North Staffordshire Combined Healthcare NHS Trust has selected the DXC Open Health Connect platform from DXC Technology and is creating a blueprint that could dramatically reduce mental health referral times in order to provide the right assistance for at-risk children through the use of digital technology.
The initiative at the trust, which has the potential to be adopted nationally, enables young people to use a digital portal to self refer to local mental health services, eliminating weeks of waiting time from traditional referral processes while significantly alleviating pressure on busy healthcare professionals.
It is also now specifically supporting young people as they cope with isolation and anxiety providing answers to some common questions while dealing with current crises and giving them access to mental health professionals.
“This is about getting children to the right professional or right information first time, and much faster,” said Julia Ford, clinical lead for child and adolescent mental health services (CAMHS) at the trust.
“At present, seven in 10 referrals to CAMHS are subsequently signposted to external organisations, while many young people are forced to wait up to 14 weeks to be seen,”
“We are redesigning and connecting services to change that, to remove lengthy processes traditionally associated with referrals, and using technology so we can intelligently refer and triage patients to the most-appropriate service for them.”
The project analysed real-life CAMHS interactions and has involved extensive collaboration with schools, young people, families and mental health professionals.
This is about getting children to the right professional or right information first time, and much faster
At the core of the portal is a recommendation engine that has been designed with mental health professionals at the trust, using the DXC Open Health Connect platform.
It utilises rules developed by clinicians with decades of mental health experience, analyses key information and responses provided by children, parents and teachers through the portal and provides alerts to clinicians via their electronic patient records, recommending the most-appropriate service for each child and ensuring mental health professionals who deliver care have a complete picture of the patient.
Colin Henderson, DXC’s director of healthcare and life sciences for the UK, Ireland, Israel, the Middle East and Africa, said: “North Staffordshire is leading the way with an important initiative that will make a real difference for the lives of young people – in a project that is applicable nationally and across the public sector.
“We are dedicated to doing everything we can to spread this innovation in North Staffordshire as far as possible.”
David Hewitt, the trust’s chief information officer, added: “This development has real potential to reduce avoidable harm and transform lives for young people across North Staffordshire, and potentially across the rest of the country.
“No child should have to wait for mental health care provision – and this new approach is empowering patients to call on that help when they need it through technology which is intuitive for them.
“Whether it’s a professional at the trust, or a specialist in the third sector, we now have the tools to get young people to the person who is best placed to help them faster than ever before. And when children arrive, professionals are now much better equipped with detailed information from the child and the people who know them best, so that the first appointment can be about treatment rather than information gathering. This is enormously powerful.”
This development has real potential to reduce avoidable harm and transform lives for young people across North Staffordshire, and potentially across the rest of the country
Plans are already underway to expand the platform to other areas of the country.
And information on the online portal can already be accessed by anyone who has a question about mental wellbeing, not just mental illness.
But, for wider parts of the programme, such as the underpinning electronic triage and clinical decision support engine, learnings are being shared through two national programmes: the cross-government green paper Transforming Children and Young People’s Mental Health Provision, for which North Staffordshire is a trailblazer, and the Lorenzo Digital Exemplar programme, provided via the Department of Health and Social Care LSP contract, through which the trust is working with DXC to create a digital blueprint for other trusts to adopt.