Health services aimed at vulnerable children and young people in the secure estate are set to improve, following changes announced today by Care Services Minister Paul Burstow.
Responsibility for commissioning health services for children and young people in Secure Children’s Homes and Secure Training Centres is to pass to the NHS.
The change is being made to ensure these individuals, who often have complex needs, benefit from high-quality healthcare.
Paul Burstow said:
“Everyone should get access to the right kind of care. Children and young people in secure settings often have far more unmet health and social needs than other children their age. These can include poor communication skills, mental health problems and learning difficulties.
“It is therefore vital that this group benefits from well-commissioned health services, particularly in mental health assessment and treatment. By transferring responsibility to the NHS, we can improve the health and well-being of these children and young people, potentially reduce rates of re-offending.”
Professor Louis Appleby, the National Clinical Director for Health and Criminal Justice, said:
“By ensuring these vulnerable young people are receiving health services delivered through the NHS, we can guarantee a consistently high level of quality across the entire secure estate for young people in England.
“It will also mean that, at times of transition such as when they pass back into community services or into adult services, there is continuity of care and people are not allowed to fall through gaps in the system.”
Today’s announcement means commissioning responsibilities for Secure Children’s Homes and Secure Training Centres will now be in line with those for Young Offender Institutions.
Supporting the change, Juliet Lyon, Director of the Prison Reform Trust, said:
“The long overdue shift in commissioning health services for children in secure settings to the NHS is very welcome. Together with the youth justice liaison and diversion schemes, it will go a long way to ensuring that vulnerable children and young people in trouble gain access to the mental health treatment and social care that they need.”
Joint working between the Department of Health, the Department for Education, the Youth Justice Board and Ministry of Justice identified the potential for significant improvements in the quality of provision of services through a change in commissioning arrangements. Previously, health services for Secure Children’s Homes and Secure Training Centres were commissioned by each institution separately, with funding from the Ministry of Justice.
Notes to editors
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For media enquiries only contact the Department of Health newsdesk on 020 7210 5221.
2. Secure training centres (STCs) are purpose-built centres for young offenders up to the age of 17. They are run by private operators under contracts, which set out detailed operational requirements. There are four STCs in England.
3. Secure children's homes are generally used to accommodate young offenders aged 12 to 14, girls up to the age of 16, and 15 to 16-year-old boys who are assessed as vulnerable. They can accommodate young people involved who are involved in the Criminal Justice System or who need to be detained for welfare reasons. There are also a number of SCHs with welfare only beds.
4. Responsibility for commissioning health services or Young Offender Institutions and prisons passed to the NHS in 2006.
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People in England are living longer and fewer people are dying prematurely from heart disease and stroke. The 2011 Local Health Profiles, published by The Public Health Observatories, in partnership with the Department of Health, provide statistics for each local area and indicate how any area is performing against the national average.
Launched at the first day of the Local Government Association (LGA) annual conference, the Health Profiles give up-to-date information on key health issues such as childhood obesity, skin cancer (malignant melanoma), deaths from smoking, hospital stays due to alcohol misuse and early deaths from cancer and heart disease; information which is essential for planning local services for communities.
New indicators for the 2011 profiles include:
There is a separate profile for each local authority, providing a snapshot of the current health status of the area, with tailored commentary, charts and a map.
Public Health Minister Anne Milton said:
“Health Profiles give a picture of local people’s health for every area in England. They act as indicators for how local areas need to plan services for residents in the community and where public health challenges lie.
“While some indicators show an improvement in an individual’s health outcomes and health needs, there is more we can do.
“Reducing health inequalities is a Government priority. This means improving access to and outcomes from healthcare in disadvantaged groups as well as addressing the wider social causes of ill health and early death.
“Everyone should have the same opportunity to lead a healthy life.”
Journalists and photographers are invited to view the new profiles on the Health Profiles stand B31 at the Local Government Association conference from 28 June 2011.
Councillor David Rogers, chair of the LGA Health and Wellbeing Board, said:
“Good quality health information is essential if councils and health professionals are to tackle some of the serious health problems affecting our communities effectively.
“Deprivation and where you live are still major causes of health inequalities for so many people. That is why today’s launch of the latest 2011 Health Profiles is important.
“Working in partnership at local level, councillors, GPs and public health practitioners will use the profiles to prioritise, plan and improve health services across all communities – and reduce health inequalities.”
The Secretary of State for Health, Andrew Lansley, will be addressing the LGA conference on Thursday 30 June 2011.
Notes to editors
For further information contact: Siân Evans on 07752 41 44 33 or Helen Shaw via 01865 334736.
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