THE BIG DIVERSION PROJECT NORTH EAST
Charlotte Winter – Project ManagerNorth East Offender Health Commissioning Unit
Aims of today:
•Introduce you to the Big Diversion Project (BDP)
•Provide you with the opportunity to think about where you as a stakeholder could potentially inform/support the future development of diversion and liaison services
•Inform you of the latest developments nationally in relation to the national diversion programme
Welcome & Introduction
What is the NEOHCU?NEOHCU hosted by NHS County
Durham & Darlington
Commissions offender healthcare
services on behalf of
All Commissioning Primary Care Organisations in the north east
The BDP
National Drivers
• Corston Report (Corston, 2007)
• Bradley Report (Bradley, 2009)
• Improving Health Supporting Justice (DH, 2010)
• No Health without Mental Health (HMG/DH, 2011)
• Breaking the Cycle (MOJ, 2010)
The BDP
Regional Response
& Vision
• Shifting the conceptual model from ‘prison health’ to the development of an ‘offender health’ pathway
• The ‘Big Diversion Project’ relates to the whole criminal pathway from pre-arrest through to arrest and charge, to court appearances and sentence. Our vision is to ensure that people with mental health problems or learning disabilities who enter (or are at risk of entering) the criminal justice system are identified and provided with appropriate health services, treatment and any other support they need at the earliest possible stage.
What do we know now?Varied level of provision for those with MH/LD in contact with the CJS in the north east
What are we trying to achieve?
An understanding of how diversion and liaison can be best offered to different populations in terms of :
• Offender Needs• The geographical setting• Specific target groups• All criminal Justice Pathway Stages
Phase 1
Initiation & Scopi
ng
• A literature review• Initial consultation with regional stakeholders • Formed a multi-agency advisory group with senior representation
Phase 2
The Developme
nt Phase
• We have contracted with NTW/TEWV/RDA to:• provide analysis of existing diversion service provision, • propose and test where possible new ways of working • evaluate those new ways of working • produce recommended service specifications to be market tested
and delivered in phase 3
Phase 3
Implementat
ion
• The service specifications produced in phase 2 will be used by the NEOHCB to develop diversion and liaison services in the north east
The BDP
Strategy into
Action
How are we trying to get there?
The National DiversionProgramme
• Government commitment to make liaison and diversion schemes nationally available by 2014, subject to business case approval
• DH have set up the National Diversion Network– 101 members (54 adult sites/37 Youth justice sites/10 police
early adopters)
• This network :• Collect evidence to measure health / economic impact• Evaluate standard diversion model • Improve understanding of the information processes and
technology required• Clarify the shared role of key partners• Advise and test on alternatives to custody.
Police Early Adopter Programme
• Only stage in adult criminal justice pathway where healthcare is not NHS-commissioned
• In March 2011, Home Office and Department of Health Ministers agreed to establish a voluntary framework to enable Police Authorities to opt into local commissioning partnerships with the NHS – with the formal transfer of commissioning and budgetary responsibility for police detainee healthcare to the NHS expected in 2015
• The NEOHCU are currently working with Northumbria Police, who are one of the first10 police force early adopters nationally, on the shadow transfer of the commissioning of their detainee healthcare to the NEOHCU as the lead NHS Commissioner.