Quality standard
Quality statement 5: Monitoring progress
Quality statement 5: Monitoring progress
Quality statement
Children and young people receiving treatment for depression have their health outcomes recorded at the beginning and end of each step in treatment.
Rationale
It is important to monitor the mood and feelings of children and young people who are receiving treatment for depression so that the effectiveness of treatment can be assessed and adjustments made to ensure maximum benefit.
Quality measures
Structure
Evidence of local arrangements to ensure that the health outcomes of children and young people receiving treatment for depression are recorded at the beginning and end of each step in treatment.
Data source: Data can be collected from information recorded locally by healthcare professionals and provider organisations.
Process
Proportion of children and young people receiving treatment for depression who have their health outcomes recorded at the beginning and end of each step in treatment.
Numerator – the number of people in the denominator who have their health outcomes recorded at the beginning and end of each step in treatment.
Denominator – the number of children and young people receiving treatment for depression.
Data source: Data can be collected from information recorded locally by healthcare professionals and provider organisations, for example from patient records. For CAMHS (Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services), data on outcomes are collected in the NHS Digital Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services secondary uses data set with Mental Health Services Data Set (MHSDS). Routine outcome monitoring is part of the NHS England Children and young people's improving access to psychological therapies (IAPT) project.
What the quality statement means for different audiences
Service providers ensure that systems are in place for the health outcomes of children and young people receiving treatment for depression to be recorded at the beginning and end of each step in treatment.
Healthcare and CAMHS professionals record the health outcomes of children and young people receiving treatment for depression at the beginning and end of each step in treatment.
Commissioners ensure that they commission services that record the health outcomes of children and young people receiving treatment for depression at the beginning and end of each step in treatment.
Children and young people being treated for depression are asked a set of standard questions every time their treatment changes to check whether the treatment is working.
Source guidance
Depression in children and young people: identification and management. NICE guideline NG134 (2019), recommendations 1.1.13 and 1.1.18
Definitions of terms used in this quality statement
Methods to monitor health outcomes
NICE's guideline on depression in children and young people indicates that healthcare and CAMHS professionals can use self‑report measures, as used in screening for depression (for example, the Mood and Feelings Questionnaire), or generic outcome measures (for example, Health of the Nation Outcome Scale for Children and Adolescents or the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire) to record health outcomes.
A step in treatment
This is the movement between steps of the stepped‑care model. For further information, see table 1 in NICE's guideline on depression in children and young people.