Eastern Eye (UK)

‘Tailored help key to tackling mental health among Asians’

VIRUS OUTBREAK HAS REVEALED RACIAL INEQUALITI­ES IN SUPPORT SERVICES

- By BARNIE CHOUDHURY

IF CORONAVIRU­S has shown us one thing, it is that Asian and black people are dying disproport­ionately from the disease.

This pandemic neither knows nor cares for race, social class or gender. It destroys lives, wreaking physical and emotional havoc in its wake.

This week, Ankur Khajuria, an NHS surgeon and lead researcher for the Royal College of Surgeons revealed further evidence of Covid-19’s destructio­n. In the Guardian, Khajuria revealed that in his study of almost 900 UK health workers, more than 60 per cent felt ‘down, depressed or hopeless’, nearly 80 per cent had ‘sleeping difficulti­es’ and 60 per cent felt ‘lonely’ during the pandemic.

It echoed what Poppy Jaman, CEO of City Mental Health Alliance, warned in last week’s Eastern Eye virtual roundtable – we will have a new pandemic six months down the line, but this health contagion.

So, it is with great sadness that I tell you about something which is very personal to me. After 25 years of championin­g mental health advice, assisting and campaignin­g for the Cinderella of Cinderella services, Awaaz, the charity I have been honoured to chair for a decade, is closing its doors. During that time, we believe we have helped almost 3,000 people, including police officers, medics and other profession­als.

The reason for our decision? Since I became chair in 2010, clinical commission­ing groups, local authoritie­s and government have systematic­ally made it more difficult for small organisati­ons, like ours, to survive.

You see, the money is being siphoned to bigger organisati­ons who say they provide culturally appropriat­e, culturally sensitive and culturally competent services to black, Asian and minority ethnic users. The truth is they hire one, maybe two, BAME staff, and when they realise they cannot deliver, they turn to organisati­ons like Awaaz. And the authoritie­s are complicit in this conspiracy. They turn a blind eye to those who are, at best, misleading them and, at worst, deliberate­ly lying, to the detriment of the people who are literally dying in need of help.

Post-Covid, the situation we are in will time it will be a mental only get worse. We saw that in the testimony of Eastern Eye’s recent exclusive story on forced marriage during Covid. A woman went to a mainstream organisati­on who simply could not help. So she turned to ours, and our team helped, as we always have done, magnificen­tly, countless times over the years. Would a so-called ‘mainstream’ organisati­on have joined the dots and realised that forced marriage causes serious mental health problems?

If Covid has shown us one thing, it is that these mainstream, white-led organisati­ons rarely understand the needs of ethnic minorities. The British Medical Associatio­n has evidence that black and Asian workers are too scared to ‘make a fuss’ in case they are labelled as troublemak­ers and lose their job or any hope of promotion. This is no excuse, but the NHS is simply battling too many fronts, and seemingly it cannot afford the time to dig into data and ask obvious questions about health inequaliti­es.

Here is why proper and relevant data is important. In 2004, the report into the death of David ‘Rocky’ Bennett once again raised the pernicious issue of racial inequality in the mental health system. On the night he died, Rocky had been racially abused by a fellow patient at the Norvic Clinic in Norwich. He was sent to another ward, while nothing happened to his abuser. Rocky attacked and seriously injured a nurse, and was restrained. Four or five staff put him face down and sat on his torso and legs for 25 minutes. I will never forget the words of his sister, Dr Joanna Bennett, who told me her brother was treated as a “lesser being” that night.

I recount this because of what followed. The then health secretary, John Reid, ordered that from 2005, as part of a five-year plan to address racial inequality in mental health services, there would be an annual census of all people receiving inpatient psychiatri­c care. We learnt that some black men were 18 times more likely to be inpatients than white people. With these figures, like stop and search, government­s had to listen and, more, investigat­e the root causes.

If coronaviru­s has shown us one thing, it is that scientific data trumps all. Today we do not know the extent to which mental health inequaliti­es exist with such certainty. So, we need every government to resume this yearly mental health census, to record properly and investigat­e diligently along ethnic lines. We need to investigat­e why this is happening, how we can prevent it and what communitie­s can do for themselves.

Otherwise more black and Asian people will die. This pandemic has shown us that much, at least, will happen.

 ??  ?? DATA DRIVE: BAME communitie­s need culturally sensitive support systems to deal with emotional issues arising from Covid-19
DATA DRIVE: BAME communitie­s need culturally sensitive support systems to deal with emotional issues arising from Covid-19
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