCR-20, PCLR
  • Risk of self harm or suicide
  • E.g. BHS, SSI, STORM
  • Multiple risks
  • E.g. FACE, GRiST, RAMAS, START

22
Tool analysis
  • Description, manual
  • Depth
  • Setting, practitioners, origin, format
  • Guidance on risk management
  • Cost
  • Evidence

23
Clarifying concepts positive risk management
  • working with the service user to identify what is
    likely to work
  • paying attention to the views of carers and
    others around the service user when deciding a
    plan of action
  • weighing up the potential benefits and harms of
    choosing one action over another
  • being willing to take a decision that involves an
    element of risk because the potential positive
    benefits outweigh the risk
  • being clear to all involved about the potential
    benefits and the potential risks
  • ensuring that the service user, carer and others
    who might be affected are fully informed of the
    decision, the reasons for it and the associated
    plans

24
Clarifying concepts high risk
  • High risk risk of committing an act that is
    either planned or spontaneous, which is very
    likely to cause serious harm.
  • few if any protective factors to mitigate or
    reduce that risk
  • requires long-term risk management, including
    planned supervision and close monitoring and
    organised treatment

25
Clarifying concepts low risk
  • Low risk may have caused, attempted or
    threatened serious harm in the past but a repeat
    of such behaviour is not thought likely between
    now and the next scheduled risk assessment.
  • likely to cooperate well and contribute helpfully
    to risk management planning and s/he may respond
    to treatment.
  • a sufficient number of protective factors (e.g.
    rule adherence, good response to treatment,
    trusting relationships with staff) to support
    ongoing desistance from harmful behaviour can be
    identified

26
Clarifying processes collaborative and
defensive risk management
27
Clarifying processes tools as one part of the
overall assessment
28
Phase 2 national implementation project
  • Toolkit
  • Website, including discussion forum
  • Other
  • Northern conference Liverpool, 14/12/07
  • National evaluation survey
  • Pilot implementation in 8 trusts
  • Revision of guidance
  • Project lead Dr. Caroline Logan
  • caroline.logan_at_merseycare.nhs.uk

29
16 Best Practice Points Introduction
  • 1. Best practice is a decision based on knowledge
    of the research evidence, knowledge of the
    individual service user and their social context,
    the service users own experience, and clinical
    judgement.

30
Implementation toolkit BPP1
  • This Trust has a library service that provides
    updates on government guidelines and new
    publications relevant to clinical risk assessment
    and management. There are methods available to
    disseminate that information across the Trust
    (e.g., bulletins).
  • Links exist between the Trust and local
    universities or colleges and clinical risk
    assessment and management is one of the subjects
    on which advanced learning is available.
  • The Trust has one or more practitioners who
    specialise in promoting best practice in clinical
    risk assessment and management across the
    locality.

31
Implementation toolkit BPP1
  • The Trust has a dedicated risk manager who
    coordinates policies and procedures and leads the
    clinical and non-clinical risk agendas.
  • The Trust has policies and procedures on the
    assessment and management of clinical risk that
    are up-to-date and accessible.
  • Clinical risk assessment practice is reviewed or
    formally audited within the Trust or there are
    well advanced plans to undertake such a process.
  • A central facility (such as the intranet) ensures
    that all practitioners are kept informed of new
    guidelines that affect practice in clinical risk
    assessment and management.

32
Implementation toolkit rating scale
  • 2 All of the areas listed above are fully and
    competently addressed within this Trust.
    Evidence is available for each area indicating
    that this is so. This Best Practice principle is
    being fully addressed in this Trust.
  • 1 50 or more of the points above are being fully
    and competently addressed in this Trust. Work is
    underway to develop the remaining areas.
    Evidence is available for each area indicating
    that this is so. This Best Practice principle is
    being partially addressed in this Trust.
  • 0 Work in most of the areas listed above is only
    partial or development is incomplete. This Best
    Practice principle is not being fully addressed
    in this Trust.

33
Website
  • http//www.managingclinicalrisk.nhs.uk
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