Improving cross-agency responses to major incidents
- Conditions
- Mental healthMental and Behavioural Disorders
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- Ongoing
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 35
The study interview sample is individuals who can cast light on the decisions taken about Grenfell, what determined those decisions, how they were arrived at, what mechanisms were available - particularly for joint working across agencies - and what the impact was. Recruitment is not open to the public. Recruitment will be from four main sources:
1. From the NHS, clinicians, managers and commissioners involved decision making and delivery
2. From the local authority and the schools for which they have a coordinating role, managers, commissioners and headteachers
3. From the voluntary sector those involved in delivering services to those affected by Grenfell, particularly those who received funding of other support from the local authority or the NHS
4. From the local community, opinion leaders who are able to comment on the overall health and wellbeing programme
Those who were not involved with, or in a position to observe, the Grenfell health and wellbeing response over the period covered by the study
Study & Design
- Study Type
- Observational
- Study Design
- Not specified
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method <br> The response of statutory organisations to the Grenfell Fire, assessed using:<br> 1. Publicly available documents from [August 2017 – June 2019]<br> 2. Routinely reported quantitative data on outputs and costs from [August 2017 – June 2019]<br> 3. Interviews with those who took key decisions or who were in a position to observe and comment on those decisions from [August 2017 – June 2019]<br>
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method There are no secondary outcome measures