There is a large body of research showing that there is a much higher prevalence of psychiatric disorders in children and adolescents with learning disabilities than in those without (Reference DykensDykens, 2000; Reference Stromme and DisethStromme & Diseth, 2000; Reference Tonge and EinfieldTonge & Einfield, 2000; Reference EmersonEmerson, 2003; Reference Whitaker and ReadWhitaker & Read 2006; Department for Education and Skills & Department of Health, 2006). People with psychiatric disorders and learning disabilities have poorer educational qualifications, do less well in the labour market and have lower income than other people (Prime Minister's Strategy Group, 2005). Despite the clear need for mental health services for children with learning disabilities, they are not universally available and often under resourced within Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS).
Background
For at least 15 years the government has highlighted the need to improve health services for people with learning disabilities (Department of Health, 1992). Organisations such as the British Paediatric Association in 1994, the Mental Health Foundation in 1996 and its sister organisation the Foundation for People with Learning Disabilities in 2002, have peppered the national document landscape with texts calling attention to the mental health needs of children with learning disabilities. Policy documents such as the National Health Service (NHS) Plan (Department of Health, 2001), the National Service Framework for Children (Department for Education and Skills & Department of Health, 2004a ) and its update on progress (Department for Education and Skills & Department of Health, 2006) and the Special Educational Needs Action programme (Department for Education and Skills, 2001) have all highlighted the need for comprehensive, accessible mental health services for this group of children. However, many of these children and their families still have no access to a comprehensive, needs-based service. Initiatives such as the recent ‘do once and share’ project (Connecting for Health, 2006) make sound recommendations about service development but there is difficulty in their implementation as no one agency, commissioning body or organisation takes responsibility.
No universal service
This vast documentation has not lead to any satisfactory ‘mainstreaming’ of children with learning disabilities into policy initiatives (Reference RussellRussell, 2003) or into practical and accessible mental health services. Indeed, some CAMHS still provide limited or no services for children with moderate to severe learning disabilities (Reference York and LambYork & Lamb, 2005; Department for Education and Skills & Department of Health, 2006).
Despite the fact that children with learning disabilities are a group at risk, the standard of mental health services for them is often well below expectations, and it is often the case that children are not accepted because they fail to meet entry criteria (Reference Mccarthy and BoydMcCarthy & Boyd, 2002). General practitioners feel untrained and ill-equipped to deal with mental health problems presenting in people with learning disabilities (Mencap, 2004). Even where tier two and three specialist services are provided, the shortage of resources may lead to a policy focusing on treatment rather than prevention (Foundation for People with Learning Disabilities, 2002). Although the NHS tier four in-patient provision is essential when severe or complex illness cannot be contained in family or community services (Reference Hepper and RoseHepper & Rose, 2004), it is not coordinated and in some regions it is absent altogether, leaving private units (Reference O'Herlihy, Worrall and BanerjeeO’Herlihy et al, 2001) and secure social services accommodation (Reference Allington-SmithAllington-Smith, 2006) to plug the gaps. Furthermore, the impact on families is considerable (Reference Mcintyre, Blacher and BakerMcIntyre et al, 2002) and this has its own health and economic price; transition into maturity raises many additional issues for the provision of services (Hepper & Garralda, 2004).
Despite numerous government documents issued for the past 15 years, there has been little appreciable impact on mental health services for children with learning disabilities. In June 2006, only 59% of primary care trusts commissioned mental health services for young people with learning disabilities (Department for Education and Skills & Department of Health, 2006). Bearing in mind that clear commissioning guidance was first given 9 years ago (Department of Health, 1998), and that the Human Rights Act 1998 and the Disability Discrimination Act 2005 are now in force, this lack of services seems extraordinary.
Why are the resources so scant?
Responsibility for children with learning disabilities and mental health problems historically fell between developmental or community paediatrics, CAMHS, and all age services for people with learning disabilities (Reference BerneyBerney, 2006). Standard 8 of the National Service Framework for Children clarifies this stating that local authorities, primary care trusts and CAMH services must work together to ‘ensure that disabled children have equal access to CAMHS’ (Department for Education and Skills & Department of Health, 2004b ).
Ineffective resource use
Additional funding for CAMHS has been provided recently through the NHS Modernisation Fund and the CAMHS grant (Department of Health, 2004). The grant was paid to local authorities, to be spent in accordance with a joint strategy agreed with CAMHS. However, these CAMHS development monies have often not gone towards services for children with learning disabilities. They have been directed at other targets (e.g. establishing core services) or priority groups (e.g. looked-after children and young offenders). Recently cash-strapped trusts and strategic health authorities have been taking back some of the development monies, reducing their budgets for CAMHS. Resources are often provided only for short, fixed time periods. For example, the early support programme ‘Every Child Matters’ funded by the Department for Education and Skills (2003) was developed in conjunction with the Department of Health as a 3-year funded programme. This funding is shortly about to come to an end in most areas and joint partnership agreements are struggling to continue funding the service.
Ineffective commissioning
If it were true that local provision was tailored to the needs of client groups and local priorities, then commissioning would have been expected to come into play for this group a long time ago. There is no clear planning function that links government priorities with local service provision. Some commissioners have no local needs assessments to guide them; and commissioning, which can appear to be reactive rather than proactive, does not seem to be able to make the necessary changes. Additionally commissioners rarely transfer resources from one service to another since reducing resources to any service is usually unpopular and may be damaging. Thus new developments can only occur with new money. The debt of the NHS trusts has reduced their financial flexibility. Joint commissioning makes good sense but it is not yet delivering effective service.
Further developments
The Public Service Agreement targets introduced three proxy indicators for improvement in CAMH services, one of which was that a full range of CAMHS be available and accessible for children and young people with learning disabilities (HM Government, 2007a ). An update in April 2007 (Department of Health, 2007) reported that only 41% of CAMHS had met this target by March 2005 but by December 2006 this figure had risen to 88%. Considering the fact that many CAMHS were asked to meet this target without additional resources, there is a strong cause for concern in areas where CAMHS budgets are tight. The Healthcare Commission monitoring this process seems to have ignored the fact that many CAMHS, previously apparently without the skills to provide for this group of children, are now doing so at the request of commissioners, but without additional funding or training. This calls into question the whole commissioning process.
The government declared that ‘disabled children should be considered both a local and a national priority’ and suggested giving commissioners ‘incentives’ to focus on this group (HM Treasury & Department for Education and Skills, 2007) and recognised a ‘need to do more’. A review (HM Treasury & Department for Education and Skills, 2007b ) calling for evidence about the barriers to effective commissioning of services was carried out and it is likely to be a crucial piece of work on this subject. Properly resourced joint commissioning seems the obvious way forward.
In July 2007 the Prime Minister commissioned a major new review of the NHS (Hansard, 2007). Three of the four key areas identified are directly pertinent to children and young people with learning disabilities, namely:
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• ‘Improving patient care, including high-quality, joined-up services and ensuring patients are treated with dignity’
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• ‘Delivering more accessible and more convenient care integrated across primary and secondary providers, reflecting best value for money’
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• ‘Establishing a vision for the NHS based more on patient control, choice and local accountability and services responsive to local communities.’
All of these will be useful reference points for ongoing reviews of services and commissioning processes.
What should a good service look like?
Children and young people with learning disabilities should have access to good mental health services and there is an ongoing debate about what a good service should look like. Three models have been discussed by various authors (Reference Berney, Gillberg and O'BrienBerney, 2000; Reference Williams, Wright, Richardson and PartridgeWilliams & Wright, 2003): a lifetime learning disability service, stand-alone learning disability specialist CAMHS services, and learning disability CAMHS services within a generic CAMHS team. The option of a lifetime service (historically more prevalent than currently) offers the least in terms of dedicated child trained specialists who are used to liaising with professionals from other child agencies and it does not satisfy Standard 8 of the National Service Framework. Specialist stand-alone ‘supra district’ CAMHS services (Reference Berney, Bowman and BrethertonBerney et al, 2004) offer high levels of expertise but if they were the only available services would they be as readily accessible and affordable as generic CAMHS? Specialist provision, including in-patient services, could be a regional resource alongside local service provision, which is essential. The most likely model for such local services would be specialist tier three teams embedded within generic CAMHS teams (Reference Green, Williams and WrightGreen et al, 2001; Reference Williams, Wright, Richardson and PartridgeWilliams & Wright, 2003). This has the advantage of cross fertilisation of ideas including joint training and working, secondments and healthy career pathways. It prevents a team from becoming isolated but retains staff with more experience and training in the area. It also provides local services and equity of access.
Alongside the three options outlined above comes the issue of who should manage these services. The jury is still out on this as services are currently variously managed by primary care trusts, community, childcare or care trusts and mental health trusts, and this is changing all the time with current trust reorganisation. These present opportunities for better co-operation and patient transition between organisations (depending on alignments). For example, being in a care trust may make co-operation with social workers much easier, while being in a trust that includes adult mental health or learning disability services might improve transitions between child and adult services. The team needs to be multidisciplinary (Reference Allington-SmithAllington-Smith, 2006). High levels of planning, co-working and co-operation between agencies (social services, child health, education, voluntary agencies and CAMHS) is essential both for community services (Beresford & Sloper, 2004) and for in-patient services (Reference Gowers and CotgroveGowers & Cotgrove, 2003).
Trusts should provide a full range of services similar to generic CAMHS including assessment, a diagnosis, a comprehensive array of interventions at all tiers and consultation services. Specialist knowledge will be necessary for physical comorbidities, epilepsy, autistic spectrum disorders, neurodegenerative and metabolic disorders, and teams will need specialist skills in dealing with challenging behaviour and child protection (Reference Williams, Wright, Richardson and PartridgeWilliams & Wright, 2003).
Where studies have sought user opinions about the services, they often express a desire for key workers, access to multidisciplinary services and good quality, readily available information (Beresford & Sloper, 2004). High-quality family support, leisure facilities and substitute care are also priorities for families.
An editorial in 2 or 3 years’ time may comment on what progress has been made in providing services for children with learning disabilities and mental health problems and their families. It will be a sad indictment of the government, commissioning processes and CAMHS professionals if the situation has not improved. This paper is a call for all these groups to continue to work together urgently to address the problem.
Declaration of interest
None.
Acknowledgements
We thank Geraldine Casswell for her comments on a draft of this paper.
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