Mental health services are free on the NHS.
To get urgent medical help, use the NHS 111 online service, or call 111 if you’re unable to get help online.
Are you feeling overwhelmed? Does your family need support? Warwickshire Family Wraparound is here to help, providing personalised, intensive, flexible support that’s built around your family.
What we do
Sometimes, it can be hard to know how to access support when you or your child is struggling with emotional health or wellbeing. Perhaps your child is finding it hard to engage at school, is facing mental health challenges, or is a young carer. Perhaps you, as a parent or carer, are finding it hard to cope day-to-day and to navigate the different support on offer.
At Warwickshire Family Wraparound, we offer personalised, intensive, flexible support built around your family. You can access weekly support sessions and check-ins with a dedicated specialist practitioner, supported by a team of professionals whose wide-ranging knowledge and skills will enable each member of your family to get the help they need.
We give families like yours the space to work through the challenges you’re facing and to make plans to move forward. By helping you to understand the help that’s out there, we’ll make it easier for you to focus on the issues that matter most to you. You’ll find opportunities for wellness, socialising, recreation, and belonging – together and individually – and we’ll support you to forge and strengthen your relationships with other services, too.
How we help
We offer:
Referrals to the Warwickshire Family Wraparound Service are on hold, due to high demand and limited capacity. If you are a social worker or support worker wishing to make a referral, please email WarwickshireFamilyWraparound@childrenssociety.org.uk with the area the referral is from. We will contact you directly as soon as capacity becomes available in that area.
Warwickshire Family Wraparound is commissioned by Warwickshire County Council.
A mental health crisis is an emergency that has a direct and immediate threat to your physical or emotional wellbeing. In these situations, it's important to get help quickly.
Try to stay calm and ask someone for help if you need it. It could help to tell someone you trust, maybe a family member or a friend. They can be with you and help you decide what to do. They can also contact services on your behalf.
If there is any immediate risk to life, contact the emergency services by calling 999.