The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

‘We can’t medicate people’s emotions’

Charity warns health chiefs over ‘impending’ mental health crisis

- JAMIE BUCHAN jabuchan@thecourier.co.uk

Health chiefs have been warned not to rely on medication to treat an impending “tsunami” of mental health problems.

Charity Plus Perth, which has been fighting for better psychiatri­c services in Tayside, warned of a “new pandemic of mental illness” as a result of lockdown and said an over-reliance on medicine would be a “travesty”.

NHS Tayside is bracing itself for a surge in cases and its board heard last week people with no history of mental illness could develop psychologi­cal problems during lockdown.

Public health chief Drew Walker told the meeting the full impact would only become clear once restrictio­ns ease further.

Susan Scott, developmen­t manager at Plus Perth, said problems with mental health services – highlighte­d in Dr David Strang’s damning report that called for “radical reform” – did not instil confidence.

“The narrative is paving the way for a new pandemic of mental illness,” she said.

“A narrative where medicating people is the most realistic, but unfortunat­e, solution if the numbers are to be believed.

“The medicalisi­ng of current and future distress is a travesty. The longterm impact of this is often devastatin­g for the person and costs more money for the country.

“The iatrogenic harm done to people as a result of medical treatment can be avoided if the resources needed are allocated to where people are being helped most at the onset of any distress.

“People need responded to when they say they are in crisis, not when the doctor or nurse decides it’s a crisis.”

Ms Scott said she was “increasing­ly worried” that people might be encouraged to believe they have a mental illness, when it is simply their natural response to the crisis.

“Distress is not a mental illness and shouldn’t be treated as such,” she said.

“No medication­s can treat loneliness and isolation. What many people are feeling right now is entirely understand­able.

“We must not medicate our emotions. We are responding in human ways to bad times.”

Throughout the pandemic, Plus Perth has stayed in touch with its 300 members via a weekly newsletter.

Some members have even reported feeling better, or experienci­ng no change, since lockdown began, Ms Scott said.

NHS Tayside declined to respond directly to Plus Perth’s statement, but referred to Dr Walker’s comments at last week’s board meeting.

He said evidence suggests lockdown will be “having a significan­t impact on people whose mental wellbeing has up until now been good”.

“This will have caused some deteriorat­ion,” he added.

“People with establishe­d mental illnesses will have their situations exacerbate­d.”

The health board is now preparing a paper “to identify the key areas where mitigating actions are required to reduce the impact of Covid-19 on population mental health”.

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