Summary
This National Audit Office (NAO) Report,
'Helping
People Through Mental Health Crisis' (HC 5), examines the role of Crisis
Resolution and Home Treatment services (CRHT) in helping people through mental
health crisis.
At any one time, one in six British adults are
experiencing at least one diagnosable mental health problem. One quarter of
routine GP consultations are for people with a mental health problem, with
anxiety and depression the most common.
Mental illness costs the economy
in the region of £47 billion a year, with over £15 billion in lost employment
and £10 billion in benefits payment. Crisis Resolution Home Treatment teams
comprise mental health nurses along with support from consultant psychiatrists,
social workers, occupational therapists and psychologists, helping people
through short-term mental health crises by providing intensive treatment and
support outside hospital, ideally at home.
Divided into four parts, the
report covers the following areas:
- The Departmental introduction of
Crisis Resolution Home Treatment (CRHT)
- Countrywide implementation of
CRHT teams
- The impact such teams are making
- The cost benefits
of such services.
The NAO sets out a number of conclusions and
recommendations, including that:
- The Department should take this
opportunity to develop metrics allowing a rounded assessment of local acute
services including CRHTs
- There should be regular service-user
satisfaction exercises in key areas, meaningful national data of all CRHT
services should be compiled
- NHS Trusts should be encouraged to improve
their use of the Mental Health Minimum Data
- NHS Commissioners should
work with mental health provider trusts to assess current CRHT capacity and
should also work with local mental health providers, acute trusts
- GP
practices and local implementation teams to jointly develop and agree
comprehensive protocols for mental health referrals.
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