Community Restart - Lancashire Care NHS Foundation Trust

Transcription

Community Restart - Lancashire Care NHS Foundation Trust
Community
Restart
e
Childr
amilies
n an d F
Services
Community
Mental Health
Community Restart
Page 1
Secure Service
s
Special
ist Ser
vices
The Vision
‘‘Health and social care services have a key role in tackling the social
exclusion that people with mental health problems experience. Being able
to access and use mainstream community services, like college or arts and
sports activities, can improve confidence and self esteem. The opportunity
to meet new people and create a network of friends plays a critical role in
promoting well being‘‘
What is Community
Restart?
Key Facts about social
inclusion
Community Restart is a modern, forward
thinking service that has co-production
with service users at its heart. It is
dedicated to improving quality of
life, promoting opportunities and
improving the outcome for people across
Lancashire.
11.3m people are predicted to be living
on their own in England by 2033,
necessitating the need for increased
social inclusion and cohesion (The King’s
Fund).
Community Restart works in partnership
with people who access the service,
carers, mental health specialists,
employment providers, housing services,
third sector agencies, sports and arts
communities, education providers and
environmental agencies to provide
the opportunities and community
connections for individuals to improve
their health and wellbeing.
Access to the service is based on
the complexity of the individuals’
employment and social inclusion needs,
and not the degree and nature of mental
ill health or symptoms. If you think
‘Community Restart’ can provide the
support you require then please contact
your mental health worker or contact us
directly for information.
One of the reasons loneliness is so bad
for us is because it makes it harder for
us to control our habits and behaviour.
Evidence suggests that the expectation
of isolation reduces our willpower and
perseverance, and makes it harder to
regulate our behaviour (The Lonely
Society, Mental Health Foundation, 2009).
Social isolation adversely impacts on both
physical and mental health, including
suicide.
Failure of social inclusion leads to social
fragmentation and polarisation, widening
disparities and inequalities, and straining
individuals, families, communities and
institutions (World Summit for Social
Development).
People with more severe forms of mental
illness have smaller social networks
than others, have relatively more family
members than friends in their social circle,
and have relationships that are more
dependent rather than interdependent.
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Equality and Diversity
Housing
The Community Restart service
constantly and consistently seeks to
champion equality and diversity and
promote the rights of people who
access the service.
This team works across the East Lancashire
region, addressing the needs of families
and adult, where homelessness presents
in conjunction with an identified mental
health issue.
The service also provides support in
response to service users who are homeless
or living in temporary or insecure
accommodation.
In undertaking this there is an
acceptance that people who experience
mental ill health and distress are
particularly vulnerable.
To achieve positive outcomes the team
work with numerous partners and these
can include various housing providers,
supported accommodation services,
benefits agencies, specialist mental health
services and third sector organisation linked
to homelessness and advocacy.
In seeking to promote equality the
service provides:
• Social inclusion support linking
people to communities of their
choice
• Signpost and guide people to
appropriate supports and services
• Individual support when required
• Information, advice and guidance
for individuals to respond to
inequalities, promote diversity and
eliminate discrimination
Key elements of the works links to: finding
accommodation/housing; deposits and
bond schemes; mediation; repairs; tenancy
support; debt and budgeting.
Geographically, the team work across the
East Lancashire region, providing support
to people in:
• Burnley
• Ribble Valley
• Hyndburn
• Rossendale
• Pendle
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Sport & Leisure
Service User Development
We provide support to offer
opportunities for people to access local
leisure centres, activity groups, and
health and wellbeing schemes aimed
at improving lifestyle though sport and
leisure.
What do we do?
The Service User Development Team is
unique in the way it works, providing
guidance to individuals and groups to
establish their role and purpose within
local communities.
Our aim is to liaise with local
organisations and groups that can help
improve health and wellbeing through
leisure, sport and recreation. These
options can support people to develop
social skills in a health and leisure
environment, facilitating involvement
within community based settings.
Our work includes:
Group activity: supporting the formation
of peer support, activity and social groups.
Project Development: sharing our
experience of planning, developing and
sustaining projects.
Information, advice and guidance: linked
to: establishing committees; developing
constitutions; funding applications;
sourcing venues; creating volunteer
pathways.
The local knowledge of sport and
leisure in the community held by
Community Restart also provides an
excellent opportunity for signposting
individuals into appropriate groups,
organisations and schemes. These
can help increase social networks and
enhance social inclusion.
Our core aim is to support the
establishment of groups, facilitate
independence and enable them to
become valued assets within local
communities.
Page 4
Employment
Voluntary Work
The employment team provides
information, advice, guidance and
practical support linked to paid
employment opportunities, which
includes:
For many people volunteering offers an
excellent opportunity to connect with
the local community.
Some consider it to be a way of
contributing back to the community
or making a difference to the people
around them.
• Employment skills training
• Assisting in completion of
application forms
For others it provides an opportunity to
develop new skills or build on existing
experience and knowledge.
• Assisting with job searches
• Attending job interviews
Regardless of the motivation, it is an
option that can be both challenging and
rewarding.
• On job support
• Attending meetings with employers
(retention)
Other reasons for volunteering include:
• Integrated working with local job
centres
• Developing increased confidence
and self-esteem
The service operates throughout Central
Lancashire and East Lancashire
• Feel valued and part of a team
• Gaining work experience and
adding valuable evidence for CVs
• Meeting new people and making new
friends
• Gaining new skills, knowledge and
experience
Page 5
Education and Training
Arts and Culture
Community Restart is able to provide
information, advice and guidance,
enabling people to access a range of
training and education opportunities.
To undertake this effectively the service
works closely with:
Involvement in arts and culture is widely
considered to have a positive impact on
mental health and provides a means of
self expression.
Community Restart has wide and
diverse links to art communities across
Lancashire, providing many creative
opportunities for people to follow their
interest and become involved.
• Colleges
• Universities
• Adult Learning Centres
• Distance learning
Our core aim is to enable people to
source options linked to the creative,
visual and performing arts, and
wherever possible support people
accessing the service to integrate ,
express themselves and become socially
included within a creative communities.
Whichever pathway people choose
around education and training, the
service is committed to ensure that
people receive the right support to
access, sustain participation in and
maximise the potential of the course
they undertake.
Typical opportunities include:
Community Restart has enabled
people to:
• Creative writing
• Art projects and groups
• Reading groups
• Music groups
• Mosaic and pottery
• Find appropriate courses
• Source funding options
• Receive additional support to ensure people remain in education and training
Page 6
Eco Activities
Partnership Working
Community Restart works with the
local agricultural, horticultural and rural
communities within Lancashire to develop
and maintain a range of voluntary and
“ecotherapeutic” opportunities for people
who access the service.
The Community Restart Service is
characterised by partnerships and joint
working. Fundamentally the service
has sought to shift the service away
from historical models that focused on
needs and deficits, to one of personal
aspiration, which promotes individual
talents, skills and assets.
The approach links naturally to asset
base development and continues to
deliver innovative and creative options,
particularly around volunteering.
Key to this is the delivery model
established in Central Lancashire,
which is delivered by Lancashire Care
NHS Foundation Trust in partnership
with Making Space and Richmond
Fellowship, two organisations from the
Volunteer Community and Faith Sector
(VCFS).
Therapeutic benefits are delivered through:
• Use of land-based activities
connected to nature, for the
enhancement of people’s
psychological and physical
wellbeing.
• Fresh and innovative approaches to
supporting mental wellbeing health
care based on the fundamental
connections we all have to nature
• Corresponding with new directions
within the NHS in encouraging
complementary, non-medicalised
approaches to recovery
All partners have a profound and
enduring conviction in the tenets of
social inclusion as a means to promote
recovery. Our experience to date
evidences the importance of joint
initiatives with partners and how these
can effectively challenge traditional
perspectives linked to mental ill health.
Page 7
Central Lancashire
Chorley and South Ribble
01257 278136
Preston 01772 773600
West Lancashire 01695 729222
Other sources of information:
The Mental Health Helpline
This provides an information and listening service for
people in Lancashire. It is available between 7:00pm
and 11:00pm Mondays to Fridays and from 12:00 noon
East Lancashire
until 12:00 midnight on Saturdays and Sundays.
Burnley
Pendle
Other&sources
of information:
Freephone 0500 639000.
01282 436807 or 01282 657210
The Mental Health Helpline provides an information and listening
service for people
in Lancashire.
It is available between 7.00pm
Hyndburn,
Rossendale
&
Customer Care
and
11.00pm
Mondays
to
Fridays
and from 12.00 noon until 12.00
Ribble Valley
If you wish to
pay 639000.
a compliment about the Trust’s
midnight on Saturdays and Sundays. Freephone
0500
01282
657252 or 01282 657110
services, make a comment, raise a concern or complaint,
The Patient Advice and Liaison Service provides advice and
please contact the Customer Care Department on
North
Lancashire
information.
Please contact East Lancashire PALS on:
01772 695315, freephone 0808 144 1010 or email
Fleetwood 01253 686760
01282 474178 or 07507 857345
Wyre 01253 651355
[email protected]
If have
you have
If you
problems
problems
reading
the reading
print we the
can provide this
print we can
leaflet in large
provide
this
print,
audio book
orleaflet
Braille. in large
print, audio
book or Braille.
W przypadku jakichkolwiek problemow z odczytaniem tekstu z
przyjamnoscia dstarczymy Panstwu ulotke z duzym drukiem,
tasme do odluchu lub tekst w jezyku Braille.
Data Protection
Leaflet number: XXX XXX/XXXX
The Trust will endeavour to ensure that your
Name of Leaflet: Seeing a Clinical Psychologist
information
secure and
confidential at all
©in
Lancashire
Care
NHS
Foundation
Trust.
Copies of this
leafletremains
are available
from:
Blackburn with Darwen
times. The Data Protection Act 1998 explains how
All rights reserved. Not to be reproduced
Date
produced:
February
2009
in whole or in part without the permission
personal information should be processed and this
date: owner.
February 2011
ofReview
the copyright
applies
to NHS
all information
whetherTrust,
held on paper
Lancashire
Care
Foundation
or electronically on computer systems. We must
Data Protection
Sceptre Point,
Sceptre
Way,
ensure that
all personal
information is processed
Lancashire Care NHS Foundation Trust
fairly, lawfully and as transparently as possible so
©
Lancashire
Care
NHS
Foundation
Trust
adheres to The Data Protection Act 1998.
Walton Summit,
Preston PR5 6AW
you:
The
Trust will endeavour
to ensure
that Not to be
2009-02-18.
All rights
reserved.
• Understand reasons for us processing your
your
information
and without the
reproduced
inremains
whole secure
or in part
personal information
confidential at all times. For further
Give your consent for the disclosure and use of
permission
of
the
copyright
owner. Tel: 01772• 695300
information regarding data protection
information where necessary
please visit the Trust’s website or ask a
Email: [email protected]
• Gain Trust in the way we handle your
member of staff for a copy of our leaflet
information
entitled
Us”. from:Website: www.lancashirecare.nhs.uk
Copies“Sharing
of this Information
leaflet are With
available
• Understand your rights regarding the right to
Lancashire Care NHS Foundation
Trust,
request access about
information we hold
Date Produced:
Review Date:
Leaflet Code:
Namethe
of Leaflet:
Sceptre
Point,
February
2015
February 2016
004/2015 about you.
Community Restart
The Caldicott Guardian, who is a senior health
Sceptre Way,
clinician, has the role to ensure we meet
Page 8
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