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National service framework will set compulsory standards for agencies

Posted: 28 November 2002 | Subscribe Online


The mental health module of the long-awaited children's national service framework will set down clear standards that agencies will be forced to adhere to, it was claimed this week.

Brian McCloskey, a professor from the Centre for Child, Family and Adolescent Mental Health, insisted that the NHS and its partners would be required to embrace the standards once the NSF was published next year.

"Those who manage the health service will have to pay attention and focus on what they have to do to improve services," he explained.
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He expected new money to accompany the NSF but speculated that this would be likely to come "with strings attached".

Speaking at Community Care's Changing Minds conference this week, McCloskey stressed that overall he was optimistic that improvements in children's and adolescents' services would materialise.

"I share the feeling that things are coming together," he said. "There is a crisis and clear problems, but currently we have a policy framework and political commitment that will support us in what we want to do."

Bob Jezzard, a senior policy adviser at the Department of Health, told the conference that the subject of workforce, skills and training issues stood out "more than anything else" from the emerging findings gained during the development of the NSF.

"We can't simply say we need more psychiatrists, psychologists and family therapists as we're never going to be able to deliver all those professionals in the time we need," he said. "We need to think about how others' skills can be used and how to develop and train a child and adolescent mental health worker able to work within primary care services."
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He added that clear guidance would shortly be issued setting out how the £140m announced for CAMHS in October was to be used.

Peter Wilson, the director of young people's mental health charity Young Minds, added that more emphasis needed to be given to the mental health of adolescents, who often fell through the gap between children's and adults' services.

"We have children's services and we have adults' services but, for the most part, adolescent services don't exist. From an emotional point of view these people are still in formation and growing up, and need particular thinking about and attention," he said.

Meanwhile, the chief executive of the National Youth Agency, Tom Wylie, criticised the government's omission of a mental health target in the Connexions programme for 13 to 19-year-olds.

"Is there a target about young people's mental health in a system that offers advice and guidance for young people? No, there is not," he said.


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