Cumbria Partnership NHS Foundation Trust is a major provider of healthcare in Cumbria. Our principal activities are:
Long term conditions, including dementia, psychosis, diabetes, neurological conditions and learning disabilities
Children and young people, including health visiting, school nursing and other community health services
Recovery and rehabilitation, including brain injuries, strokes, elderly care, physiotherapy and prison healthcare
Wellbeing and lifestyle, including depression, stress and anxiety, stop smoking and sexual health
Urgent care, including mental health crisis, inpatient care and out of hours community nursing
End of life care, including palliative care services
We serve a population of almost half a million across the six districts in Cumbria and as a Foundation Trust we have over 14,000 members who are invited to have their say about their local health services.
For more information about the services we provide, visit:
Sheffield Health and Social Care NHS Foundation Trust (SHSC)
Sheffield Health and Social Care NHS Foundation Trust (SHSC) has a strong and long standing commitment to the use of arts and creativity in supporting recovery from mental illness and promoting mental wellbeing.
“Inspired Minds”, SHSC’s strategy for arts in health wellbeing and social inclusion was adopted by the Trust Board in December 2010.
SHSC has supported the development of the Creative Arts Steering Team (CAST) and developed partnerships with organisation such as Breakthrough, Reflections in Art charity and the Storying Sheffield project at University of Sheffield.
Service users’ artwork is now displayed on information leaflets, on the Trust website, on corporate plans and reports.
It is also displayed on “gallery walls” throughout the Trust.
The role played by art, music and drama in the Recovery Event in October 2011 also marked a recognition of the role that these approaches can play in wellbeing and inclusion.
The Sheffield Arts and Wellbeing Network was launched with a conference on 2nd November 2012.
This marked a commitment by SHSC, Sheffield City Council, the University of Sheffield and a host of local arts organisations, individuals and voluntary bodies to further collaboration on providing inclusive arts opportunities.
South West Yorkshire Partnership NHS Foundation Trust
We are an NHS foundation trust, providing a range of community, mental health and learning disability services in Barnsley, Calderdale, Kirklees and Wakefield.
We also provide some specialist medium secure services to the whole of Yorkshire and the Humber.
We put people who need to use our services, and their carers, at the very centre of everything we do.
We want to enable people to enjoy productive, full and independent lives in the heart of their communities.
To encourage the use of creative approaches in healthcare, which can increase self-esteem, provide a sense of purpose, develop social skills and improve quality of life, the Trust has developed an initiative called Creative Minds.
Our Creative Minds work is altering the perceptions of how we deliver our services and not only underlines our commitment to creative approaches but also provides more opportunities for individuals and groups to develop and grow creatively.
Derbyshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust is the largest provider of mental health, and substance misuse services in Derbyshire, primarily serving the people of Derbyshire and Derby City which has a combined population of approximately one million.
Our Trust focuses on services for those with severe and enduring mental health problems.
These services supplement others (such as those provided in primary care) and are themselves complemented by more specialist services such as secure inpatient services provided from dedicated premises.
We provide a wide range of services which reflect the spectrum of care needs of people with mental health problems. This includes services for individuals who need support from community staff, through to inpatient, crisis resolution and more specialised services.
In addition we provide specialist substance misuse services, and community based learning disability services.
In April 2011 Derbyshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust became the provider of Children’s Universal and Specialist Services for Derby City following a successful tender process.
In addition as part of the Transforming Community Services (TCS) programme, Derbyshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust transferred into the organisation community paediatric services and substance misuse services from NHS Derby City.
Leicestershire Partnership NHS Trust provides community health, mental health and learning disability services across Leicester, Leicestershire and Rutland.
The care and support we provide includes community nursing and therapy services and care on community hospital wards, service for people with severe mental health problems and healthcare in prisons.
We don’t just care for people who are ill or injured, we also support people to stay well and prevent future problems.
We serve a population of one million people and spend in excess of £262 million of taxpayers’ money each year, and employ almost 6000 staff.
Our services are organised into four operational divisions
Adult mental health services
Adult learning disability services
Families, young people and children’s services
Community health services, which includes mental health services for older people
We work with family doctors (GPs), local hospitals, social services and other local authority departments such as housing and education.
We also work with voluntary organisations, local community groups and local people.
Most people are referred to our services by their GP. We deliver our services from many different locations including hospitals, longer term recovery units, outpatient clinics, day services, GP surgeries, children’s centres, schools, health centres, people’s own home, care homes and prisons.
We continually strive to improve the services we offer to make them the very best. For more information about our services visit
Kent and Medway NHS and Social Care Partnership Trust
Kent and Medway NHS and Social Care Partnership Trust was formed in April 2006 following the merger of East Kent NHS and Social Care Partnership Trust and West Kent NHS and Social Care Trust.
It provides mental health and social care services in partnership with Kent County Council in Kent. In Medway, services are not integrated but we work closely with the local unitary authority to provide joined up health and social care services.
The Trust employs 3,405 staff (plus 265 seconded staff) providing a range of mental health and other services from around 100 separate buildings across almost 90 sites.
The Trust is one of the larger mental health trusts in the country, covering an area of 1,450 sq miles and serving 1.6 million people across Kent and Medway.
The Trust’s main commissioner is the local PCT cluster, NHS Kent and Medway.
Our latest figures show that in 2010/11 over 71,000 referrals were received, 445,000 contacts were undertaken and there were over 3,000 admissions.
Dorset HealthCare University Foundation Trust provides Mental Health, Learning Disability and Community health services to the population of Dorset.
The Mental Health Directorate provides a number of services to support adults of all ages with their mental health and wellbeing. These include:
Community Services
Inpatient services
Rehabilitation and Recovery services
Addictions services
Forensic services
Prison health care services
The Directorate also provides some specialist services such as community and inpatient support for mothers and babies.
Other services such as Eating Disorder services and services to support young people’s mental health and wellbeing are also provided by the Trust, in the Children and Young People’s Directorate.
The Trust is committed to providing services which support people in their recovery and is working closely with people with lived experience, carers and third sector organisations to develop new ways of working to support this goal.
A recent development being the implementation of the fourth Recovery Education College in England.
We are an NHS organisation that works closely with other health and social care providers across Devon to support the recovery of people with mental health needs.
We deliver services for:
Adults
Older people
People with alcohol and substance misuse issues
People with a learning disability
People who need forensic or secure mental health services (usually people that have come into contact with the criminal justice system)
People in Devon’s three prisons.
We also work with our partners to provide supported accommodation, vocational rehabilitation and employment opportunities.
At any one time, we provide care for around 12,000 people in Devon and Torbay.
Increasingly, our focus is on personal recovery. Working with people to understand their individual needs and goals, moving them towards recovery and independence and helping them to get on with their daily lives.
We actively support the national Time to Change campaign to end mental health discrimination and eradicate the stigma that too often accompanies mental ill health.
Coventry and Warwickshire Partnership NHS Trust provides mental health and learning disability services for the people of Coventry and Warwickshire, and community health services for the people of Coventry.
We also offer some mental health and learning disability services in Solihull, serving a population of around one million people.
We also provide specialist services to people from across the West Midlands and beyond.
Our Trust has more than 4,300 dedicated staff who are working together to make a difference to the lives of everyone living in our communities, especially those using our services.
Our visions are to work for the wellbeing of the people we serve and to be recognised as the best at what we do.
We are currently undertaking the process of becoming a Foundation Trust and aim to be confirmed as a Foundation Trust by the end of 2012.
Cambridgeshire and Peterborough NHS Foundation Trust
We deliver high-quality health and social care that promotes well-being and independence and which we are proud to recommend to our families and friends.
We provide a range of services for primary care, older people, children and adolescents, adults, primary care, specialist learning disabilities, substance misuse and forensics.
CPFT is also a member of Cambridge University Health Partners (CUHP), one of only five Academic Health Science Centres in England – a new organisation that has been set up to drive forward the partnership between the NHS and the University of Cambridge.
In addition, we are proud to have been selected as one of six demonstration sites in the country for Implementing Recovery Organisational Change (IMROC); being chosen as a result of our excellent progress in successfully embedding a recovery approach and in making good progress in many of the key elements of recovery-focused practice.
Visit the CPFT website to find out more about its work and vision for the future.