Research Fellow, Royal College of Psychiatrists Research and Training Unit (CRTU), London
Consultant Psychiatrist and Director of CRTU, 4th Floor, Standon House, 21 Mansell Street, London E1 8AA, email: p.lelliott{at}cru.rcpsych.ac.uk
Research Assistant, CRTU, London
Consultant Child and Adolescent Psychiatrist, CRTU, London
Research Assistant, CRTU, London
Research Worker, CRTU, London
|
|
|---|
In 1999, child and adolescent mental health (CAMH) in-patient provision was unevenly distributed across England. A repeat of a 1999 bed count survey was conducted in 2006 to determine whether change had occurred in response to government policy.
RESULTS
Total bed numbers in England were found to have increased by 284; 69% of the increase is due to the independent sector, whose market share has risen from 25% in 1999 to 36% in 2006. Regions with the highest number of beds in 1999 have increased bed numbers more than areas with the lowest number of beds in 1999 (8.3 v. 3.6 beds per million population). In units that admit only children under the age of 14, there has been a 30% reduction in beds available (123 to 86).
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS
Inequity in provision of CAMH inpatient services has increased despite government policy to the contrary. We speculate that this might be partly due to fragmented and local commissioning, and the effects of market forces operating as a result of increasing privatisation.
|
|
|---|
|
|
|---|
The survey
We conducted the 1999 survey and have maintained direct contact with all
CAMH in-patient units in England through their research and development
activities. This network means that we are aware of any existing unit that
closes and any new unit that is established. For the 2006 survey, a research
worker interviewed the unit manager or lead clinician of each unit over the
telephone to ascertain (a) the number of beds available for use, (b) the age
group accepted for admission, (c) admission policy, and (d) the diagnostic
groups treated.
Units can be categorised according to the age group of the young people admitted (children, adolescents or both) and to the types of problem of the young people admitted. Units that admit children and/or adolescents with a wide range of diagnoses and problems are categorised as general. More information about the criteria used in this classification is given in the report of the 1999 survey (OHerlihy et al, 2003).
|
|
|---|
Table 1 summarises the change between 1999 and 2006 in the number of CAMH beds by type and managing agency. There have been some changes in the overall balance of provision. The number of forensic and secure beds has increased greatly whereas the number of general beds in units that only admit children under age 14 has fallen.
|
View this table: [in a new window] | Table 1. CAMH bed numbers and type managed by the NHS and the independent sector in England between 1999 and 2006 |
For the element of provision managed by the NHS, there has been new investment in forensic units and disinvestment from childrens units. There has also been a change in emphasis for NHS managed general adolescent in-patient services. In 2006, a higher proportion of these beds (61 of 625, 10%) are short-stay, with a target length of admission of between 6 and 8 weeks, than was the case in 1999 (10 of 459, 2%).
The independent sector has increased its market share of eating disorder beds, from 75% to 82%, and of general adolescent beds, from 15% to 27% (there were 71 such beds in 1999 and 169 in 2006), and has a virtual monopoly of secure psychiatric beds.
Table 2 shows the distribution of beds per 1 million of the total population across nine English regions, and the change in this between 1999 and 2006. The number of beds in the four regions with highest provision in 1999 (all four had more than 23 beds per million) has increased by a mean of 8.3 per million. In contrast, the number of beds in the five regions with the lowest provision (all five had fewer than 12 beds per million) has increased by 3.6 per million. Furthermore, nearly all of the increase for the most poorly provided areas is accounted for by a single English region, the West Midlands, which, following a strategic review in 2002, established a new short-stay general adolescent unit and an NHS forensic unit. At about the same time, a new independent sector unit also opened.
|
View this table: [in a new window] | Table 2. Total CAMH and general bed numbers per million population in English regions |
The distribution of types of specialist unit and age group catered for is also uneven. Eating disorder services are confined to four of the nine English regions, with four units in London accounting for 75 of the 113 beds (66%). The 183 secure and forensic beds provided by 12 units are located in six regions.
|
|
|---|
Standard nine in the National Service Framework for Children, Young People and Maternity Services (Department of Health, 2004) places great emphasis on accessibility of services. In relation to CAMHS it requires that where a child or young person needs to be placed in an inpatient unit, every effort is made to find a place that is close to home, so that contact with the family can be maintained (Department of Health, 2004: p. 19). The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence endorses this in its guideline for depression in children. This recommends that CAMH in-patient care should be available within reasonable travelling distance to enable the involvement of families and maintain social links (National Collaborating Centre for Mental Health, 2005: p. 165).
An even distribution of CAMH beds across the country is a prerequisite for optimal access. This survey shows that not only is provision very unevenly distributed but that the inequity has increased over the past 7 years. As a result, despite an overall increase in bed numbers, four regions of England are still well below the minimum of 20 beds per million population recommended by the Royal College of Psychiatrists (2006).
The forces that have shaped the development of in-patient CAMHS
The increasing inequity is perhaps an example of the effect of the
incompatibility of different government policies on one type of specialised
provision. Although a standard about access has been set centrally through the
National Service Framework, responsibility for commissioning CAMH in-patient
services, with the exception of forensic units and in-patient provision for
deaf children, is devolved to a large number of primary care trusts that
commission for a population of about 200 000. At the same time, the government
has actively encouraged the independent sector to provide a larger proportion
of NHS-funded care. The results of the survey would support the view that the
force that is actually shaping CAMH in-patient services is not the National
Service Framework but isolated decisions by commissioners about individual
patients and the markets response to these. The problem is that the
market response has resulted in a widening of the gap between areas with high
levels of provision and those with low provision. The results of this study
provide little evidence that primary care trusts have worked together
as consortia to ensure that highly specialised (Tier 4) services are
commissioned or that strategic health authorities [have]
oversee[n] and performance manage[d] collaborative commissioning
arrangements (Department of Health,
2004: p. 40).
The future for in-patient services for children
In contrast to services for adolescents, the number of beds available to
children under the age of 14 has reduced markedly. During the period between
the two surveys four units that admitted only children closed. Also, one
general child and adolescent unit changed its admission policy and now admits
only adolescents. At the time of writing, we are aware that one of the
remaining childrens unit was also under threat of closure.
Conclusions
Over the past 7 years an overall increase in CAMH bed numbers has been
accompanied by increasing inequity of provision. We argue that the latter is
partly the result of localised commissioning and increasing privatisation of
this specialised resource. In-patient services for children under the age of
14 face an uncertain future.
|
|
|---|
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
N. K. Fung and L. Cullen Child and adolescent in-patient units - room for expansion Psychiatr. Bull., April 1, 2008; 32(4): 155 - 155. [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||