NHS Somerset bosses vow to improve mental health services following Nottingham Attacks
It comes two years since Ian Coates, Barnaby Webber and Grace O'Malley Kumar were killed by Valdo Calocane.
Somerset health bosses have vowed to do more to support people with severe mental health problems to prevent a repeat of the tragic events that took place in Nottingham two years ago.
June 13 marked the second anniversary of the tragic killing of Taunton teenager Barnaby Webber, one of three people who was fatally stabbed in Nottingham by Valdo Calocane in 2023.
Following the conclusion of the criminal case against Calocane, NHS England and the Care Quality Commission (CQC) have been reviewing mental health services across the UK, trying to assess how Calocane was failed and what needs to be done to prevent similar events in the future.
The NHS Somerset integrated care board (ICB) has now published an action plan to improve its own mental health provision ā though it will require up to Ā£3m of additional government funding to fully implement all the planned changes.
Ian Coates, Grace OāMalley-Kumar and Barnaby Webber were killed in Nottingham on June 13, 2023 by Calocane, who was subsequently sentenced in February 2024 to spend the rest of his life in detention at a high-security hospital.
Calocane had been a patient of Nottinghamshire HealthCare Foundation Trust, having been diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia in 2020 and been sectioned four times in less than two years.
The Care Quality Commission (CQC) recently completed a review of the trustās mental health services, recommending (among other things) that all trusts carry out a similar review and implement any necessary changes.
Subsequently, NHS England asked all trusts and ICBs to review the effectiveness of their intensive and assertive community treatment (IACT) services, focussing on āpeople with severe mental illness who require treatment but where engagement is a challengeā (i.e. failing to attend appointments, take medication or otherwise accept help).
The issue was discussed when the ICB met at NHS Somersetās Yeovil headquarters on Thursday morning (June 19).
Neil Jackson, deputy service group director for mental health and learning disabilities, said: āPart of the request from NHS England was that we created a āhigh risk of harm listā for posting, so the team was very clearly aware of all of the patients that are high risk.
āWeāve managed to get that into our governance meetings in the senior leadership team, so on a regular basis we have a member of the team thatās able to discuss with us all of the high risk patients, so that weāre clear about what measures we need to take if necessary.
āWhen our staff are assessing patients, theyāre not only looking for risk to themselves or to the patients themselves, but theyāre also looking very clearly at risk to others, which is something that perhaps wasnāt done as much before we implemented new training.ā
Mr Jackson said Somersetās in-patient provision for mental health patients (i.e. dedicated wards where they can receive safe treatment) was in the middle of āa two-year transformation programmeā, focussing on providing better continuity between inpatient and community care (to prevent patients slipping through the net).
The action plan also mandates that patients who are discharged from hospital have clear care and support plans in place, in line with Section 117 of the updated Mental Health Act 1983.
Mr Jackson said: āWeāve done a very good update on the policy recently, which means weāve got a really clear check-list, with really clear guidance for the inpatient wards, social services, the local authority and the community services that we manage.
āOne of the main benefits for us with this is weāve got clear templates, so that we can be clear when people have been discharged from hospital.
āWeāre really monitoring them very closely, especially within the first few weeks, and then being able to have a clear review pattern over the next the following years and months to come.ā
One of the main problem with severe mental health patients is their failure to attend regular appointments or reviews ā something which could lead to them being missed if their condition deteriorates at a later stage and they cause harm to themselves or others.
Mr Jackson said: āThereās now a really clear procedure to make sure that patient is contacted, monitored, and if theyāre not able to be contacted, staff continue to try.
āIf we get patients where we eventually canāt get hold of them, weāre having very regular disengagement meetings to make sure that everythingās been done that could be done to ensure that we havenāt lost that patient.ā
Mr Jackson said work was also ongoing to ensure the different branches of healthcare could access a patientās medical notes seamlessly, with the creation of the Somerset integrated digital electronic record (SIDER).
He said: āThis means that weāre not asking the patients to give their story over and over again.
ā It also means that weāve got access to really good safety plan management, so that we can share those safety plans with GPs and the local authority so they can respond quickly to patients.ā
The plan also includes a commitment to treating more patients within Somerset (rather than sending them outside of the county to access specialist services, at a potentially higher cost) and to improve the liaison between staff and patientsā families to ensure they are properly supported.
William Barnwell, associate director for mental health, autism and learning disability, said that implementing all these improvements to the fullest extent would cost around Ā£3m ā funding that was not currently being provided by the Department for Health and Social Care (DHSC).
He said: āThe issue is that no national funding has been allocated to this programme for delivery, and NHS England has asked us to prioritize actions that have no cost implications.
āThe autumn statement did mention some allocations for crisis care, which which might help in related areas to this work, but itās not a direct funding pot for intensive and assertive outreach.ā
NHS England will now review the ICBās action plan, with an update expected to come back before the board in September.