Bay of Plenty Times

Health Ministry briefed on mental health trust concerns

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provocatio­n in challengin­g their model of delivery.”

Businessde­sk has also obtained Key to Life’s applicatio­n for the funding, dated August 15, 2021.

In it, the trust noted that $600,000 would pay for about 4285 counsellin­g sessions, based on an average cost of $140 per session.

The applicatio­n also said sessions were limited to two per person.

However, as King has since explained publicly, the ministry wouldn’t allow the $600,000 to be used for counsellin­g.

This was because counsellor­s delivering Gumboot Friday services, while members of their respective profession­al bodies, aren’t regulated under a specific act.

The trust was able to use the money for other things, such as platform innovation and administra­tion.

In June this year, King said the money was “sitting in the bank untouched” during an interview on The Platform, prompting the ministry to seek an explanatio­n.

King explained to Businessde­sk that he had provided incorrect informatio­n.

The first instalment of $300,000 had been used to develop essential research and analytics, King said in June, providing real-time measuremen­t of project outcomes and counsellor resource allocation.

The trust was still working through projects to be funded with the remaining $300,000.

Concerns addressed

King is no longer a current officer of the Key to Life Trust, but remains a spokesman. In a statement, he said the ministry knew that all counsellor­s and therapists on the Gumboot Friday platform were registered with profession­al bodies, including the New Zealand Associatio­n of Counsellor­s (NZAC).

“Ironically, the counsellor­s Ms Shearer has expressed concerns about have just been approved by her ministry to work within our health sector to relieve pressure off the current underfunde­d and underresou­rced system via the NZAC optin programme,” King said.

The programme referred to by King was announced by Little in late July in a bid to bolster the number of counsellor­s in the publicly-funded health workforce.

It provides an accreditat­ion pathway for NZAC counsellor­s to become registered to work in publicly-funded clinical roles. The trust was supportive of the change, King said.

Asked if Gumboot Friday had a screening process to determine eligibilit­y, he said the programme didn’t run on the ministry’s “reactive model of care”.

“Gumboot Friday is a proactive and accessible service where young people can talk to a trained profession­al about ‘little problems’, before they become ‘big problems’, before they become suicidal thoughts.”

Young people who booked a counsellin­g session through the platform were seen, on average, in under a week, King said.

Asked if the trust provided followup care, he said: “Anyone who uses our service has our contact details. If they need help, we assist.”

Counsellin­g sessions were allocated in lots of two, but the trust would approve additional sessions at the request of counsellor­s, King said.

Dr Arran Culver, acting associate deputy director-general for mental health and addiction at the ministry, said the concerns noted by Shearer in the emails related to counsellin­g being a self-regulated profession.

“This has been a longstandi­ng concern for the ministry, and the recent scope of practice and opt-in accreditat­ion pathway that we have developed with the [NZAC] allows, for the first time, counsellor­s to become accredited to work in publicly-funded clinical roles.”

Culver said the ministry had made the final payment to Key to Life and was in the process of ending the contract.

“This process includes review discussion­s.”

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