The
Black Country Partnership NHS Foundation Trust (BCPFT) was formed on the 1 April 2011. Formerly the Sandwell Mental Health and Social Care Foundation Trust, the name change signified a broader range of services across the region. The trust was given £89,000 from the Nursing Technology Fund in March 2014 which is to be spent on mobile devices. The trust, together with
Dudley and Walsall Mental Health Partnership NHS Trust has set up a Liaison and Diversion service. The intention is that "when someone in a police station, or involved in court proceedings, has a mental health problem or other vulnerabilities, they are referred to the right services and are given support and guidance based on their needs." An inspection by the
Care Quality Commission in 2016 found that Abbey ward, Charlemont ward and Friar ward at Hallam Street Hospital,
West Bromwich all had blind spots. The wards were said to be in a ‘poor state’ with stained and damaged walls, carpets and furniture and an ‘unpleasant odour throughout the ward areas’. They found a number of areas of good practice. "This included how young people were involved in making decisions about their care and that the trust had also employed a nurse who spoke four Asian languages to lead on work with black and minority ethnic communities." A planned merger with
Birmingham Community Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust and
Dudley and Walsall Mental Health Partnership NHS Trust was scheduled for October 2017. The new organisation would have an annual turnover of around £440 million – making it the third biggest mental health trust in England. The three way merger collapsed but the merger with Dudley and Walsall was completed in April 2020, forming Black Country Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust. ==See also==