In order to understand the requirements of a mental health facility, the following documents were revised.
Click on a tab you're interested in looking at. The page will scroll down and take you there!
CECMHC Toolkit
This toolkit is intended to support Head Start and Early Head Start administrators in their efforts to develop and implement a vision and strategic plan for a programwide approach to mental health and mental health consultation. Program administrators will learn how to ensure more effective mental health consultation by facilitating staff-consultant relationships and providing support and oversight to mental health consultants. This toolkit will also provide administrators with ideas and tools to help plan and sustain effective mental health consultation in their programs. Administrators will learn how to write strong job descriptions and contracts for mental health consultants; how to build effective mental health teams or committees to guide and sustain the work of the consultant; and how to implement effective quality assurance and quality improvement feedback loops for consultation services.
International Guidelines
The Adult Mental Health Unit provides assessment, admission, inpatient accommodation and treatment in a safe and therapeutic environment suitable for adult patients with mental health and behavioural conditions. The Adult Mental Health Unit will be suitable for patients with acute mental health symptoms that may be accommodated in a secure or high dependency area or patients with sub-acute conditions that can be cared for in an open, less secure unit. Patients in the unit may exhibit behaviour that is agitated, aggressive, violent or may pose a threat to themselves or others. This FPU is applicable to:
1. A dedicated Adult Mental Health Unit within a general hospital campus
2. A stand-alone Adult Mental Health Unit or group of units.
​
Health & Wellbeing Bristol
The Joint Strategic Needs Assessment (JSNA) is an ongoing process to identify the current and future health and wellbeing needs of the local Bristol population. Bristol City Council (BCC) and NHS Bristol, North Somerset and South Gloucestershire Clinical Commissioning Group (BNSSG CCG) have equal and joint duties to prepare the JSNA through Bristol’s Health and Wellbeing Board. The JSNA should inform decisions about how we design, commission and deliver services (both now and in the future), to improve and protect health and wellbeing across the city, while reducing health inequalities.
​
This Health and Wellbeing in Bristol 2018 report is the title of the Joint Strategic Needs Assessment (JSNA) 2018 data profile. It provides an updated and expanded overview of the changing health and wellbeing needs1 in Bristol, and highlights the current challenges. The JSNA uses standard data-sets, such as the Public Health Outcomes Framework (or PHOF), for benchmarking Bristol overall against national indicators and other English Core Cities, and also uses local data from within Bristol City Council plus the CCG and Healthwatch Bristol in order to give a more detailed view of differences and inequalities within the city. It includes a focus on data by gender, with many indicators broken down for males and females, and where possible by ethnicity and deprivation.
​