September 2008

1.   Update from the President: Professor Dinesh Bhugra reflects on his first month

2.  Working at the CAMHS/adult interface: good practice guidance for the provision of psychiatric services to adolescents/young adults

3.   Mental health survey of MPs, Lords and Westminster staff: MPs forced to hide mental health problems

4.   Ivan Lewis announces appointment of Anne Williams as new National Director for Learning Disabilities

5.   Oxford team wins NHS health and social care award

6.   Developing the curriculum for the new role of medical examiners

7.   Regulations and assessor training

8.   What's new



1.         Update from the President: Professor Dinesh Bhugra reflects on his first month

The summer is traditionally a time for holidays and taking a well-earned rest – but the first few weeks of my presidency have been extremely busy.

 

The Central Executive Committee, in its July meeting, approved three new College leads: on Care Pathways, Disaster Preparedness and Public Mental Health. The interviews for the first two leads are being held soon. We have had tremendous interest in these posts and we hope to make good appointments.

 

Professor Dinesh Bhugra

 

We are setting up a Fair Deal Campaign steering group to oversee and co-ordinate the separate projects that will address each of the campaign’s eight priorities. I hope to announce the names of the chair and members of the group shortly.

 

The Fair Deal campaign will only succeed with full support from all of the College divisions, and I am excited about the opportunities for members to get involved. We will be inviting the divisions to submit proposals for local projects that can feed in to the national campaign, and I look forward to hearing your ideas.

 

I believe that the College’s strength lies in its membership. One of my top priorities is to ensure the College remains relevant to its members by rewarding excellence. That is why we have decided next year to hold an annual Awards Ceremony to recognise excellence and acknowledge best practice within psychiatry.

 

I hope that the prestigious ceremony will highlight the achievements of members, boost morale among the profession, and raise the profile of psychiatry among the public.

 

There will be eight awards, including Psychiatric Team of the Year, Psychiatrist of the Year (voted for by patients and carers), Academic of the Year, Public Educator of the Year, two Trainee awards and a Lifetime Achievement award. More details – including how to nominate yourself or a colleague for an award - will follow soon.

 

Another priority is to build stronger links between the College and other stakeholders. In the last few weeks, I have attended meetings with the NHS Confederation, CEOs and Medical Directors of three regions, the Care Services Improvement Partnership (CSIP), the lead for Delivering Race Equality in Mental Health Care  (DRE), the MMC Programme Board, the National Clinical Assessment Service (NCAS), and various MPs including Anne Milton, Conservative lead on mental health, Lynne Jones, chair of the All Party Parliamentary Group on Mental Health, and Liberal Democrat health spokesman Norman Lamb.

 

Strength lies in numbers, which is why I am also exploring new approaches to joint working with other medical royal colleges. I have already had several meetings with the RCGPs. I hope we will see greater collaboration with them in future, including more opportunities for joint statements on NHS reforms and mental health issues, and joint papers on the link between mental health and physical illness.

 

Throughout the autumn I will continue to travel around the country, attending various divisional, faculty and special interest group events. I look forward to meeting more of you over the coming months. Meanwhile feel free to let me know your concerns, your ideas and suggestions for improving psychiatric health care. I will be delighted to visit and meet with psychiatrists in your local areas. Email: patopresident@rcpsych.ac.uk

 

2.         Working at the CAMHS/adult interface: good practice guidance for the provision of psychiatric services to adolescents/young adults

The  Child and Adolescent and General and Community Faculties have prepared a joint paper which lays out good practice guidelines for psychiatrists working at the interface between CAMHS and adult mental health services.

 

The report, Working at the CAMHS/adult interface: good practice guidance for the provision of psychiatric services to adolescents/young adults, acknowledges the lack of clarity in the UK about  where CAMHS ends and adult services begin – a problem that results in service gaps and considerable unmet need. The report’s authors (Drs Clare Lamb,  David Hall, Raphael Kelvin and Michael van Beinum) argue there is a need for improved provision of developmentally appropriate mental health services to those over 16-years-old, and planned arrangements and programmes for transition of care from child to adult services.

 

The report recommends:

  • local CAMHS and adult services agree on arrangements for the transfer of care to adult mental health of young people with severe mental disorder (schizophrenia and related psychoses, bipolar disorder, severe OCD, severe depressive disorder, severe or chronic eating disorder);
  • protocols are written for the transfer of care of young people who are in treatment with children’s mental health services and are within certain diagnostic groups (ADHD, autistic spectrum disorder, emerging borderline personality disorder, mild to moderate learning disability, psychological sequelae of chronic physical illness or abusive experiences);
  • local CAMHS and adult mental health services agree pathways of care and treatment protocols for self-harm and emergency presentations to A&E departments;
  • When admission to an adult unit is unavoidable, it should be short term only and guided by a CAMHS/Adult shared protocol of care.

 

Adult and child and adolescent psychiatrists must work more closely together, with ongoing dialogue and joint training events at both a local and national level. Providers should also work with commissioners of services to ensure resources are made available for young service users

 

3.         Mental health survey of MPs, Lords and Westminster staff: MPs forced to hide mental health problems

A new survey of MPs, Lords and staff published in July provides an insight into the kinds of mental health problems they face and their fear of being found out. The report, produced by the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Mental Health, with the support from the Royal College of Psychiatrists and the mental health charities Mind, Rethink and Stand to Reason, reflects concerns that it is still difficult to talk about mental health issues especially for those in the public eye.

 

An anonymous questionnaire was completed by 94 MPs, 100 Lords and 151 parliamentary staff found:

  • 27% had personal experience of a mental health problem including 19% of MPs, 17% of Peers, 45% of staff
  • 94% had family or friends who have experienced a mental health problem
  •  86% of MPs said their job was stressful
  • 1 in 3 said work-based stigma and the expectation of a hostile reaction from the media and public prevented them from being open about mental health issues.

 

The report is critical of the law forcing MPs to give up their seat for life if they are sectioned under the Mental Health Act for six months. By comparison, if an MP is physically incapable of working for six months due to a serious illness, he or she would not be forced to stand down. The majority of MPs who responded thought this rule was discriminatory and needs to be changed.

 

The joint chairs of the All Party Parliamentary Group on Mental Health, Lynne Jones MP, Tim Loughton MP and Sandra Gidley MP, unanimously agreed that the perception that an MP would damage their career by being open about an experience of mental distress needs challenging.

 

Despite significant numbers of people working in Parliament experiencing mental distress, over half of MPs did not think they had sufficient understanding of the Disability Discrimination Act to make reasonable adjustments for a staff member with a mental health problem and only 17% had received any mental health awareness training.

 

The All Party Parliamentary Group on Mental Health's recommendations include:

  • the urgent need to repeal laws that prevent people with experience of mental health problems from standing for Parliament
  • a review of laws that force MPs to automatically lose their seat if sectioned under the Mental Health Act for six months
  • encouraging MPs and Peers to be more open about their experiences of mental health problems and to introduce a protocol that would support individuals to be transparent about dealing with mental health issues in public life
  • ensuring that MPs, Peers and staff have the opportunity to undertake mental health awareness training
  • ensuring that the health check offered to MPs includes a discussion with a relevantly trained clinician on mental health issues.

 

4.         Ivan Lewis announces appointment of Anne Williams as new National Director for Learning Disabilities

On 5th August, Ivan Lewis announced the appointment of Anne Williams as the new National Director for Learning Disabilities at the Department of Health. Her responsibilities will include driving forward delivery of policies to make sure people with learning disabilities are treated as equal citizens in their communities, in healthcare and beyond. She will also oversee the next stage of the cross-Government 'Valuing People Now' strategy, for publication later this year, as well as the implementation of the strategy.

 

Anne said: "I have a longstanding commitment to people with learning disabilities and their families. I am especially keen to see that every person benefits from the developments that will be outlined in the strategy, particularly those with profound and complex disabilities and those whose behaviour challenges services."

 

Anne Williams is the current Strategic Director of Salford City Council and Immediate Past President of the Association of Directors of Adult Social Services (ADASS).

5.         Oxford team wins NHS health and social care award

The team's innovative approach to improving care for people with bipolar disorder was recognised during an event at Wembley stadium held as part of the NHS 60th birthday celebrations in July.

 

Oxford team

 

The project, which scooped the 'NHS Live' award, is a collaboration between the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Oxford and Oxfordshire & Buckinghamshire Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust. The team worked together to come up with a text messaging system for people with bipolar disorder that would enable them to monitor their own condition and keep GPs up-to-date with how they're feeling.

 

'I am delighted that our project has been selected from so many for the NHS Live award,' said Professor John Geddes of Oxford University. 'We believe our text messaging system is a great way of improving support for those with bipolar disorder and it allows them to take much more control of the way they live with their condition. We’ve created something that can really make a difference to the way care is provided.’

6.         Developing the curriculum for the new role of medical examiners

Professor Peter Furness, President elect of the Royal College of Pathologist, is chairing a group which is devising the curriculum for the new role of Medical Examiners. These doctors will have the task of ensuring that referrals to the Coroner are as well founded as possible.

The Group is asking for examples from different areas of medicine and from coroners of recent decisions on referrals that they have had to make or advise on. Dame Lesley Southgate is collecting examples from mental health.

Please send any information to her at l.southga@sgul.ac.uk or lisabennet@dial.pipex.com or contact her on tel: 020 8725 0816 (messages via St Georges)

fax 01920 870116.

7.         Regulations and assessor training

The Mental Capacity (Deprivation of Liberty: Standard Authorisations, Assessments and Ordinary Residence) Regulations 2008 and The Mental Capacity (Deprivation of Liberty: Appointment of Relevant Person's Representative) Regulations 2008 come into force on 3 November 2008.

 

 

8.         What's new

© 2010 Royal College of Psychiatrists