Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dlnhk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-28T16:05:53.166Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Mental health rehabilitation services in the UK in 2007

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Debbie Mountain
Affiliation:
Faculty of Rehabilitation and Social Psychiatry, Royal College of Psychiatrists, and Royal Edinburgh Hospital, Edinburgh
Helen Killaspy
Affiliation:
Faculty of Rehabilitation and Social Psychiatry, Royal College of Psychiatrists, and Department of Mental Health Sciences, University College London, Hampstead Campus, London NW3 2PF, email: [email protected], and Camden and Islington NHS Foundation Trust, London
Frank Holloway
Affiliation:
Faculty of Rehabilitation and Social Psychiatry, Royal College of Psychiatrists, and Croydon Integrated Adult Mental Health Services, South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust, London
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Aims and Method

A survey of UK consultants in rehabilitation psychiatry was carried out to investigate current service provision and changes over the past 3 years.

Results

Most services had undergone multiple changes, with an overall reduction in over half and an overall expansion in a minority. the proportion with low secure provision had doubled. Around a third reported reinvestment of rehabilitation resources into other specialist in-patient and community services.

Clinical Implications

Rehabilitation services are undergoing rapid change with diversion of resources into services that may lack rehabilitation expertise. This risks an increase in independent sector referrals for in-patient rehabilitation for those with complex needs. Expansion of community services should be balanced against the need for local in-patient rehabilitation services.

Type
Original papers
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2009

In 1999, the National Service Framework for Mental Health 1 set targets for the implementation of specialist community mental health services across England (335 crisis resolution, 220 assertive outreach and 50 early intervention services by 2003). Five years later, there were 263 assertive outreach teams employing around 3000 staff, 168 crisis resolution teams employing around 2000 staff and 41 early intervention services employing 174 staff. 2 Most of these staff moved from existing mental health services into the new teams. These services have succeeded in reducing reliance on in-patient services overall, Reference Glover, Arts and Suresh Babu3 although English assertive outreach services were not shown to be effective in this regard Reference Killaspy, Bebbington, Blizard, Johnson, Nolan and Pilling4 and a proportion of users of these and other community mental health services still require lengthy hospital admission. Reference Craig, Garety, Power, Rahaman, Colbert and Fornells-Ambrojo5

The majority of people requiring lengthy admissions have a diagnosis of schizophrenia complicated by treatment resistance Reference Meltzer6 and/or comorbidties such as cognitive impairment, substance misuse and challenging behaviours. Reference Wykes and Dunn7Reference Killaspy, Rambarran and Bledin9 Many do not meet eligibity criteria for specialist community teams since they are unable to manage community living. 10,11 At any one time it has been estimated that around 1% of people with schizophrenia receive intensive in-patient rehabilitation in order to recover adequate social function to live outside hospital. Reference Holloway8 Rehabilitation services provide ‘a whole system approach to recovery from mental ill health which maximises an individual's quality of life and social inclusion by encouraging their skills, promoting independence and autonomy in order to give them hope for the future and which leads to successful community living through appropriate support’. Reference Killaspy, Harden, Holloway and King12 Service users tend to be referred for rehabilitation once the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence guidance on the treatment of schizophrenia 13 has proved unsuccessful and other approaches have failed. Reference Holloway8

Over the past 3 years, the Faculty of Rehabilitation and Social Psychiatry of the Royal College of Psychiatrists has received reports from its members of rehabilitation service reconfigurations and losses. Some, such as the rebadging of 25% of community rehabilitation teams as assertive outreach teams (C. Wright, personal communication, 2009) appear to be a direct consequence of the implementation of the National Service Framework for Mental Health. 1 In order to investigate these reports further, the Faculty carried out a survey of its members across the UK, coordinated by its regional representatives.

Method

The survey was carried out between October 2006 and March 2007. Consultants were asked to complete a structured proforma, devised by the authors of this paper and based on a previous survey of rehabilitation services in England. Reference Killaspy, Harden, Holloway and King12 Information about any reductions or expansion of in-patient and community rehabilitation services that had taken place in the 3 years since the previous survey or were being proposed was gathered. All regional representatives were requested to disseminate the survey proforma to all consultants in rehabilitation psychiatry in their area. Responses were collated by the Chair of the regional representatives (D.M.) and summarised according to the main changes to services reported and whether any service reconfiguration had resulted in an overall service reduction, expansion or both.

Results

Thirteen (72%) of the 18 regional representatives responded. From a possible 101 regions/trusts/local authority areas, data on 55 services were received (response rate 54%). Of these, four reported that there was no rehabilitation service in that area, five reported that there had been no changes but major service reviews were planned, the detail of which was unknown. A summary of the main types of change reported by the remaining 46 services is shown in Table 1.

Table 1. Main change to each rehabilitation service

Services reporting changes (n = 46) n (%)
Reduction in service: type of service reduction 25 (54)
    All areas of service reduced including whole ward/units 5 (11)
    Loss of one part of service (e.g. ward, continuing care unit, supported community accommodation unit) 5 (11)
    Redesign resulting in transfer of resources to e.g. forensic services, older peoples' service, primary care and voluntary sector 9 (20)
    Reduced staffing to manage more complex and disturbed individuals 4 (9)
    Reduced service funding 2 (4)
Development or expansion of service: type of service reduction 4 (9)
    Substantial investment in all areas 1 (2)
    Development through reinvestment of efficiencies achieved through repatriation of out of area treatments 2 (4)
    Service redesign leading to greater system coherence 1 (2)
Reduction and development of service: type of mixed service change 17 (37)
    Reduction in in-patient services and reinvestment in other services (e.g. early intervention, supported community accommodation, low secure unit, hospital and community rehabilitation units) 10 (22)
    Reduction in community rehabilitation services and reinvestment in other parts of non-forensic in-patient and community rehabilitation service 2 (4)
    Rehabilitation service resources reduced but service expanded by joining with assertive outreach and intensive home treatment teams and/or increasing remit to cover more clients in supported community accommodation 5 (11)

Most services reported multiple changes. Ten services (18%) reported closures of whole wards or units, two reported planned ward/unit closures and eight reported planned reductions in in-patient rehabilitation beds. Seventeen (37%) respondents reported cuts to community rehabilitation services comprising closure of seven community rehabilitation teams, eight community rehabilitation residential units and four rehabilitation day services. However, taking into account all the changes reported within a service, these were not always considered to have resulted in an overall reduction in service.

In terms of service expansion, 14 (30%) respondents reported development of in-patient services, eight of which were low secure units (six had opened and two were planned). Seventeen (37%) respondents reported investment in community rehabilitation services with twelve detailing development of various residential services and five reporting development of some form of service to review individuals placed out of area. However, taking all the changes reported for each service into account, these developments were considered to have resulted in an overall expansion of only four rehabilitation services.

Discussion

Study limitations

Our data is incomplete since although the majority of regional representatives responded, some had been unable to contact some consultants within their region. Our overall service response rate of 54% is reasonable for a postal survey but clearly non-response bias means that the results must be interpreted with caution. However, in areas where rehabilitation services had already been cut, non-response was inevitable unless the regional representative was able to report this. We therefore cannot report the absolute figures for the number of rehabilitation services that have been completely closed since 2004. Non-response may also have been as a result of potential respondents being too busy to complete the survey (perhaps because of expansion of services) or lacking enthusiasm for the research (perhaps because of service reductions and poor morale).

However, we cannot estimate from our results whether the non-response from services undergoing expansion or reductions were similar.

Potential impact of reductions in rehabilitation services

Bearing this in mind, the results of this survey appear to suggest that there has been a net loss of in-patient rehabilitation services across the UK over recent years and an expansion of low secure provision. In 2004, 15% of rehabilitation services reported having low secure service provision. Reference Killaspy, Harden, Holloway and King12 Our results suggest that since then, a further 15% of services had opened or planned to open a low secure unit.

Services appear to be being reconfigured within small geographical areas without any strategic coherence or reference to the wider mental health system. This has led to patchy provision across the UK, with services in neighbouring areas or within the same trust reporting reductions or expansion, often without recourse to any specified service plan. This lack of coherence renders rehabilitation services vulnerable to cuts when the health economy is under pressure.

The results of this ‘snapshot’ survey suggest that rehabilitation services are undergoing a period of rapid change. It is unclear what the impact of these changes will be on individual patient care and the wider mental health service. One obvious problem with reductions in local rehabilitation services is that individuals with complex needs and treatment resistance become stuck in acute in-patient settings with no rehabilitation expertise. Reference Holloway8 This affects the whole in-patient system and increases referrals to the independent sector for in-patient treatment. Reference Shepherd, Beardsmore, Hardy and Muijen14,Reference Shepherd15 Although we welcome investment in community rehabilitation services, this cannot be made at the cost of in-patient services since it may only benefit those with more prospects of recovery and disadvantage those with higher levels of need.

The development of new functional community teams implemented through the National Service Framework for Mental Health may have been at the cost of rehabilitation services. Mental health commissioners, under considerable financial constraints, have focused on targets for the provision of these new services. The lack of emphasis on the delivery of rehabilitation services as part of the National Service Framework for Mental Health may therefore be directly responsible for the current incoherence in provision of these services, at least in England.

The mental hospital closure programme has led to the development of a ‘virtual asylum’ in the form of independent sector hospital, residential and nursing placements. Reference Priebe, Badesconyi, Fioritti, Hansson, Kilian and Torres-Gonzales16Reference Ryan, Hatfield, Sharma and Simpson19 Individuals with severe impairment of their social and every day living skills who require a high level of support are increasingly being placed in ‘out of area treatments’ at a cost to the National Health Service of around a quarter of a billion pounds for working age adults alone. 20 The cost of out of area treatments is much more than financial: service users are often placed long distances from their area of origin leading to social dislocation from family and other support networks (this is a particular problem for those from black and minority ethnic communities); continuity of care from their local mental health and primary care services is lost; many do not receive appropriate care from their new local mental health services under the care programme approach; care is incompletely or irregularly reviewed leading to ‘over support’ and increasing institutionalisation as their symptoms and function improve, rather than promotion of independent living skills; care coordinators from the area of origin do not report the outcomes of reviews to commissioners of these services in any regular or coherent manner. These issues clearly undermine the rehabilitation and recovery of service users, leading to increased social exclusion in terms of their local community, family networks, access to appropriate support when they need it and reintegration into mainstream employment, education and lesiure activities.

Recommendations

The need to prioritise a coherent service approach for those with complex and long-term mental health needs is therefore obvious and, in order to reverse the current potential loss of expertise in attending to the needs of this patient group, we suggest that commissioners and providers of services support and invest in their own local rehabilitation services rather than promoting an outflow of resource into out of area treatments. Our survey results show that some rehabilitation services have already taken on a specialist role in reviewing out of area treatments and some have reinvested financial flows into local rehabilitation and residential services. We would strongly encourage this approach. In addition, rehabilitation services need to engage in a focused research programme to evidence their effectiveness if they are to survive the vagaries of service reconfiguration.

Declaration of interest

The authors are members of the Executive Committee of the Royal College of Psychiatrists' Faculty of Rehabilitation and Social Psychiatry.

Acknowledgements

We would like to thank all respondents and the following regional representatives for coordinating data collection: Robin Arnold, Andrew Ashley-Smith, John Barnes, Clare Brabbins, Moira Connolly, Frank Corrigan, Tom Craig, Steffan Davies, Peter Dick, Robin Ellis, Rhoswen Hailwood, Giles Harborne, Lindsey Kemp, Ena Lavelle, Wendy Macfarlane, Rob MacPherson, Mike Metcalfe, Caroline Mitchell, Jim Murphy, Kirsten Nicoll, Eileen O’Sullivan, Ashok Patel, Jane Patterson, Simon Payne, Glenn Roberts, Debbie Simpson, Richard Stanton, Jane Throssell and Sandra Tough.

References

1 Department of Health. National Service Framework for Mental Health. Department of Health, 1999.Google Scholar
2 Department of Health. National Service Framework for Mental Health – Five Years On. Department of Health, 2004.Google Scholar
3 Glover, G, Arts, G, Suresh Babu, K. Crisis resolution / home treatment teams and psychiatric admission rates in England. Br J Psychiatry, 2006; 189: 441–5.Google Scholar
4 Killaspy, H, Bebbington, PE, Blizard, R, Johnson, S, Nolan, F, Pilling, S, et al. The REACT study: a randomised evaluation of assertive community treatment in north London. BMJ 2006; 332: 815–20.Google Scholar
5 Craig, T, Garety, P, Power, P, Rahaman, N, Colbert, S, Fornells-Ambrojo, M, et al. The Lambeth Early Onset (LEO) Team: randomised controlled trial of the effectiveness of specialised care for early psychosis. BMJ 2004; 329: 1067–71.Google Scholar
6 Meltzer, HY. Treatment-resistant schizophrenia – the role of clozapine. Curr Med Res Opin 1997; 14: 120.Google Scholar
7 Wykes, T, Dunn, G. Cognitive deficit and the prediction of rehabilitation success in a chronic psychiatric group. Psychol Med 1992; 22: 389–98.Google Scholar
8 Holloway, F. The Forgotten Need for Rehabilitation in Contemporary Mental Health Services. A position statement from the Executive Committee of the Faculty of Rehabilitation and Social Psychiatry. Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2005 (http://www.rcpsych.ac.uk/college/faculty/rehab/frankholloway_oct05.pdf).Google Scholar
9 Killaspy, H, Rambarran, D, Bledin, K. Mental health needs of clients of rehabilitation services: a survey in one Trust. J Ment Health 2008; 17: 207–18.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
10 Department of Health. Mental Health Policy Implementation Guide. Assertive Community Treatment Teams. Department of Health, 2001.Google Scholar
11 Department of Health. Mental Health Policy Implementation Guide. Community Mental Health Teams. Department of Health, 2002.Google Scholar
12 Killaspy, H, Harden, C, Holloway, F, King, M. What do mental health rehabilitation services do and what are they for? A national survey in England. J Ment Health 2005; 14: 157–65.Google Scholar
13 National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence. Schizophrenia: Core Interventions in the Treatment and Management of Schizophrenia in Primary and Secondary Care. Clinical Guideline No. 1. NICE, 2002.Google Scholar
14 Shepherd, G, Beardsmore, A, Hardy, P, Muijen, M. Relation between bed use, social deprivation and overall bed availability in acute adult psychiatric units and alternative residential options: a cross sectional survey, one day census data and staff interviews. BMJ 1997; 314: 262–6.Google Scholar
15 Shepherd, G. System failure? the problems of reductions in long stay beds in the UK. Epidemiol Psychiatr Soc 1998; 7: 127–34.Google Scholar
16 Priebe, S, Badesconyi, A, Fioritti, A, Hansson, L, Kilian, R, Torres-Gonzales, F, et al. Reinstitutionalisation in mental health care: comparison of data on service provision from six European countries. BMJ 2005; 330: 123–6.Google Scholar
17 Ryan, T, Pearsall, A, Hatfield, B, Poole, R. Long term care for serious mental illness outside the NHS: a study of out of area placements. J Ment Health 2004; 13: 425–9.Google Scholar
18 Ryan, T, Hatfield, B, Simpson, V, Sharma, I. A Census Day Audit of Mental Health Out of Sector Placements in the North West. HASCAS and Manchester University, 2005.Google Scholar
19 Ryan, T, Hatfield, B, Sharma, I, Simpson, V. A Census Day Audit of Mental Health Out of Sector Placements in the West Midlands. HASCAS and Manchester University, 2005.Google Scholar
20 Mental Health Strategies. Out of Area Treatments 2004/5 – A market out of control? Mental Health Strategies, 2005.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Table 1. Main change to each rehabilitation service

Submit a response

eLetters

No eLetters have been published for this article.