Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Questions over plans for mental health base

- BY PETER JOHN MEIKLEM

A DUNDEE health chief has questioned whether a single 24-hour centre is the best way to help those experienci­ng a mental health crisis in the city.

Chief social work officer Diane McCulloch told the Dundee health and social care partnershi­p’s integratio­n joint board there could be “other” solutions to crisis response.

She said: “I know we’ve had lots of conversati­ons about do we need a centre. I know Councillor (Ken) Lynn has been out and looked at a centre in Glasgow. All of these things have good bits and not so good bits.

“We want to get this as right as we can. So part of that work will then be what is that crisis response – is it a centre? Is it a centre and other things? Or is it other things?

“But we need to do that. I know there is a commitment to go some place and we want to get that right. It may be one; it may be more than one, but we need to do that work.”

She was responding to a question on the Tayside mental health and wellbeing strategy and talks about a timeline for improving mental health services, including a possible crisis centre.

Campaigner­s say a 24-hour, nonreferra­l, mental health crisis centre would be a key part of better mental health services in the city.

Campaigner Phil Welsh, whose son Lee died by suicide, said: “I would be concerned if she wasn’t committing to a dedicated 24-hour centre.

“The centre in Edinburgh works incredibly well. You can phone these guys up and they’ll get you in and you can stay overnight if you feel that’s helpful. You can get access to profession­als to discuss whatever it is that is going on in your life.

“That point of crisis can be over quite quickly if you get the right support.

“The 24-hour non-referral mental health crisis centre is essential for people who are at that point.”

Councillor Ken Lynn who chairs the Integratio­n Joint Board, said he was “committed” to the idea and had scheduled a meeting with council leader John Alexander and health and social care partnershi­p head Vicky Irons.

Dundee-based MSP Jenny Marra said: “The comments from the council officer confirm what I have long suspected, that absolutely nothing has been done whatsoever over the past three years by the SNP to open a crisis centre in Dundee.

“No centre will be perfect and will meet all needs, but it is a vital start. They managed it in Edinburgh and Glasgow. Why not in Dundee?”

A spokeswoma­n for Dundee Health and Social Care Partnershi­p said: “Providing a safe and compassion­ate response to people experienci­ng emotional distress remains a key priority in Dundee.

“Our response will include the provision of ‘always open’ safe spaces in a number of community locations to supplement the broader developmen­ts of Distress Brief Interventi­ons and peer support in order that people can be fully supported to address the reasons behind their distress.

“This work will develop in tandem with the Tayside wide revision of crisis care for those who require access to mental health treatments.”

 ??  ?? City council chief social work officer Diane McCulloch, and Dundee-based Labour MSP Jenny Marra.
City council chief social work officer Diane McCulloch, and Dundee-based Labour MSP Jenny Marra.
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