Agenda and minutes

Venue: Town Hall

Contact: Victoria Freeman  Email: victoria.freeman@onesource.co.uk 01708 433862

Items
No. Item

1.

CHAIRMAN'S ANNOUNCEMENTS

The Chairman will announce details of the arrangements in case of fire or other events that might require the meeting room or building’s evacuation.

Minutes:

The Chairman gave details of arrangements in case of fire or other event that may require the evacuation of the meeting room or building.

2.

FORWARD PLAN

Minutes:

It was noted that there is no annual forward plan and that this would be drafted once the Joint Health and Wellbeing Strategy has been agreed.  As an interim measure, it was agreed that the next meeting would focus on the theme of the health and wellbeing of older people.

3.

APOLOGIES FOR ABSENCE

(If any) – receive

 

Minutes:

Apologies were received for the absence of Councillors Damian White, Robert Benham and Gillian Ford. Apologies were also received from Andrew Blake-Herbert, London Borough of Havering, Ceri Jacob, BHR CCGS (Sharon Morrow substituting) Jacqui Van Rossum, NELFT and Chris Bown, BHRUT (Richard Pennington substituting).

4.

DISCLOSURE OF INTERESTS

Members are invited to disclose any interest in any of the items on the agenda at this point of the meeting.

 

Members may still disclose any interest in any item at any time prior to the consideration of the matter.

Minutes:

There were no disclosures of interest.

5.

MINUTES, ACTION LOG AND INDICATOR SET pdf icon PDF 224 KB

To approve as a correct record the minutes of the Committee held on 16 January 2019 and to authorise the Chairman to sign them.

Additional documents:

Minutes:

The following items were noted in respect of the action log:

 

4 – Update on referral to treatment – The target from NHS England was for BHRUT to have fewer people awaiting treatment on 31 March 2020 than had been the case two years previously. An update on progress on this target could be brought to the May meeting of the Board. It was accepted that recruitment difficulties for consultants and nurses could impact on meeting this target.

 

BHRUT was currently modelling what additional capacity was needed to meet these targets and there were plans to extend the triage system to other specialities. More details regarding the triage system could be given at the next meeting of the Board. BHRUT was putting the expected population growth into commissioning plans and discussions had taken place re the cost of delivery and capacity to deliver.

 

7 – SEND Action Plan Update was distributed (appended to the minutes).

 

8 – Health analytics - It was confirmed that every GP practice was required to sign a data sharing agreement. It would be clarified whether data from the 21 Havering practices who had signed  could now be accessed.  

 

The minutes of the meeting of the Board held on 16 January 2019 were agree as a correct record and signed by the Chairman.

6.

CHILDREN AND ADOLESCENT MENTAL HEALTH pdf icon PDF 97 KB

Additional documents:

Minutes:

It was noted that the CAMHS local transformation programme was currently entering the fourth year of a five year agenda. A hub model using iTHRIVE principles has been developed for the main providers in order to seek to deliver earlier interventions. The service’s future direction was reinforced by the new NHS Long Term Plan with its emphasis on investment in areas such as prevention, early intervention in psychosis and eating disorder services. Funding for CAMHS is received on a borough-wide basis but some funding is top sliced in order to fund BHR-wide work e.g. a single point of access.

 

A steering group has been established to look at local need and come up with local solutions. In the past year, the transformation programme hasfunded work across a range of settings and services including the Early Help Service to increase perinatal mental health support, CAD team to deliver Five to Thrive and ELSA training, Youth Services to deliver the Go Girls programme, Havering Mind and AddUp charities to deliver parent support sessions and Children’s Services to develop the Adolescent Safeguarding Hub.

 

These programmes link to wider work which has included the funding of mental health first aid courses and suicide prevention training for school staff. School counselling was purchased by schools directly although officers were working with schools in order to map which Havering schools offered counselling and develop practical checklists for use by schools when appointing counselling services. It was suggested that the Council could coordinate joint purchasing of counselling services via its traded services. Officers would clarify which counselling services were currently available via traded services.

 

Healthwatch powers did not cover children’s issues but Healthwatch did wish to support this work. A Healthwatch report on mental health issues from another area could be shared with the Board for information.

The availability of IAPT services for children and young people was currently an issue at STP level and funding for services after year 5 of the transformation agenda was yet to be decided. The Council had also invested in mental health work within children’s services and wished to see children and families supported more in their own environment, rather than in clinics etc.

7.

AUTISM STRATEGY pdf icon PDF 138 KB

Minutes:

It was emphasised that there was now a wish to prioritise children’s autism needs, in addition to those of adults. A new Government strategy for autism was due at the end of 2019 and some work had been undertaken locally to get a better sense of what people with autism and their families were saying. Some services were highly regarded including post-diagnosis support for adults with learning disabilities and hospital staff being aware of patients with autism.

 

A draft strategy was being completed this week that would need sign up from all partners at a senior level. There were around 500 Havering residents with a primary autism diagnosis with a further 70 having a secondary diagnosis. Key issues for families included housing and unemployment and it was felt there should be an improved pathway between children’s and adults services. There was also a need to better signpost where help and support was available. An additional priority was to provide support to ensure people with autism could safely use public transport.

 

The Healthwatch representative felt it was important that children with autism received annual healthchecks and agreed that the CCG had improved greatly in this area. Work was also in progress with BHRUT to bring the skills of Trust staff with assisting people with autism etc out into the community.

 

The strategy covered large groups of people with varying needs and also looked at needs for supported housing. The families of people with autism wished to be more involved but it was felt more input was required from the Council and its partners. It was felt that the Council’s leisure provider and libraries could support work on dementia awareness and the action plan would include details of proposed work on raising autism awareness.

 

The Board discussed whether the Autism Partnership Board was the best place to take the strategy forward and it was agreed that Healthwatch Havering could be engaged to support consultation on the autism strategy.

8.

BHR MENTAL HEALTH TRANSFORMATION PROGRAMME pdf icon PDF 99 KB

Additional documents:

Minutes:

The Board was advised that it was wished that local work on mental health transformation fitted with the national programmes for this area. The recently published NHS Long Term plan focussed on mental health and there was a need to explore the primary care model for people with moderate to severe mental health issues. The Long Term Plan aimed to provide better community support for mental health and the CCG was currently investing in perinatal mental health. Improving access to IAPT services was also a priority whilst work was also in progress on improving the access of rough sleepers to mental health support, support for people with gambling problems and for suicide reduction.

 

National must do actions for the CCG included meeting IAPT treatment targets although the increased recruitment this required could be difficult to achieve. Havering was not meeting its target for formal diagnosis of dementia and the estimate of numbers of people in Havering with dementia may not be accurate. It was noted that GPs were not allowed to diagnose dementia, this had to be done by a consultant.

 

The CCGs were working on ensuring that all patients with acute mental health issues received a full physical healthcheck. Out of area placements had increased recently and more people from outside Havering were also receiving treatment at local facilities. The CCGs had put investment into CAMHS and further investment was planned for 2019/20. A stakeholder workshop had been held on 28 February.

 

It was felt that a BHR-wide needs assessment exercise could assist with future planning for mental health and that a more coordinated approach to suicide prevention was also required. The Local Area Coordination model used in Thurrock had picked up a lot of issues that could lead to mental health problems such as debt, employment problems and housing issues. This gave a different way of working with communities and it was important that the aims of the mental health transformation programme fitted in with localities. Officers were also keen to work across BHR on substance misuse and mental health, as well as on homelessness issues.

9.

SUICIDE PREVENTION pdf icon PDF 85 KB

Additional documents:

Minutes:

Training on suicide prevention and mental health first aid had been delivered by the Council’s Safeguarding and Workplace Wellbeing teams. The three-borough strategy on suicide prevention had been in place for one year and a lot of activity had taken place during this period at local, pan-London and national levels. Commissioning intentions for suicide prevention across BHR had been collated and published and work on discharge from in-patient settings was being led by NELFT. It was important for people with long-term conditions to have access to talking therapies. In addition, a ‘Good Thinking’ site had been commissioned across London with the aim of providing tools and resources to help tackle problems such as stress.

 

AThrive London programme had been established with improving the mental health and wellbeing of all Londoners. The Samaritans had also produced resources for use in schools.

 

Priority work included the arranging of an annual BHR summit and workshop on lessons learned from suicide. Public health officers also met with the coroner twice a year to discuss suicide inquests. Inquests into the suicides of Havering residents who died elsewhere would be undertaken by the coroner for that area although information could be gleaned from death registrations.

 

Work in progress this year covered areas such as training on suicide prevention, crisis response & places of safety and the provision of support to individuals in crisis. A review of the care of patients that self-harmed could be carried out at the BHR level of via the STP steering group. It was noted that self-harm was a very high risk factor for suicide and it was felt hat the impact of self-harming on A & E services should also be considered. The role of school counsellors was also important in preventing young people self-harming.

10.

FUTURE MEETING DATES

Minutes:

The next meeting was scheduled for 1 pm, 8 May 2019 at Havering Town Hall.