CQC and CBF publish ‘Three Lives’ Report with commitments to action

winterbourne

A short while ago, the Learning Disabilities Elf made a small contribution to the Justice for LB campaign by trying to draw attention once again to the evidence base.

Wednesday (day 91) saw the publication of a key report from the Care Quality Commission and Challenging Behaviour Foundation, which tells the stories of three young people and their families who were let down by learning disability services that should have been caring for them.

At the heart of policy for supports for people with learning disabilities is the notion of person centred planning – responding to the needs of individuals and working in partnership with their families and supporters, but the three stories in the report show clear failures to work in this way.

Care Quality Commission and Challenging Behaviour Foundation Event

The report itself grew out of an event in in February 2014, chaired by Professor Louis Appleby who is a member of the CQC board. Everybody present at the event was able to identify actions they could take to address the issues identified in the three stories.

A key operational message was that actions should be taken within the context of the already existing national initiatives, for example

  • The Joint Improvement Programme Team
  • The DH team reviewing the Mental Health Act Code of Practice.
  • The DH Learning Disability Programme Board chaired by the Minister of State.

The Three Lives

This is a report of that meeting and the proposed resulting actions. These have been thematically grouped, based on the discussions and the recorded feedback.

The family stories told at the event tell a tragically familiar story and outlined the experiences of:

  • 18 year old Connor, who tragically died at an assessment and treatment centre after he was found unconscious after a seizure whilst unsupervised in a bath.
  • Kayleigh, who spent 10 years in assessment and treatment centres, including Winterbourne View.
  • Lisa who was kept for the majority of the time in a locked area at an assessment and treatment centre with staff interacting with her through a small letterbox style hatch.
The three stories told a tragically familiar story

The three stories told a tragically familiar story

Common Themes

The common themes identified by those at the event were:

  • The importance of understanding the person, and listening to them and their family
  • The need for local professional expertise and early intervention close to home
  • The importance of good multidisciplinary support, including transition between child and adult services
  • The closure of services that do not meet people’s needs, and which are at odds with the right models of care
  • Implementing the evidence base that exists for person centred local services based on positive behavioural support
Evidence based, person centred and local services needed

Evidence based, person centred and local services needed

Actions for the participants

The actions identified cover:

  • Improving information for planning through the learning disability census and local commissioner review
  • Creating a clearer strategic focus through a national strategy for learning disability secure services
  • Strengthening the focus of CQC regulation on services demonstrating a shift to individual outcomes
  • Better workforce development to ensure services staffed with skilled and able professionals

Conclusion

The report’s authors point out that there is now a compelling evidence base for how to support individuals and their families. The evidence base clearly points to the need for the availability of community-based, person-centred and personalised supports, close to family and local contacts, to be available across the country, with crisis support available and based on positive behaviour support approaches.

However they also point out that this report will be added to “the plethora of other reports and publications about what needs to be done to deliver safe, effective dignified care for people with learning disabilities and their families” and they want to ensure that progress is being made on the commitments that were given at the meeting in February.

The plan is for the group to meet again in September of this year and the Learning Disabilities Elf will endeavour to report on that when the group publish their progress later in the year.

The group meets again in September and will report on progress

The group meets again in September and will report on progress

Link:

3 Lives: What have we learned, what we need to do, Care Quality Commission and Challenging Behaviour Foundation, 2014

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John Northfield

After qualifying as a social worker, John worked in community learning disability teams before getting involved in a number of long-stay hospital closure programmes, working to develop individual plans for people moving into their own homes. He worked for BILD, helping to develop the Quality Network and was editorial lead for the NHS electronic library learning disabilities specialist collection. This led him to found the Learning Disabilities Elf site with Andre Tomlin as a way of making the evidence accessible to practitioners in health and social care. Most recently he has worked as part of Mencap's national quality team and also been involved in a number of national website developments, including the General Medical Council's learning disabilities site.

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