Sunday Territorian

Mental health a big issue

- SUE DUNLEVY NATIONAL HEALTH REPORTER

EIGHT in 10 Australian­s view mental health as an important guide to their election vote but election promises don’t go near enough to solving the crisis, a peak group warns.

Nearly one in three voters say they would consider changing their vote if a political party produced a comprehens­ive and actionable mental health vision and investment plan.

Mental Health Australia (MHA), the peak body representi­ng mental health organisati­ons across the country, commission­ed the IPSOS survey of 1000 Australian­s to find out how important the issue was to voters.

The organisati­on is calling on whoever wins the election to invest in four key priorities to sustain momentum in mental health reform:

LIVED experience leadership;

GOVERNMENT leadership and accountabi­lity;

CO-DESIGNED implementa­tion of a community focused mental health system; and

THE developmen­t of the mental health workforce.

MHA chair and tech entreprene­ur Matt Berriman, who lives with bipolar disorder, said that the Productivi­ty Commission had estimated mental health problems were costing the country $70bn a year in lost productivi­ty.

“Yet we’re spending a fraction on that to make it better,” Mr Berriman said.

Labor had not promised anything of substance on mental health in the election campaign and the Coalition’s $2.6bn spend was half the amount the National Productivi­ty Commission found was needed, Mr Berriman said.

“There is definitely a fear in the sector that the money is being announced but not spent where it needs to be,” he said.

“What we haven’t seen is accountabi­lity and delivery of services … we want some transparen­cy, where those services are delivered.”

There are 65,000 suicide attempts in Australia each year and it is the leading cause of death among males aged 25 to 44, he said.

As someone who attempted to take his own life, Mr Berriman welcomed a Co

alition plan to ensure every person who attempted suicide would get an after-care followup plan.

“I went through 15 different types of medication and had shock therapy. I’ve been in public and private hospital. I’ve kind of gone through a lot of it so I do understand it,” he said.

However, he said improvemen­ts to mental health would not happen if we just concentrat­ed on spending more on

medical care because real life issues such as financial distress and relationsh­ip breakdowns were the trigger for mental break down.

A massive shortage of mental health nurses, psychiatri­sts and psychologi­sts has seen people waiting more than 12 weeks to get access to care and there was “definitely a workforce gap that needs to be solved,” he said.

Labor had a plan to provide $12,000 to students who wanted to study education and that should be extended to those who wanted to study nursing, psychology and psychiatry, Mr Berriman said.

More must be done to build up mental health services in local communitie­s to prevent people going to hospital and stop them being discharged from hospital into homelessne­ss, he said.

Health Minister Greg Hunt has said that under the Coalition investment in mental health and suicide prevention had more than doubled, from $3.3bn to an estimated $6.8bn in the 2022-23 budget.

During the election campaign the Coalition has announced a series of Head to Health centres around the country and has outlined promises of extra spending on suicide prevention.

Labor has promised to restore affordable telehealth psychiatri­c consultati­ons for people living in regional and rural Australia, reversing cuts made by the government.

It has also pledged to fund a National Nurse and Midwife Health Service to bolster the resilience of these workers who have been burnt out by the Covid pandemic.

 ?? ?? Mental Health Australia’s Matt Berriman.
Mental Health Australia’s Matt Berriman.

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