DDN May 2017 DDN March2018 | Page 21

More about NHSSMPA at www.drinkanddrugsnews.com STREET SEX WORKER INITIATIVE A low threshold initiative was developed for street sex workers who elected to engage with it, and who were provided with 30mg oral methadone. They could pick up on any or all days, seven days a week, giving them the option of working and a safety net. Two pharmacies were part of the team and would work in partnership, closely monitoring risk. The expectation of the sex worker was that they would attend a three-monthly clinic. Its format was devised by service users and access was available for: • rape crisis intervention genito-urinary medicine services for smear tests and sexually shared • infections, high vaginal swabs and any necessary treatments family planning for depot contraception injections • • midwives for pregnant service users • needle and syringe exchange • condom provision • vaccination for hepatitis A and B Direct referral to colposcopy and appointments was provided at the time of attendance, as well as the ability to dress wounds, listen to breathing to identify respiratory disorders, examine injecting sites, monitor drug use and move into mainstream treatment if that was what the person wanted. Apart from the obvious direct benefits for service users it also improved relationships between services and the sex workers’ access to these. incorporated into a tender for Derbyshire treatment services at the beginning of 2017, and the new service went live in April 2017. The HIT do not carry a caseload, but instead support key workers with their higher risk service users, and the sole focus is on improving their physical and mental health and preventing drug-related deaths. Those with chronic and deteriorating physical health will have greater priority placed on managing these conditions integrated with their substance misuse treatment. Physical health assessments and advice will be provided by the HIT nurses, including more routine care such as blood-borne virus testing and vaccinations alongside ECG. The role of nurses was central to the success of the Derby approach, and is fundamental to the other examples provided. Over the past decade or so, nursing and other clinical expertise has been lost – meaning that within drug and alcohol treatment, as many of our service users age and require broader health and social care, clinical expertise is less accessible. The multi-disciplinary team, which includes those with clinical expertise working with other disciplines and those with lived experience, has never been more important. NHSSMPA is also part of a national working group led by the Royal College of Psychiatrists and PHE, with third sector colleagues, that is trying to reverse the reduction in addiction psychiatrists – an example of the sector responding to an important workforce issue. It is at our peril that we do not ensure that drug and alcohol services incorporate the correct blend of skills and disciplines, including highly skilled clinicians. Authors are Jon Shorrock, Avon and Wiltshire Mental Health Partnership NHS Trust; Linda Johnstone, Cheshire and Wirral Partnership NHS Foundation Trust; Martin Smith, Derbyshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust; Mike Flanagan, Surrey and Borders Partnership NHS Foundation Trust. All are members of the NHS Substance Misuse Provider Alliance (NHSSMPA). why retaining an appropriately balanced and skilled work force is essential. ENGAGING COMPLEX CLIENTS Nursing staff learned compression bandaging to work with some difficult-to-engage service users with venous leg ulcers. We worked with people who were not turning up to the dressings clinic, not having doppler studies, continually having breakdown of their ulcers, and suffering widespread infection, cellulitis and venous eczema. We engaged with their GP practice and developed a shared care type approach. We increased outreach to service users and managed their dressings as per the care plan. We would make sure they attended doppler appointments where the GP and nursing staff would manage the dressings. This allowed a relationship to develop between the service user and the nursing team and allowed us to pull back when the service user was fully engaged. DERBY’S HIT Derby Healthcare Foundation NHS Trust looked at their care delivery in an effort to address the effect of diminishing resources. They devised a ‘red flag system’ to identify service users most at risk of accidental overdose, through reviewing six years of local mortality data. The common themes that correlated this risk of accidental overdose were largely expected – continued intravenous use of illicit drugs, erratic engagement, poor physical and/or mental health. But less considered was hepatitis C status and the link with those living in isolation. Other risk factors were a hospital admission in the last 12 months and having a physical health condition such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or a deep vein thrombosis. Being prescribed additional medication with a sedating effect by their GP was also a marker. Collecting and analysing this data identifying who was at risk led to the creation of a health improvement team (HIT) in Derbyshire. This approach was www.drinkanddrugsnews.com ‘Disinvestment and retendering cycles have resulted in... a significant loss of knowledge, practice and skills, as provider organisations design services that try to manage the reduction in budgets while still meeting need.’ March 2018 | drinkanddrugsnews | 21