Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-tf8b9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-24T10:36:46.489Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Drug services in England and Wales: a survey of treatment providers and their medical leads

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Nick Airey
Affiliation:
Somerset Drug Service, Salmon Parade, Bridgwater, Somerset TA6 5PY, e-mail: [email protected]
Stuart McLaren
Affiliation:
South Devon Drug Service, Torquay
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Aims and Method

We undertook a postal questionnaire survey of drug action teams in England and Wales with the aim of clarifying the nature of statutory specialist drug services.

Results

Of 159 drug action teams, 110 (69%) responded; 64 (58%) reported that mental health trusts exclusively provided their specialist drug services. Other providers were primary care and acute trusts, the non-statutory sector and social services. The majority of medical leads were psychiatrists (123 senior posts with 20% vacant/occupied by a locum), then general practitioners (GPs) (42) and other specialists (4).

Clinical Implications

Specialist drug services are offered by a range of treatment providers, with the medical lead being taken by GPs and other specialists in some areas. In view of the current difficulty in recruiting psychiatrists, we propose that alternative training pathways are considered for addiction specialists.

Type
Original papers
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © 2006. The Royal College of Psychiatrists

The past 10 years has been a time of great change for both the commissioning and provision of substance misuse treatment in Britain. In 1995, the commissioning of drugs services became the responsibility of local drug action teams (Central Drugs Co-ordination Unit, 1995). In 2001, the National Treatment Agency was formed (http://www.nta.nhs.uk). This has the status of a special health authority and it is to this body that the drug action teams are now responsible. The Department of Health published its consultation document Models of Care for Substance Misuse Treatment Promoting Quality, Efficiency and Effectiveness in Drug Misuse Treatment Services in 2002, and this is essentially the National Service Framework for drug treatment providers.

The provision of substance misuse treatment has also changed considerably over the years and the landscape today bears little resemblance to that of even a few years ago. Statutory substance misuse treatment was, at one time, the preserve of psychiatrists. Much care was provided in the primary care setting but with a few notable exceptions this was unplanned and uncoordinated. Psychiatrists had a recognised training route into the specialty. General practitioners (GPs) have been interested in the provision of drug services for a number of years but have recently become more organised and have an active special interest group attached to their College, the Substance Misuse Management in General Practice.

The ‘traditional’ model of service delivery would be a mental health trust providing the statutory drug treatment in a particular locality under the medical supervision of a consultant psychiatrist. However, other treatment providers have moved into the field; these include primary care trusts and non-statutory organisations. These agencies require a doctor to have medical responsibility, but there is no requirement for this doctor to be a psychiatrist.

We have conducted a survey of drug action teams to investigate the nature of statutory provision of drug services in England and Wales. We asked who is providing this care at present, who medically manages these services and the specialist background of the medical lead. In the UK these statutory services treat mainly opiate-dependent patients, often with a background of polysubstance misuse.

Problems in the recruitment and retention of psychiatrists are of major concern to the Royal College of Psychiatrists and this is a not infrequent subject for discussion in the Bulletin. The College itself publishes data on vacant posts (Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2002). Hence, as part of our survey we also asked the drug action teams to comment on whether posts were occupied or not.

Method

In 2003, we sent questionnaires to all coordinators of drug action teams in England and Wales by e-mail. Nonresponders were then followed up by letter. They were asked to provide details of statutory specialist drugs services in their area, who managed these services, the specialty of the medical lead and whether these posts were filled, vacant or occupied by a locum.

Results

Questionnaires were sent to 159 drug action teams (of which 5 were in Wales). Usable replies were received from 110 (of which 4 were in Wales), yielding a response rate of 69%.

Providers

The majority of drug action teams (88/110) had at least one mental health trust providing drugs services in their local authority area. Of these, 64 had the service provided exclusively by one or more mental health trusts. The remaining 24 had a mental health trust provider alongside either a primary care trust (PCT) (20) or a non-statutory or social services provider (2 each). Thirty-four had services provided by PCTs, of whom 11 had the service provided exclusively by one or more PCT provider, 20 in combination with 1 or more mental health provider and 3 in combination with a non-statutory provider. Nine drug action teams had services provided by non-statutory services, of whom three had services provided exclusively by this sector, with the remainder in combination with other providers, such as a community trust, mental health trust or PCT. One drug action team had services that were provided by a combination of social services and mental health trust. The four Welsh drug action teams which responded indicated that their statutory provision was provided by acute trusts.

Medical leads

The largest group of medical leads (in posts both vacant and filled) were psychiatrists. There were 123 senior psychiatric posts, of which 99 were with a mental health trust, 12 a PCT, 6 the non-statutory sector, 1 a community trust, 2 social services and 3 acute trusts in Wales. The next largest group were GPs, the total number of posts being 42, of which 11 were with mental health trusts, 22 PCTs, 7 in the non-statutory sector, 1 in a community trust and 1 an acute trust in Wales. Three public health specialists were medical leads (one in a mental health trust and two in PCTs) and one community trust employed a genito-urinary specialist as their medical lead.

Post occupancy

Table 1 shows whether posts were filled, vacant or occupied by a locum. For psychiatrists employed by mental health trusts, occupancy figures were slightly lower than those in Table 1 with 75 posts occupied (77% of the total), 10 vacant (10% of the total) and 12 occupied by a locum (12% of the total). In PCTs, occupancy was better, with 10 out of 12 posts occupied (83%). For GPs, 20 posts out of 21 were filled when the PCT was an employer (95%), and 11 out of 11 for mental health trusts (100%).

Table 1. Number and occupancy of medical lead posts (all types of provider)

Total n (%) Filled n (%) Locums n (%) Vacant n (%)
Psychiatrists 118 (-) 94 (80) 13 (11) 11 (9)
General practitioners 32 (-) 31 (97) - (-) 1 (3)

Discussion

This survey reveals the diverse nature of providers of drug treatment services. Mental health trusts are still the main providers, but PCTs are significantly represented. At least nine non-statutory agencies are now involved in running prescribing services, which is in marked contrast to the role they occupied not so long ago. Indeed, the future may see a blurring of the distinction between statutory and non-statutory drug service provision, perhaps organised under one managerial umbrella. These changes may have implications for psychiatrists in terms of their professional practice with issues around, for example, the risk of increased professional isolation in hybrid provider organisations. They may also have an adverse impact on service delivery for patients with complex problems, particularly for those with dual diagnoses (i.e. substance use plus severe mental illness), where there is a danger of deepening the divide between addiction and mental health services.

Currently, the conventional route into the specialty of addiction medicine is through higher psychiatric training, but our survey indicates that there is diversity in the professional background of doctors now involved, including GPs and public health doctors. They presumably have a very different depth and breadth of training experience thus raising major issues of clinical governance. As a possible way forward in the UK, we would put forward the Australasian model of a Chapter of Addiction Medicine under the aegis of a Royal College. Under this system, a training programme would be open to members of any College, while providing some exemption to psychiatrists who have undertaken prior addiction training as part of their higher professional training. This would have the advantage of broadening the entry into the specialty, ensuring some uniformity of training, and raising and maintaining educational/training standards in the field. Although a lengthy process requiring approval by the Secretary of State for Health, development of training programmes might eventually lead to agreement to a Certificate of Completion of Specialist Training (CCST) in addiction medicine.

The vacancy and locum rates among consultant psychiatrists revealed in this survey are very high and possibly increasing. The Royal College of Psychiatrists’ Annual Census of Psychiatric Staffing 2001 showed a combined vacancy and locum rate among substance misuse psychiatrists of 14%, compared with our figure of 20%. This contrasts starkly with occupancy of GP posts of over 95%. Although the reasons for these differences in occupancy are likely to be complex they must partly be a result of the relative lack of suitably trained psychiatrists and perhaps the creation of new GP posts linked to the presence locally of interested GPs. A College Research Unit study that is currently underway may clarify some of these factors (http://www.rcpsych.ac.uk/cru/hsrp/addictionpsychiatricservices.htm). However, these high vacancy rates add further weight to the need for radical changes in the routes into addiction medicine training and a corresponding broadening of the background of addiction specialists.

The main limitations of this study are the possible inaccuracy of the coordinators’ perceptions of their services provider and medical lead, and the 69% response rate.

Declaration of interest

None.

References

Central Drugs Co-Ordination Unit (1995) Tackling Drugs Together, a Strategy for England 1995–98. London: TSO (The Stationery Office).Google Scholar
Department of Health (2002) Models of Care for Substance Misuse Treatment Promoting Quality, Efficiency and Effectiveness in Drug Misuse Treatment Services. London: Department of Health.Google Scholar
Royal College of Psychiatrists (2002) Annual Census of Psychiatric Staffing 2001 (Occasional Paper OP54). London: Royal College of Psychiatrists.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Table 1. Number and occupancy of medical lead posts (all types of provider)

Submit a response

eLetters

No eLetters have been published for this article.