Table 3.
Barriers/challenges | Stakeholders mentioned … |
---|---|
Bringing staff from four different NGOs together to work as one team |
• Differences in organisational culture (values, philosophy, tolerance of risk) • Differences in organisational policies, procedures and practices • Having to negotiate over seemingly minor issues • Challenges — for Aftercare, NGO partners, and staff themselves — related to staff supervision |
Barriers to integrating with the MHS |
• The fact that this initiative was driven by NGOs, rather than mandated by government • Systemic constraints on the MHS’s ability to participate |
Barriers to systematic information sharing |
• System barriers preventing NGOs from accessing the MHS information system • Practical difficulties preventing MHS staff from using Floresco’s information system • Differing views among the partner NGOs about the importance of record-keeping • Co-located services not using the shared client information system • Difficulty of ensuring that users of the shared client information system enter data correctly and consistently |
Resourcing challenges |
• Insufficient NGO funding to support necessary components of the service model • Insufficient NGO funding to enable employment of more appropriately qualified, skilled and/or experienced staff to respond to clinical need • Insufficient MHS resources to enable co-location of staff at Floresco |
Staffing problems |
• High staff turnover, particularly among support workers • Difficulties in recruiting suitable NGO staff, both support workers and managers • Long delays in filling support worker positions • Difficulties maintaining commitment to the integration vision in the context of management changes • Mental health workforce recruitment difficulties in the Ipswich area |
Recruiting and retaining GPs and private mental health practitioners |
• Constraints on charging a fee • Lack of incentives and support for private practitioners |
Responding to demand |
• Higher-than-expected demand for services • Insufficient resources to meet demand |
Responding to clinical need |
• Higher level of clinical need than expected • Inability to meet demand for private practitioners • Insufficient capability among support workers to respond to clinical need |
Operating as a consortium |
• Additional and more complex staff management problems for Aftercare • Ongoing clinical governance problems • Lack of benefits for clients • Unequal partnerships • Tension between the need to collaborate in the Floresco service model and the pressure to compete in the context of the incoming National Disability Insurance Scheme |
Inconsistent leadership and governance |
• Over-reliance on the commitment of key personalities • Difficulties maintaining the commitment to collaboration in the face of several management staff changes, particularly within Aftercare • Inconsistent commitment to the Governance Committee among consortium partners • Uncertainty about an appropriate governance model • Lack of strategic focus by the Governance Committee |