Learning Disability Service overview 

We offer a range of services to assess and support people with learning disabilities and autistic adults. Click here to find out more about services for autistic adults.  

We offer crisis support from our Learning disability Intensive support team. For more information click on their leaflets here: 

We offer the following community support to adults with learning disabilities: 

The Community Learning Disability Nursing team supports adults with a diagnosed learning disability who have specialist health needs that cannot be met by mainstream services, with reasonable adjustments. The team delivers time-limited, episode-based interventions in collaboration with families, carers, care providers, mainstream health services, and local authority partners. The team provides specialist support in areas such as physical and mental health, behaviour support, trauma and emotional distress, sexual health and relationships, dementia screening, and proactive health promotion. A key focus of the team is reducing health inequalities, enabling equal access to mainstream services, and empowering families, carers, and providers with the knowledge and skills to better support individuals with a learning disability. The team strives to improve quality of life and promote independence. 

Occupational therapy considers the impact of someone’s learning disability on their function, highlighting how the learning disability affects their life and engagement in occupations that are important to them. (Lillywhite, Haines 2009).  The role is holistic and person-centred, evaluating the persons strengths, needs and barriers to occupations and activities related to health and wellbeing outcomes. 

The Occupational Therapist addresses the impact of physical, cognitive, perceptual, sensory, and behavioural factors in the assessment and intervention of individuals. â€¯This includes the environmental and social factors which affect their skills 

Specialised areas of physiotherapy may include the management of complex needs through tailored and adaptive approaches. This can encompass 24-hour postural care, falls prevention and intervention, and the management of mobility challenges, all designed to support individuals with diverse and evolving physical needs. 

The learning disability speech and language team supports adults with learning disabilities by assessing and treating communication difficulties and issues associated with eating, drinking, and swallowing (dysphagia). 

 

Enhanced Case Managers are responsible for the monitoring and facilitation of out of area specialist rehabilitation beds for Derbyshire residents with complex mental health and learning disability care needs. This also includes liaising with our Case manager colleagues from IMPACT whom oversee the low secure beds These placements are predominantly hospital based and non-NHS healthcare provider lead. There is an aim where possible to return service users closer to their area of origin.   

The team are responsible for the management of a defined caseload of individual fully funded continuing care cases, arranging or commissioning the provision of services appropriate to meet the assessed needs of the individual and arranging periodic reviews according to local protocols. We work exclusively with service users, their carers and their advocates, according to the requirements of the National Framework for Continuing Health and Social Care, in the assessment of individual needs and the provision of appropriate services/resources. 

About the Strategic health facilitation (SHF) team 

We work with Health workers like Doctors, Nurses, and Managers. We help them to understand about the special needs of people with learning disabilities. 

One of the roles of the SHF team is to support primary care to deliver good quality annual health checks for people with learning disabilities. We do this by providing training sessions to primary care staff. The sessions include Learning disability awareness, reasonable adjustments, advice on the Annual Health Check template, invitation process and payments.    

The SHF team will, at individual practice request, review their learning disability register to check that the right people are being invited and help to explore possible reasons for nonattendance. 

 

We also work with carers, families and people who have learning disabilities. The SHF provide a range of awareness raising or training sessions to them to help them to keep people with learning disabilities healthy.  

For more information, please contact the team at  

dhcft.strategic-health-facilitation-team@nhs.net 


Eligibility and referral criteria for adults with learning disabilities  

We are a specialist service commissioned to work with adults aged 18 + 

The person needs to have a diagnosed or suspected learning disability as well as a health need. – The World Health Organisation defines Health as Mental Physical and Social Wellbeing  

We work with people who cannot have their needs met by mainstream services with reasonable adjustments alone due to their learning disability.  

Mainstream services have a duty to provide services to everyone regardless of their disability through the provision of reasonable adjustments. We work with people with a learning disability only if reasonable adjustments have been attempted and not worked or are not sufficient to meet people’s needs.  

Learning difficulties might include dyslexia, dyscalculia, dyspraxia, processing disorder and ADHD 

This is a useful video which explains the difference: 

A person with a learning disability may experience: 

  • A significantly reduced ability to understand new or complex information and learn new skills 

  • A reduced ability to cope independently 

This starts before adulthood and has a lasting impact on development.  
 

Locations and service delivery 

The Adult Neurodevelopmental Service provides an Integrated Service across all of Derbyshire Including Derby City.  

This is provided jointly by Derbyshire Community Health Services NHS Foundation Trust and Derbyshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust.  

We have bases across Derbyshire but we also work with people in their homes and communities.  

Pathways and joint working 

We work closely with other health and social care agencies in Derbyshire and Derby City. More  information can be found at Your Services » Joined Up Care Derbyshire |
 

Transition 

Link to Transition Leaflet  

Growing up and the Mental Capacity Act:  

What does Transition and Preparing for Adulthood Mean?  

Transition FAQS 

Support for Carers  

Carers in Derbyshire - Derbyshire County Council
Support for carers - Derby City Council 

Online Safety  

Keeping children safe online | NSPCC 

 

Useful links and resources