New scheme to offer dedicated mental health support

Durham and Darlington residents in mental health crisis are set to benefit from a new dedicated response vehicle which is being trialled over the next two months.

North East Ambulance Service (NEAS) NHS Foundation Trust is working with Tees Esk and Wear Valleys (TEWV) NHS Foundation Trust, Durham and Darlington Street Triage Service to pilot a new mental health response car staffed by a paramedic and community psychiatric nurse, responding solely to patients who require further support after calling either 999 or NHS 111 for help.

The pilot, which runs until 31 March, aims to provide a faster response to patients in the Durham and Darlington area, delivering the most appropriate care for their needs.

The mental health response car will now be dispatched instead of an ambulance to patients who, after calling 999 or NHS111, are triaged as being urgent but not life-threatening.

Working as a team, the paramedic and community psychiatric nurse will be able to assess the patient and recommend appropriate treatment, either requesting a faster ambulance response or accessing care within the community, therefore reducing unnecessary hospital admissions.

This service was initially trialled for a six-week period during the first COVID lockdown and made a significant difference to patient care. Average response times where within 20 minutes and only 22 per cent of patients were taken to hospital.

The success of this next phase of the pilot will determine if long term funding can be made available.

The mental health response car is the latest dedicated service introduced by NEAS over recent years to improve its response to patients across the North East. It follows the success of the Trust’s dedicated falls response services and its specialist moving and handling evacuation service.

Stephen Down, mental health lead at NEAS, said: “We have been closely watching what our colleagues in other ambulance services are doing for some time, working behind the scenes to understand how different models operate in different parts of the country. Having done this research, we believe this model will suit our patients in the North East best.

“Whilst we will always try to reach patients as quickly as possible, these patients who need help but whose lives are not imminently in danger are often prioritised as urgent but not an emergency. As such, they may wait longer than we would like for help to arrive as our finite resources must concentrate on those in greater need.

“Once on scene, our ambulance crews may have to request further support for the crisis team, and often end up with no choice but to take the patient to A&E in order to keep them safe, which we know isn’t necessarily the best place for them.

“By working closer as a system, we think we can make better use of our resources, whilst providing more timely and appropriate care to our patients.

“We know from experience that many patients require specialist support in a community setting. Teaming a paramedic and a community psychiatric nurse means we should be able to meet the needs of that patient without sending an ambulance. However, the team may decide an ambulance is required and will be able to request a higher priority for that patient if required, for example, if the patient needs urgent physical care.

“The team will also be able to respond to requests from colleagues for specialist on-scene or telephone support where a double crewed ambulance has responded to a patient experiencing a mental health crisis.

“We’re excited about the potential for this service and hope to prove this is the way forward for patients experiencing a mental health crisis in the North East in order to secure funding for its long term future.”

Emma Burke, service manager at Tees, Esk and Wear Valleys NHS Foundation Trust, said: “We are proud to be partnering with our colleagues at NEAS once again, bringing mental health and ambulance services together to support the people of Durham and Darlington.

“Our mental health practitioners provide specialist knowledge ensuring patients, families and carers access the right service at the right time and receive an appropriate response tailored to their needs.

“More than half of the patients triaged face-to-face during last year’s pilot were assessed and remained at home with a plan and access to appropriate support numbers. Not only did this ease the pressure on A&E and free up ambulances to attend to other emergencies, but also enabled many people to be treated in a familiar, non-clinical environment.”


Notes to editors

For more information, contact the NEAS press office on 07559 918672 or email publicrelations@neas.nhs.uk

More information about the ambulance categories are available at https://www.england.nhs.uk/urgent-emergency-care/improving-ambulance-services/arp/

About the North East Ambulance Service

North East Ambulance Service NHS Foundation Trust (NEAS) covers 3,200 square miles across the North East region. It employs more than 2,600 staff and serves a population of 2.7 million people by handling all NHS111 and 999 calls for the region, operating patient transport and ambulance response services, delivering training for communities and commercial audiences and providing medical support cover at events.

In 2019/20 we answered more than 1.4m emergency 999 and NHS 111 calls, with almost 290,000 patients taken to hospital, 23,500 treated and discharged over the phone and more than 110,000 treated and discharged at home. We responded to over 31,000 C1 serious and life threatening incidents in less than 15 minutes.

About Tees, Esk and Wear Valleys NHS Foundation Trust

Tees, Esk and Wear Valleys NHS Foundation Trust (TEWV) was formed in April 2006 and was authorised as a foundation trust on 1 July 2008. The Trust provides mental health and learning disability services for the people of County Durham, Tees Valley, York and most of North Yorkshire. It also provides a range of specialist mental health and learning disability services to other parts of northern England.