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Birmingham and Solihull Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust

0121 301 0000 Unit 1, 50 Summer Hill Road , Birmingham, B1 3RB
http://www.bsmhft.nhs.uk

Birmingham and Solihull Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust 1 out of 5 stars 1 out of 5

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Based on 4 ratings for this trust

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Overview

News:

  • BSMHFT and Barnardo’s to provide innovative new service for children and young people in Solihull
  • Reaside Writes nominated for 2015 National Service User Awards
  • Solihull wins national recognition for improving health and care
BSMHFT

Birmingham and Solihull Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust provides mental health care to those people living in Birmingham and Solihull who are experiencing mental health problems.  

We serve a culturally and socially-diverse population of 1.2 million spread over 172 square miles, and have an income of over £200 million, making our Trust one of the largest mental health foundation trusts in the country.  We also provide services to people who live further afield because of some of the specialised services we provide.
 
Our Trust has over 4000 dedicated staff who are continually working to help people get better and challenge the stigma associated with mental illness. Our Trust operates from over 60 sites in a variety of settings, from community based mental health teams through to acute wards and day centres.

Our Trust 2014-15

A summary of our Annual report and accounts 2014-15

Credits

BSMHFT

Latest news

BSMHFT and Barnardo’s to provide innovative new service for children and young people in Solihull

Children and young people in Solihull are set to benefit from improved emotional wellbeing and mental health services from April this year.

Solihull Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG) and Solihull Council have awarded the contract to provide a new specialist service for children and young people to Birmingham and Solihull Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust, who will deliver the service from 1 April 2024 in partnership with Barnardo’s.

The new service is aimed at providing more targeted emotional wellbeing and mental health support to young people and enabling a smooth transition for those who may need adult services in the future.

Solihull’s current Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service has 17th birthday as the upper age limit for referral. However, adult services are not available until young people reach 18. For the new service, the upper age limit has been extended so that children and young people can be referred up until their 18th birthday. Those already receiving services prior to turning 18 will be able to continue to do so until the age of 21, if this best suits their needs.

Another key change is that the new service will be available out of working hours, when young people may find they need support.

Solihull CCG Chair and Clinical Lead Dr Anand Chitnis, said: “Whilst the new service will provide the traditional medical services and treatments, an innovative new partnership with Barnardo’s will also develop a community based service that works closely with young people, their families and schools to understand their emotional distress much earlier, hopefully preventing it escalating into an illness that requires medical treatment.

“Patients and their families have told us that the current service is good but young people don’t always get the consistent support they need as they become adults. This is why we have extended the upper age limit by a year.”

Cllr. Ken Meeson, Solihull Council Cabinet Member for Health and Wellbeing, added: “Children and young people with a serious, enduring mental illness need intensive and specialist support services. However, these services can only work if the young people attend assessment and therapy sessions.

“They are more likely to attend if the sessions meet their needs and are offered at a time that is convenient to them – out of school hours, for example. We are therefore commissioning a wider range of therapies to give greater choice and flexibility, in a specialist service, which will be available out of working hours.”

John Short, Chief Executive of Birmingham and Solihull Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust, said: “We are delighted to have been awarded this contract in partnership with Barnardo’s, to add to the services we already provide to adults in the borough. Improving mental health care for children and young people has been highlighted as a priority nationally and we are committed to improving the experience of people aged 18 and under through this new service, particularly focusing on earlier intervention, promoting recovery and providing a seamless transition to adult services.”

Hugh Sherriffe, Barnardo’s Director Midlands & South West, said: “Our role will be to ensure earlier intervention and support is easily available to children, young people and their families in order to reduce the escalation of mental health issues. We all want to provide care which treats them with compassion, dignity and respect, aiding their recovery and preventing problems from recurring.”

Last updated on 13 February 2015.

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Reaside Writes nominated for 2015 National Service User Awards

We are delighted to announce that Reaside Writes, a project developed by service users at Reaside, has been nominated for a National Service User Award in the Community, Social or Vocational Initiative category.

The National Service User Awards are a service user-led initiative designed to celebrate the many achievements and initiatives implemented by service users in mental health services across the country.

Reaside Writes gives service users the chance to develop their creative skills with the support of occupational therapy staff.
Reaside-writes

Project workers in the occupational therapy team at Reaside have been working with service users over the last year to improve their social confidence, communication skills, inclusion and self-esteem through a number of creative activities.

As part of this work, service users were tasked with finding ways to celebrate World Book Day. They suggested that they could put together their own book, which is how Reaside Writes was established.

Reaside Writes gives service users the opportunity to contribute towards a collaborative book, whilst developing their creative storytelling skills. The book contains inspiring and emotionally captivating personal stories, supported by project workers who help with editing and IT skills.

Rob Tulk, Creative and community project worker within the Occupational therapy team at Reaside, said: “We’re thrilled that the project has been nominated for an award. The service users have put a lot of thought and effort into the project which is very much based on our principles of recovery, so we’re really proud that they have been recognised for their work.”

The judging panel selected its shortlist from a total of over 100 nominations to attend the awards ceremony on 11 March 2024 at Silverstone Racing Circuit’s Wing Hall.

For more information about the National Service User Awards and this year's finalists, visit www.nsua.org.

Last updated on 13 February 2015.

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Solihull wins national recognition for improving health and care

The work of the ‘Solihull Together for better lives’ partnership of local health and social care organisations to improve urgent and emergency care in the borough has been nationally recognised.

Solihull has today been awarded vanguard status by the Department of Health for its work to create an integrated system that combines preventative services with rapid access to primary, social and specialist care both in and out of hospital, enabling people to take better control of their lives.

Achieving vanguard status means Solihull will receive national attention as well as being able to access specialist support and evaluation to help the partners to achieve their vision of creating an integrated health and care system that extends people’s healthy, active lives for as long as possible.

The application was made through ‘Solihull Together for better lives’, a partnership of organisations that have joined forces to make sure everyone in the borough gets the right care and support when they need it.

Their bid included plans to build an urgent care centre within Solihull Hospital as part of a health and wellbeing campus to support patients and carers, reducing pressure on hospital services. This will provide GP out of hours, urgent walk-in and minor injuries services, some primary care led beds, improvements to community and social care teams as well as a new primary care centre and improved access to diagnostics and specialists.

The partners will build on existing mental health and community services so that patients know where to go for help before a problem escalates.

Those people who are most likely to have complex health issues, particularly frail patients aged 75 and over, will be given more support in the community.

When frail older patients are unwell, they will be comprehensively assessed and wherever possible treated in the community or outpatient care clinics to avoid hospital admission.

They will have rapid specialist acute care when they need it, with comprehensive geriatric assessments in hospital or at home, and greater involvement from GPs in Solihull Hospital.

When they have been discharged from hospital, they will benefit from an integrated programme of support in their own homes.

Patients reaching the end of their lives will be able to die in the place of their choice and be in control of their treatment.

John Short, Chief Executive of Birmingham and Solihull Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust, said: “It’s really exciting that parity of esteem for mental health is taken so seriously in Solihull and that we are able to work with our colleagues in the acute trust, primary care and social services to improve care for older people with mental health difficulties.”

Dr Patrick Brooke, Accountable Officer of Solihull CCG, which plans, designs and funds health services in the borough, said: “It’s great news that Solihull has won vanguard status. By working together in partnership, we’ve already achieved many improvements in health and social care. We’ll now be able to transform services to benefit patients much more quickly than we could have done otherwise.

“Our aim is to support patients so that they can live independently for as long as possible, take more control of their own care and avoid ending up in hospital unnecessarily.”

Professor Ian Philp, Deputy Medical Director for Older People's Care at Heart of England NHS Foundation Trust, said: “We are delighted to be part of the partnership selected to be awarded vanguard status.  Hospitals across the country are feeling the pressures on their emergency and urgent care departments and by developing new models of care, we aim to address some of the challenges we increasingly face.

“Solihull Together has a shared vision to make sure people who live in the borough get the right care and support. This extends beyond out-of-hospital care to integrate health, social care, mental health and wellbeing for adults and older people.

More here


Last updated on 27 July 2015.

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Trust's partnership work with young people and homeless charity gains national recognition

Birmingham and Solihull Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust has been shortlisted for a national award for its pioneering project for young people.

The Trust’s Youthspace initiative has been shortlisted for the prestigious Nursing Times Awards following its partnership work with youth charities St Basils, which works with young homeless people, and the Prince’s Trust, which supports the young unemployed and those struggling at school.

Youthspace aims to raise awareness of mental health services for young people and challenge the discrimination people with mental health illnesses can face, while promoting positive mental health for young people and offering advice, support and information.

The scheme Youthspace has been shortlisted for the Nursing Times’ HRH The Prince of Wales Award for Integrated Approaches to Care because of its work with St Basils and the Prince’s Trust.

John Short, Chief Executive at Birmingham and Solihull NHS Foundation Trust, said: “We are immensely proud of the work Youthspace has done in connecting with young people and raising the awareness of mental health services for them. Its team and youth board - which is made up of young service users, students, volunteers and young professionals – is dedicated to improving services for 16 to 25 year olds and being shortlisted for this award is testament to their hard work

“Working with charities such as the Prince’s Trust and St Basils means we can reach people, who are often vulnerable, who may need our services, but might not be aware of or know how to access them. The work carried out by Youthspace - particularly with homeless young people through St Basils - is just one of the ways we engage with communities to ensure those who might otherwise risk falling through gaps in the health care system receive the help they need.”

The Trust already provides support for homeless people with mental health needs through access to all its services, incorporating emergency out of hours mental health services, the Community Mental Health Team and The Homeless Health Exchange, which provides GP services for homeless people in Birmingham.

Both the Community Mental Health Team and Health Exchange attend a weekly street outreach service led by, a housing, care and support organisation, Midland Heart, to make sure people sleeping rough in the city can gain access to mental health services.

In addition, an Advanced Nurse Practitioner attends Sifa Fireside, a charity that works with homeless people, to provide surgeries at its site twice a week. The Community Mental Health Team works closely with the charity to support homeless people with mental health needs and is currently working with it with regard to organising Mental Health First Aid Courses and supporting the forthcoming World Mental Health Day and World Homeless Day, both of which fall on 10 October.

The 2015 Nursing Times Awards showcases innovations that are shaping and improving nurse-led care in the NHS and through independent healthcare providers.

Youthspace will find out if it has been successful in the awards on 12 November when winners will be announced at Grosvenor House Hotel, Park Lane, London.

Last updated on 27 July 2015.

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BSMHFT nurse wins Student Nursing Times Award 2015

Birmingham and Solihull Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust (BSMHFT) celebrated success at the Student Nursing Times Awards for the second time in three years after one of  its  team won Student Nurse of the Year in Mental Health.

Laura Fitzgerald, who recently successfully secured  a permanent position with the Trust’s prison healthcare service, was recognised for her work in mental health.

She received her award at a lunch at London Hilton, Park Lane, on 7 May, where she joined 820 talented student nurses, education providers and mentors, including the 158 finalists on the shortlist and 18 deserving winners.

Laura said: “I was shocked to hear I had won the award, and it was a lovely way to start a new job. It won’t change anything in my day to day work though. I worked a long day before the ceremony, and a long day the day after!”

“I started to develop an interest in mental health when working as a prison substance misuse worker, and so decided to train as mental health nurse to further my knowledge and skills in the area. Working at Birmingham and Solihull Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust has given me the opportunity to gain experience in a wide variety of services, from dual diagnosis to forensic community services.

“In the first month of my new job I have learnt so much already.”

BSMHFT works in partnership with Birmingham City University (BCU) to provide placements for student nurses as part of  the university’s course requirements. Students undertake placements at our Trust during each year of their course to gain practical experience in a variety of mental health settings.

The prestigious Student Nursing Times Awards celebrate the achievements of student nurses and educational establishments that are guiding and shaping the future of nursing.

Rebecca Kidman, a student at BCU, was also shortlisted in the Student Nurse of the Year, mental health category.

Sue Hartley, Executive Director of Nursing, said: “I am delighted that Laura has won this award, and very glad that she has chosen to work for Birmingham and Solihull Mental Health Trust. Rebecca being shortlisted is also a great achievement. We should do all we can to support the excellent work of students on their placements to help them on their way to becoming compassionate and caring nurses in the future.”

Both Laura and Rebecca thanked their BCU mental health lecturer and their Trust mentors for their help and support.

Last updated on 27 July 2015.

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Quality Account Report

Quality Accounts are annual reports to the public from providers of NHS healthcare services. They provide additional accountability about the quality of an organisation's services.

More information about Quality Accounts

Download BSMHFT Quality Account Report 2015-16 PDF (3.61 MB) BSMHFT Quality Account Report 2015-16

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Last updated on 30 November 2024.

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