nta residential rehabilitation event
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NTA Residential Rehabilitation Event. Welcome Baroness Massey of Darwen. NTA Residential Rehabilitation Event. Rosanna O’ Connor NTA Director of Delivery. Welcome to all. Key aims: to support closer relationships between residential providers and commissioners - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
NTA Residential Rehabilitation Event
WelcomeBaroness Massey of Darwen
NTA Residential Rehabilitation Event
Rosanna O’ ConnorNTA Director of Delivery
Welcome to all...................
Key aims:
to support closer relationships between residential providers and commissioners
to provide an opportunity for networking
to facilitate the sharing of ideas and models of delivery
The new drug strategy
2010 drug strategy sets out a clear ambition to help people recover and to overcome their dependency Companion public health white paper makes clear reducing drug use, enabling people to overcome dependency and recover fully are a key priority
Improving successful completions are a component part of the success of any partnerships approach to recovery
Residential rehabilitation has a key part to play in providing abstinence-based treatment and enabling people to successfully complete treatment
There are also a range of residential models available, some of which we are highlighting today
NTA role in delivering the drug strategy
Mandated to work with others to support the transformation of treatment systems into recovery systems
Ensure integration of treatment into wider systems of recovery: Ensuring that the system links to housing, employment, education,
children services, families and Mutual Aid Ensure a holistic tailor-made response to the whole needs of an
individual’s recovery journey Assisting partnerships to develop recovery orientated systems in
prisons – bringing together the clinical and CARAT services
Transition year
Transitional year as some NTA functions transfer to Public Health England
New local accountability structures from April 2012 – e.g. Health & Wellbeing Boards
‘Building Recovery in Communities’ to replace Models of Care
Snapshot of the 2011/12 work plan
Implementation of BRiC Patient placement criteria – segmenting treatment population Support Payment by Results Secretariat to the National Skills Consortia Supporting recovery networks & champions and Mutual Aid groups
Key themes for Commissioners & ProvidersMarch 2011
Mark Gillyon
Head of Delivery - North
MoC 3 Building Recovery in Communities
2007 Clinical Guidelines
Integrated Drug Treatment System (IDTS)
Recovery Mutual Aid, successful completions, the supportive role of families,
the importance of housing and employment
Support through the system
User choice and responsibility
Families and safeguarding
Targeting the right interventions, to the right people, at the right time.
The new framework
The over arching aim of the new framework is to support local areas in developing their systems and services to become recovery focused,
highly ambitious and offer a real opportunity for sustainable recovery.
The sector is changing...
Different models of delivery
‘Traditional’
Locally commissioned and locally provided
‘Quasi-residential’
The commissioning environment is changing...
Funding in 2011/12
Funding in 2012/13
Funding from 2013 onwards
Outcome-based systems, Payment by Results, and the leadership of Directors of Public Health / Health & Wellbeing Boards
Other things will change...
Successful completions The number of people leaving drug treatment free of their drug(s) of
dependency
Payment by results Model / length focus vs. specific required outcomes
Data About 2/3 report to NDTMS New models / new data problems
The future of PTB Within Public Health ring-fence, for Health & Wellbeing Boards
Data support
NDTMS Regional Teams Data collection, support, training, analysisRehab Online Marketing Testimonials VacanciesEvidencing outcomes and value
Future developmentsColin Bradbury
Residential Rehabilitation Event
March 2011
Contents
1. Payment by Results
2. Case Mix Adjustment
3. Residential Rehabilitation Outcomes
Payment by Results - Background
A recovery programme, not a treatment programme – aiming to attract new providers
Around 6 pilot local authority areas
April – Sep 2011: co-design, running 2011-2013
Independent evaluation
4 outcomes (interim & final) identified: Leaving treatment free from drug(s) of dependency Re/Offending Employment Health & Wellbeing (interim only)
Payment by Results
Opportunities and challenges
Moving away from process/ front end targets
Giving providers freedom and flexibility to innovate and sub-contract what they need
Letting the market show “what works”
Encouraging new providers to enter the market
Developing a single point of contact model
A need to avoid perverse incentives
Delivering more outcomes with the same money
Ensuring small/ new providers are able to compete
Payment by Results
Case Mix
Using outcome and re-presentation data to predict risk for new treatment entrants
Push and pull factors for recovery
Allowing comparisons of outcomes in similar areas and services – segmenting on the basis of probability of recovery
Limited to the data we have
Says something about an individual’s chances, but nothing about how best to help them...
CaseMix
RR outcome research
a prospective outcome study of publicly funded providers of drug and alcohol residential rehabilitation
expert academic and provider advisory group
Peer reviewed academic journal
Consult on which sort of models should be included
Rehabilitation Outcomes
In summary...
How might we further incentivise recovery, moving beyond the existing evidence base?
Payment by ResultsHow can we ensure accurate tariffs are set and there is a level playing field? Case Mix AdjustmentHow could we ensure people get the right treatment at the right time? Patient Placement CriteriaWhat role can residential rehabilitation play in this? Outcomes Study