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London Mental Health ­ Fact Bbook

A Cavendish Square Group publication 53 Main locations from which services are provided Limelight services and areas of specific expertise Key stats about the Trust Other innovative services include the Family Drug and Alcohol Court and the Family Nurse Partnership National Unit. Training With an international reputation and reach, the Trust’s clinician-trainers provide transformational training programmes which make a significant and distinctive contribution to the development of the health and social care workforce of the UK and further afield. Research The Trust’s pioneering research has been part of its history since 1920 and it works with leading institutions such as UCL and the Institute of Child Health. London and the home counties. For more information see: http://tavistockandportman.uk/about-us/about-website/how-find-us The Trust’s Camden-based Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service (CAMHS), known as Open Minded, is a major service which puts patients at the heart of service delivery and is staffed by highly trained practitioners supporting children, young people and families. The Gender Identity Development Service is nationally commissioned and the only service of its kind in the UK to work with children and young people who are experiencing difficulties in the development of their gender. The Family Drug and Alcohol Court is the first of its kind; an award winning, evidence-based court that takes a problem-solving, therapeutic approach to care cases where parental substance misuse is a factor. The Family Nurse Partnership National Unit (FNP) is responsible for training specialist family nurses who work with vulnerable first time young mums and parents. The National Unit sets up new and developing FNP sites across England and ensures fidelity of the evidence-based US model. The City and Hackney Primary Care Psychotherapy Consultation Service (PCPCS) was developed with GPs to support patients with complex presentations who typically fall between the gaps of service provision. PCPCS addresses the reality of complexity in primary care, including co-occurring physical and emotional health issues. The service model has been evaluated with the Centre for Mental Health and is gaining a national profile. The Trust passed the CQC inspection in 2014 without reservation. The Trust obtains and reports on a wide range of metrics and publishes an annual quality account available at http://www.tavistockandportman.nhs.uk/about-us/governance/quality -account-archive. Key metrics include patient attendance, service user experience, formal outcome measures (both clinical and patient determined).


London Mental Health ­ Fact Bbook
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