Gulf Today

TORIES HAVE LOST PUBLIC TRUST IN MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES

- BY BEN CHU

The overall economic and social costs to our society of poor mental health are estimated to be more than £100bn a year. In that context, a bill of £70,000 is, of course, a drop in the ocean. That was the cost to the Metropolit­an police for dealing with almost 9,000 emergency calls from sufferers in 2017.

But the fact that all those calls came from just ive people helps to force home a broader truth: when mental health services are underfunde­d by the government, the cost invariably shows up elsewhere.

It manifests in increased demands on the police, the courts, prisons and the regular health service. It also shows up in rough sleeping. And then there are the intangible costs. Things like disrupted education, family breakups, lost jobs, derailed careers, and of course the personal anguish for suffers and those close to them.

That’s how you get to £100bn, or around 5 per cent of UK GDP. The government spent around £12bn on mental health services in England in 2017-18, around a tenth of the total health budget. Perhaps that sounds a lot. But the reality is the ministers have indeed underfunde­d mental health services, along with most other public services, in the age of austerity.

In 2012 ministers made a commitment to “parity of esteem” between physical and mental health, essentiall­y a promise that people with mental health problems would get the same access to care and treatment as those with physical ailments.

Yet research by the King’s Fund think tank has shown that in the following three years almost half of the 60 NHS mental health trusts saw their cash budgets fall, while most regular acute trusts saw an increase. There was an improvemen­t for most mental health trusts in 2016-17, but evidence suggests that their level of funding in real terms remains below the level seen before 2012.

And demands on the service have grown over that period as the population has increased. Data on total mental health spending over time is unreliable for various technical reasons, but it’s likely that, per person, and adjusting for inlation, funding will have gone down under the Conservati­ves and the coalition.

The government’s own independen­t Mental Health Taskforce in 2016 complained about “chronic underinves­tment in mental healthcare across the NHS in recent years”. If you spend less on a service, or keep funding spending below demand, the quality and availabili­ty of the service will suffer. Moreover, if that service is the treatment of people with mental health problems, there will likely be spill-over social harms. The economy will prove a false one.

Ministers seem to have been in denial about this simple fact. On World Mental Health Day in 2017 the former health secretary Jeremy Hunt boasted to MPS that there are “30,000 more profession­als working in mental health than when my government came into ofice”.

It soon emerged that the reality was an increase of around 700 and Hunt had to correct the oficial parliament­ary record. Moreover, this small increase was driven by an expansion of psychother­apists. The number of mental health nurses is 5,000 lower.

There are some 215,000 specialist mental health posts in England and around 20,000 of them are currently illed by temporary agency staff. A survey of mental health staff last year indicated shortages of personnel and a rise of violent incidents.

Given the shameful recent history of mental health treatment – the underfundi­ng, the broken promises, the political denial – who can blame them?

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