Title: The Future Mental Health Workforce
1The Future Mental Health Workforce
2The Future Mental Health Workforce
- Staff in the right numbers
- With the right skills
- In the right place
- At the right time
- Well supported
- Well led
- Reflect local population
- Responsive to needs of service users
3WorkforceAn Organic Process.
Leadership
Education and Training
Planning and Design
WORKFORCE
Recruitment and retention
New Roles
New Ways of Working
4Trying to make sense of it all
Policy/Commissioning /Performance Management
(Mental Health Focus)
Implementation/Development
DH
DOH
Legislation
NIMHE
MHCGWT
Policy Development Performance Management
WNAB
Workforce Implementation Team
Workforce Numbers Advisory Group
Trent WDC HRD-WD TOPSS SCMH NIMHE CWP
Deaneries
SHA
WDCs
RDCs
LAs
PCTs
Adult MH LIT PCT Trusts
SSDs Voluntary
Independent Secto r User
Carers HEIs/Colleges
Sector
Overarching Social Inclusion
User and Carer Participation Women
BMERecovery Evidence ann Values based
practice Themes
Workforce New Services New Workers New
Services Re-engineering Specialist
Mental Implications ?STR Services
Health Of Service ?Assertive Outreach
?Graduate ?Safe Houses ?Acute ?
Forensic Bill Models ?Crisis Resolution
?Gateway ?Employment ?CMHTs
?Drugs Alcohol ?Early Intervention
?Carers ?Accommodation ?Day
Services ?Prisons
?Community ?Advocacy
Development
(Mainly Trust Led) Mainly PCT/SSD
(Mainly Voluntary ( Mainly Trust/
(Mainly Trust/PCT
Led)
Sector Led) LA Led)
DATLed)
5Key Collaborators
- Mental Health Care Group Workforce Team
- Workforce Implementation Team- NIMHE, Trent WDC,
CWP, HRD,Social Care,SCMH - WDC,s, NIMHE DCs, SHAs
- Employers, Users and Carers
6Key Challenges
- LIT Autumn Assessment Results
- Vacancies, Use of Locums and Agency
- Availability of future recruits
- Changing the current workforce
- Changing education and training
- Local capacity capability to address these
issues
7Workforce Planning and Design
- Priority Key Collaborators
- Implementing Design NIMHE DCs
- Guidance HRD Workforce
- (7 Implementation Sites Planning Tools Project
- in 2004) Durham University
- Joint Workforce Support Unit
- WDCs
8Workforce Planning and Design
- Analysis of Demand and Supply Workforce
Review - for nurses, social workers Team
- OTs and Clinical Psychologists Joint
Workforce Support Unit - Professional Bodies
- WDCs, HRD
-
9Recruitment and Retention
- Priority Key Collaborators
- Support implementation RCP
- of Joint Action Plan DOH
- (RCP and DOH Feb 2004) Deaneries
- on Consultant Recruitment Trusts
- and Retention NIMHE DCs
- SHAs
-
10Recruitment and Retention
- Complete study in examples of UCLAN
- good practice in non-medical Employers
- recruitment and retention WDCs
- (Spring 2004) NIMHE DCs
- and disseminate
SHAs -
11Recruitment and Retention
- Study to examine recruitment processes into
professional training - Covers all professions
- All HEIs
- Identify good practice
- Recommend actions
- Sarah Owen
- Kath Ferguson
- Sandra Beswick
12New Ways of Working
- Priority Key Collaborators
- Produce Interim Guidance R.C.Psych. with
- Report on New Ways of NIMHE
- Working of Consultant CWP
- Psychiatrist and Cross Professional Bodies
- Boundary Working Employers
- Spring 2004 Practitioners
- National Steering Group Users
- Carers
-
-
13New Ways of Working
- Priority
Collaborators - Content will include -
BMA - guidance of medical professional GMC
- responsibility
DoH - Distinctive role of psychiatrist
- Use of locums revised guidance Trusts
- Pilot sites in every RDC
CWP - matrix of roles
JWSU
14New Roles
- Priority Key Collaborators
- Graduate Workers NIMHE Primary Care
Programme - Trent WDC
- NIMHE DCs
- PCTs
- HEIs
- STR Workers CWP Accelerated Dev. Programme
- NIMHE DCs
- Employers
15New Roles
- Community Development BME Programme
- Workers
- Carers Support Workers ?
- Personality Disorder PD
Programme - Roll out of CWP Pilots CWP
- e.g. dispensing assistant NIMHE DCs
- psychology associates CWP
- medical secretaries WDCs
- Dissemination/Support for SHAs
- locally developed roles
- e.g associate,advanced practitioner
16Education, Training and Development
- Priority Key Collaborators
- Develop Shared Capabilities Joint Workforce
Support Unit - Identify Training Resources Values based
practice - Develop Training Curricula Social Inclusion
- Produce Resource Library National
Programmes developing competency - Set up National Network for frameworks
- Capability Development
Professional Bodies - Users Carers
-
HEIs, WDCs -
17Education, Training and Development
- The Ten Essential Capabilities for Mental Health
Practice - Shared Capabilities for all Mental Health Workers
- The development of the Essential Capabilities is
a joint NIMHE and Sainsbury Centre for Mental
Health Project. It builds on the work of the
Sainsbury Centres Capable Practitioner Framework
copies of which can be downloaded from
www.scmh.org.uk. - The work lays out the capabilities that all staff
working in mental health services should achieve
as a minimum part of their basic qualifying
training. However, it is intended that they
should form the core building blocks for
teaching, learning and personal development not
just for professionally qualified staff but for
all staff working in the NHS, Social Services,
the statutory, private, independent or voluntary
sector.
18Education, Training and Development
- Working in partnership.
- Respecting Diversity.
- Practising ethically.
- Challenging Inequality.
- Promoting Recovery.
- Identifying Peoples Needs and Strengths.
- Providing Service User Centred Care.
- Making a difference.
- Promoting safety and positive risk taking.
- Personal development and learning.
19Education, Training and Development
- Respecting Diversity. Working in partnership with
service users, carers, families and colleagues to
provide care and interventions that not only make
a positive difference but also do so in ways that
respect and value diversity including age, race,
culture, disability, gender, spirituality and
sexuality. - In order to respect diversity the practitioner
will need to - Understand and respect diversity including age,
gender, race culture, disability, spirituality
and sexuality - Understand the impact of discrimination and
prejudice on mental health and mental health
services - Demonstrate a commitment to equal opportunities
for all persons and encourage their active
participation in every aspect of care and
treatment - Respond to the needs of people sensitively with
regard to all aspects of diversity - Demonstrate the ability to promote peoples
rights and responsibilities and recognise the
service users rights to privacy, dignity, respect
and confidentiality - Demonstrate the ability to work as a member of
the therapeutic team to contribute to evidence
based programmes of care and treatment that are
sensitive to diversity. - Demonstrate the ability to take account of the
impact of the risk of social exclusion in
treatment and care through the provision of care
and treatment that recognises the importance of
housing, employment, occupational opportunities,
recreational activities, advocacy, social
networks and welfare benefits. - Demonstrate adherence to local, professional and
national codes of practice - Demonstrate effective knowledge of organisational
policies and practices to maintain the role and
the capacity of the therapeutic team to provide
evidence based care that is sensitive to
diversity - Demonstrating a commitment to active
participation to clinical supervision and
life-long learning
20Education, Training and Development
- Practising ethically. Recognising the rights and
aspirations of service users and their families,
acknowledging power differentials and minimising
them whenever possible. Providing treatment and
care that is accountable to service users and
carers within the boundaries prescribed by
national (professional), legal and local codes of
ethical practice. - In order to practice ethically the practitioner
will need - Demonstrate an understanding of and commitment to
the legal and human rights of service users and
carers - An understanding of the service users wider
social and support networks and the contribution
made by carers, family and friends to the
recovery process. - An ability to respond to the needs of people in
an ethical, honest, non judgemental manner - An ability to encourage active choices and
participation in care and treatment. - Demonstrate an ability to conduct a legal,
ethical and accountable practice that remains
open to the scrutiny of peers and colleagues - Demonstrate the ability to promote services users
(and carers) rights and responsibilities and
recognise and maintain their rights to privacy,
dignity safety, effective treatment and care
based on the principle of informed consent - Demonstrate the ability to work as a member of
the therapeutic team in making a safe and
effective contribution to the de-escalation and
management of anger and violence especially
concerning the use of control and restrain
techniques. - Demonstrate adherence to local and professionally
prescribed codes of ethical conduct and practice - Demonstrate knowledge of policies, practices and
procedures concerning the local implementation
of mental health and related legislation - Demonstrate the ability to work within the
boundaries of local complaints management systems
21Education, Training and Development
- Promoting safety and positive risk taking.
Empowering the person to decide the level of risk
they are prepared to take with their health and
safety. This includes working with the tension
between promoting safety and positive risk
taking, including assessing and dealing with
possible risks for service users, carers, family
members, and the wider public. - Demonstrate the ability to develop harmonious
working relationships with service users and
carers and in particular with people who may wish
not to engage with mental health services. - Demonstrate understanding of the factors
associated with risk of harm to self or others
through violence, self-neglect, self-harm or
suicide. - Demonstrate the ability to educate users and
carers about the role, function and limitations
of mental health services in relation to
promoting safety and managing risk of harm. - Contribute to accurate and effective risk
assessments identifying specific risk factors of
relevance to the individual their family and
carers and the wider community, (including risk
of self harm, self neglect and violence to self
or others. - Contribute to the development of risk management
strategies and plans which name all the relevant
people involved in the care and treatment of the
person and clearly identify the agreed actions to
be taken and the goals to be achieved. - Contribute as a member of the therapeutic team to
the safe and effective management and reduction
of any identified risks - Demonstrate knowledge and understanding of
national and local polices and procedures for
minimising risk and managing harm to self and
others. - Demonstrate knowledge and understanding of
multi-agency, multi disciplinary working in
utilising the Care Programme Approach to provide
safe and effective care and treatment for service
users and carers particularly those who have a
history of risks to self or others. - Demonstrate awareness of individual and service
responses to potentially manage and minimise
crisis and risks as they are happening e.g.
diffusion strategies, crisis response services - Demonstrate ability in long-term risk management
through contributing to use of medical and
psychosocial interventions with the expressed
goal of managing a persons risk behaviours e.g.
use of medication, anger management, supportive
counselling etc
22Education, Training and Development
- A simple Likert scale has been used to assess the
degree to which a programme meets each of the
Shared Capabilities - The Shared Capabilities will be evidenced in
education and training curricula through specific
actions e.g. the presence of training sessions on
the assessment of risk (Item 9) would indicate
that this area was covered, the number of
sessions and assessment strategy would indicate
the depth of coverage and the learning outcomes
(assuring competence in this area) would indicate
practice competence.
0 1 2 3
No evidence Minority of areas covered Most areas covered All areas covered
23Education, Training and Development
- Link SCs with Implementation Skills for of
of National Occupational Health
Standards and Knowledge WDCs - Skills Framework NIMHE DCs
- Employers
-
NHSU
24Education, Training and Development
- Develop training framework for Skills for
Health - non-professionally CWP
- affiliated workers including NIMHE DCs
- STRs Pilot sites for STRs
- Implement Quality Audit Tool NIMHE DCs
- Good Practice Guide on Trent WDC
- User Carer Involvement WDCs
HEIs
Employers
25Leadership
- Priority Key Collaborators
- Team Effectiveness Pack Leadership Centre
- roll out NIMHE DCs
- Consultants Psychiatrists Leadership Programme
- Leadership Programme CWP
- NIMHE DCs
26Summary
- Huge Agenda
- Changing Landscape (SHA, WDC, NIMHE etc)
- Culture Change
- Need for Co-operation and Shared Agenda