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Publication, Part of

Improving Access to Psychological Therapies Report, June 2015 Final, July 2015 Primary and most recent Quarterly data (Quarter 4 2014/15)

Official statistics, Experimental statistics
Publication Date:
Geographic Coverage:
England
Geographical Granularity:
Care Trusts, Clinical Commissioning Groups, Independent Sector Health Care Providers, Mental Health Trusts, NHS Trusts, Integrated Care Boards
Date Range:
01 Jun 2015 to 31 Jul 2015

Summary

This statistical release makes available the most recent Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) final monthly data (June 2015) and the most recent quarterly data (Quarter 4 2014/15).

This series replaces the previous Quarterly IAPT Reports, last published for the period Q3 2014-15, and provides more frequent and wider-ranging information concerning the care delivered to users of NHS-funded IAPT services for adults in England.

The information contained in this release is expected to be of use to organisations delivering IAPT services for adults in England, as it presents timely information intended to support discussions between providers and commissioners of services.

This information is also intended to be of interest to other audiences, including the general public, as it provides up-to-date information about access rates, waiting times and outcomes within IAPT services.

Highlights

In June 2015:

 

85,428 referrals entered treatment

 

for which:

 

29.9 days was the average (mean) waiting time between referral and first treatment appointment

 

113,505 referrals ended

 

of which:

 

47,594 (41.9 per cent) finished a course of treatment

 

for which:

 

6.3 was the average (mean) number of attended treatment appointments

 

and of which:

 

29,214 (61.4 per cent) showed reliable improvement

 

and

 

43,300 (91.0 per cent) started treatment at caseness

 

of which:

 

19,625 (45.3 per cent) moved to recovery

 

and

 

18,633 (43.0 per cent) showed reliable recovery.

 

Waiting times for a course of treatment (for those finishing a course of treatment in June 2015):

 

37,963 (79.8 per cent) waited less than 6 weeks to enter treatment

 

45,882 (96.4 per cent) waited less than 18 weeks to enter treatment.

 

 

Resources

Last edited: 3 July 2018 12:00 pm