The effect of a youth mental health service model on access to secondary mental healthcare for young people aged 14–25 years
Citation
Sarah Maxwell,Obianuju Ugochukwu, Tim Clarke, Brioney Gee, Emmet Clarke, Hope Westgate, Jonathan Wilson, Belinda R Lennox, Ian M Goodyer. The effect of a youth mental health service model on access to secondary mental healthcare for young people aged 14–25 years. BJPsych Bulletin (2019) 43, 27–31.
Abstract
Aims and method The Norfolk Youth Service was created in 2012 in response to
calls to redesign mental health services to better meet the needs of young people.
The new service model transcends traditional boundaries by creating a single, ‘youth
friendly’ service for young people aged 14–25 years. The aim of this study was to
investigate the effect of the transition to this new model on patterns of referral,
acceptance and service use. We analysed routinely collected data on young people
aged 14–25 years referred for secondary mental healthcare in Norfolk before and
after implementation of the youth mental health service. The number of referrals,
their age and gender, proportion of referrals accepted and average number of service
contacts per referral by age pre- and post-implementation were compared.
Results Referrals increased by 68% following implementation of the new service
model, but the proportion of referrals accepted fell by 27 percentage points. Before
implementation of the youth service, there was a clear discrepancy between the peak
age of referral and the age of those seen by services. Following implementation,
service contacts were more equitable across ages, with no marked discontinuity at
age 18 years.
Clinical implications Our findings suggest that the transformation of services may
have succeeded in reducing the ‘cliff edge’ in access to mental health services at the
transition to adulthood. However, the sharp rise in referrals and reduction in the
proportion of referrals accepted highlights the importance of considering possible
unintended consequences of new service models.