This statistical release makes available the most recent Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) monthly and quarterly data, including activity, waiting times, and outcomes such as recovery.
IAPT is run by the NHS in England and offers NICE-approved therapies for treating people with depression or anxiety.
This statistical release makes available the most recent Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) monthly and quarterly data, including activity, waiting times, and outcomes such as recovery. It also makes available, for the first time, additional experimental statistics about a pilot programme for integrated IAPT services.
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This statistical release makes available the most recent Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) monthly and quarterly data, including activity, waiting times, and outcomes such as recovery.
IAPT is run by the NHS in England and offers NICE-approved therapies for treating people with depression or anxiety.
This statistical release makes available the most recent Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) monthly and quarterly data, including activity, waiting times, and outcomes such as recovery. It also makes available, for the first time, additional experimental statistics about a pilot programme for integrated IAPT services.
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Health chiefs have drawn up new guidance to encourage doctors to place mental health therapists in practice surgeries – bringing more mental and physical health services under one roof.
This statistical release makes available the most recent Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) monthly and quarterly data, including activity, waiting times, and outcomes such as recovery. It also makes available, for the first time, additional experimental statistics about a pilot programme for integrated IAPT services.
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Up to 30 GP surgeries in the county will benefit from a pilot scheme which helps people suffering from diabetes to manage and improve their mental health.
Lincolnshire Partnership NHS Foundation Trust (LPFT) is offering talking therapies to selected patients who are identified as requiring support to control their diabetes.
Since 2016, the NHS has begun testing new services which integrate mental and physical treatments, as part of its Improving Access to Talking Therapies programme. People with long-term health issues like diabetes, heart problems or respiratory illness are now routinely given a ‘whole-person assessment’, focusing on what additional mental health care they may need to manage their condition.
rom April 2018 all CCGs are expected to expand Improving Access to Psychological Therapies by commissioning (IAPT) services integrated into physical healthcare pathways. This document supports this expansion by setting out the treatment pathway that underpins the access and waiting time standards, which all services should seek to measure themselves against.
Internationally, the clinical outcomes of routine mental health services are rarely recorded or reported; however, an exception is the English Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) service, which delivers psychological therapies recommended by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence for depression and anxiety disorders to more than 537 000 patients in the UK each year. A session-by-session outcome monitoring system ensures that IAPT obtains symptom scores before and after treatment for 98% of patients. Service outcomes can then be reported, along with contextual information, on public websites. . Please contact the library to request a copy of this article - http://bit.ly/1Xyazai
Comment. Most people with mental illness worldwide receive no treatment at all.1 The number benefiting from effective treatment is even fewer—eg, as low as one in six people with major depression receive effective care in high-income countries, and one in 27 people in low-income or middle-income countries.2 For mild-to-moderate depression, the treatments of choice are psychological therapies.3 ; 4 Are there any examples of a health-care system successfully scaling up evidence-based practice for such common mental disorders? Yes: evidence is emerging that the Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) programme in England fits this bill as reported by David M Clark and colleagues in The Lancet. 5 . Please contact the library to request a copy of this article - http://bit.ly/1Xyazai
An innovative CPFT service to support the mental health of women with gynaecological cancers at CUH Addenbrooke’s and Peterborough City Hospitals and funded by Macmillan has been launched today.
The comprehensive psychological service, one of the first of its kind in the country, includes group and 1:1 therapies, and direct access to specialist psychology and psychiatry support for those with more complex or severe mental health difficulties.
It has been developed by experts from CPFT’s Psychological Medicine Service, which provides psychiatric care to those in acute hospitals, and the gynaecological oncology department at Addenbrooke’s, part of Cambridge University Hospitals (CUH).