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Green light toolkit 2013: a guide to auditing and improving your mental health services so that it is effective in supporting people with autism and learning disabilities
- Author:
- NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT TEAM FOR INCLUSION
- Publisher:
- National Development Team for Inclusion
- Publication year:
- 2013
- Pagination:
- 76
- Place of publication:
- Bath
An earlier report by NDTi, ‘Reasonably adjusted’ (2012) described the reasonable adjustments mental health services were already putting in place for people with learning disabilities and people with autism. The NHS Confederation, supported by the Department of Health, commissioned the NDTi to develop and produce materials to help services review their own quality and share and replicate good practice. These are published as the Green Light Toolkit 2013, which comprise practical new materials designed to help improve the quality of mental health services for adults with learning disabilities and/or autism. The toolkit includes an audit framework to support reviews; an easy-read version of the audit framework and toolkit; and examples. (Edited publisher abstract)
Why we need local pathways for children with learning disabilities and/or autism whose behaviours challenge (including those with a metal health condition)
- Authors:
- NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT TEAM FOR INCLUSION, CHALLENGING BEHAVIOUR FOUNDATION
- Publishers:
- National Development Team for Inclusion, Challenging Behaviour Foundation
- Publication year:
- 2017
- Pagination:
- 5
- Place of publication:
- Bath
Building the Right Support (NHS England et al., 2015) sets out a national plan to develop community services and close inpatient facilities for people with a learning disability and/or autism who display behaviour that challenges. This plan covers children and young people, and includes a new service model of local support arrangements to prevent admission. This explanatory note explains why local pathways are needed to improve outcomes for children and families, target public funding more effectively, and fulfil the duties under the Children and Families Act 2014. It also lists the range of organisations who are responsible for the development and delivery of local pathways. It is one of a set of three resources commissioned by the NHS England Transforming Care Programme help Transforming Care partnerships, local authorities and CCGs to work together with local families. (Edited publisher abstract)
Guide for commissioners of services for children and young people who challenge services
- Author:
- NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT TEAM FOR INCLUSION
- Publisher:
- National Development Team for Inclusion
- Publication year:
- 2017
- Pagination:
- 28
- Place of publication:
- Bath
This guidance has been developed following a project to review the commissioning arrangements for children and young people with learning disabilities and/or autism whose behaviours challenge. It aims to support local authorities and clinical commissioning groups (CCGs) to jointly commission services for children and young people with SEND as required by the Children and Families Act (2014). The guide focuses on the overall culture that needs to be in place to enable good services to flourish. It sets out seven commissioning considerations, including: visions and values, leadership, relationships, the model of service, skilled providers and staff; and an evidence base. Each section includes a description of what good looks like, provides links to further resources and concludes with recommendations for what effective action by commissioners should consist of. The guide will help commissioners and planners to review their current practice and develop an agenda for change. (Edited publisher abstract)
Reviewing the commissioning of services for children and young people who challenge: end of project report
- Authors:
- NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT TEAM FOR INCLUSION, IN CONTROL
- Publisher:
- National Development Team for Inclusion
- Publication year:
- 2016
- Pagination:
- 26
- Place of publication:
- London
Summarises some of the learning from a pilot project to review of local commissioning arrangements for children and young people with learning disabilities and/or autism who challenge. The report briefly describes the project, provides feedback from the young people and families consulted, and pulls together key themes from the pilot sites in Newham, Leeds, Cheshire East, and Rutland. The key themes cover education, preparing for adulthood, early intervention and prevention, support for families. The findings from the review included the need for a greater focus on preparing for Adulthood (PfA) from children’s services, the need for more support for families, and to ensure that the ‘Transforming Care Programme’ not just focused on adults but is also linked to wider local commissioning strategies for children and young people. Examples of good practice from the pilot sites in the areas of commissioning, service delivery and support for parents are also included. (Edited publisher abstract)