Title: ADULT MENTAL HEALTH PARENTING SUPPORT
1ADULT MENTAL HEALTH / PARENTING SUPPORT
2WHY IMPROVE LINKS?
3PARENTING SUPPORT CONTEXT
BACKGROUND FACTORS Family Structure Age of
Mother Income/ Poverty Occupation /
Employment Education
KEY FAMILY FEATURES Parental Cognition Physical
Health Mental Health / Well Being Resources
FAMILY PROCESSES Parenting Quality Home
Learning Parental Advice
OUTCOMES Child Development
4(No Transcript)
5 MULTIPLE DISADVANTAGE
Percentage of families with children experiencing
5 or more disadvantages
2.2
2.1
2
2
1.9
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
The consistency of this figure over 2001 to 2004
suggests that improvements such as the reduction
in child poverty may not be reaching such
families
- Basket of indicators of disadvantages includes
- No parent in the family is in work
- Family lives in poor quality or overcrowded
housing - No parent has any qualifications
- Mother has mental health problems
- At least one parent has a long-standing illness/
disability - Family has low income (below 60 median)
- Family cannot afford a number of food and
clothing items
6POLICY BACKGROUND
- Every Child Matters
- Every Parent Matters
- Think Family
7THINK FAMILY
- Tailored, flexible, holistic approaches needed
no wrong door - Progressive universalism
- Early intervention
8SERVICE RESPONSE
- Single person / single problem
- Complex and fragmented
- Deficit models
- Reactive not early intervention
- Random element to who gets service
9THINK FAMILY MODEL
Better systems for identifying and engaging
families at risk (those with multiple and complex
problems putting their children at risk of poor
outcomes)
Identification
Whole family assessment
Building on the CAF, which looks at the needs,
strengths and interrelation of problems of the
whole family
Multi agency support plan
Managed by lead workers who case work families,
working directly with them and co-ordinating
other service involvement
Improved information sharing
To enable early identification and interventions
To ensure the full range of evidence based
programmes and interventions to meet family needs
Joined up planning commissioning
Integration between adult and childrens
services
At all levels of local services such as clear
accountability for families through joined-up
governance to and a common vision and agreed
outcomes for families across services as part of
the LAA process.
10NEW DEVELOPMENTS
- Family intervention projects
- Family pathfinder projects
- Family nurse partnership
- Family group conferencing
- Multi systemic / family therapy
11MENTAL HEALTH -RISK FACTOR
- 450,000 parents have MH problems
- Poor parental MH linked to child MH difficulties
- 175,000 children acting as carers, around 30 in
relation to parent with MH difficulties - Transmission genetic and environmental
- Particular influence of mothers mental health
12MENTAL HEALTH ACT 2007
- 1. Single Definition of Mental Disorder
- 2. Criteria for the use of Compulsion
- 3. Age Appropriate Services
- 4. Widening Professional Groups
- 5. Nearest Relative
- 6. Independent Mental Health Advocacy Service
- 7. Patients and ECT
- 8. Supervised Community Treatment
- 9. Referral to the MHRT
-
12
13Care Programme Approach
- The needs of parents, child and family as a whole
should be assessed routinely at each stage of the
care pathway from referral to review. - Guidance states
- An intervention intended to provide safety and
support during a time of acute distress, can fail
to promote recovery if the effects on the whole
family are not taken into account.
14SCIE /NICE GUIDANCE
- To conduct a systematic review of evidence and
existing practice by health and social care
services in parenting needs, including meeting
the needs of ethnic minority parents to publish
new guidelines
15EMERGING FINDINGS
- Change is required in both childrens and adult
services - Key information is not routinely collected
- Some interagency protocols in place but few
resources to embed - CAF/ Integrated Childrens System CPA interface
crucial - Separate eligibility criteria prevent
identification of compounding difficulties - Limited robust evidence of what works for parents
with MH problems - Training does not address complexity of cross
working
16BUILDING BRIDGES
- Where parents have profound and enduring mental
health problems - Starting point is families perceptions of their
needs - Flexible and holistic
- Utilises unqualified family support workers
- Help with practical issues as well as providing
emotional support
17COVENTRY - ISSUES
- Gap in skills and awareness of impact on children
of parents with MH issues - Need for training around referral routes/pathways
and awareness of issues for childrens and
adults services in working together - Duplication of assessments and meetings
- Asking the right questions on initial referral
forms and encouraging a Think Family approach
in all agencies/organisations
18COVENTRY continued
- Understanding thresholds for mental
health/illness and identifying levels and
availability of interventions for both parents
and CYP - Need for joint budgets/commissioning to enable
joint working - Concern about capacity to introduce new
initiatives
19COVENTRY - OPPORTUNITIES
- Protocol for adults with a disability, (MH
included) who are also parents, being written by
Adult Services - PEIP CEDAR starting an evaluation which looks
at long-term effects of parenting on both parents
and their CYP - Family Action (FWA) awarded an intensive family
support project in Coventry (Jan 09) - FIP, SPP, DVA project, FGC
20OPPORTUNITIES continued
- Multi-Agency Teams being set up in
neighbourhoods/clusters weekly case meetings
involving a holistic, whole family approach - Early Intervention Team at CAMHS working with
families - New Senior Parenting Practitioner post part of
remit will be working with families with MH issues
21BIRMINGHAM ISSUES
- Limited overall policy/protocols
- Sporadic joint training
- Access difficult / pathways unclear
- Good initiatives but not linked
- Some holistic approaches finding barriers
- Young carers services uncoordinated
- Tensions between health and local authority
perspectives
22BHAM OPPORTUNITIES
- FIP
- Young carers initiatives
- Family group conferencing
- Domestic violence pilot
- Links with parents with disabilities group
- Pilot site for SCIE /NICE guidelines
23EXERCISE
- 1) Discuss your experiences of MH / parenting
support links in pairs / threes. - 2) On pro forma provided identify barriers and
drivers to developing links further. - 3) Summarise any initiatives / innovations you
are aware of that have tried to address the above
issues.
24RESOURCES
- www.pmhcwn.org.uk (Parental Mental Health
Child Welfare Network) - www.scie.org.uk
- www.barnardos.org.uk
- www.suffolk.gov.uk/careandhealth/childrenandfamili
es/ACCORD (protocol) - www.nspcc.org.uk
- www.rcpsych.ac.uk
25RESOURCES
- www.youngcarers.net
- www.mind.org.uk
- www.nsfscot.org.uk (National Schizophrenia
Fellowship Scotland) - www.family-action.co.uk (was FWA)