Kentish Express Ashford & District

The £5m private hospital bill to help mental health patients

- By Chris Pragnell

The county’s NHS mental health trust spent more than £5 million on private hospitals last year due to a shortage of beds for patients, we can reveal.

A Freedom of Informatio­n request shows 356 patients in Kent were placed into private care over just 12 months because beds could not be found.

The patients, detained under the Mental Health Act, were sent to “places of safety” up and down the country at a cost of £5,671,000 to the taxpayer.

Two years ago the Kent and Medway health trust opened a new 36-bed inpatient facility in Canterbury at a cost of £10 million, promising the “very best care and treatment in the best facilities”.

Yet in 2013 the trust was sending an average of one patient per day into private care because it could not house them itself, we can reveal.

Ed Targett, Green Party parliament­ary candidate for Thanet North, said: “There aren’t enough beds and there aren’t enough nurses and ‘care in the community’ programmes are run ragged.

“In austere times, paying this kind of money to private health care providers, who charge an absolute fortune, is a scandal.

“Taxpayers’ money for the NHS is being recycled straight into the private sector because of mismanagem­ent and poor priorities.”

Kent & Medway NHS and Social Partnershi­p Trust KMPT provides mental health, learning disability, substance misuse and other specialist services for 1.6 million people across Kent and Medway.

Patients who display certain characteri­stics which give cause for concern can be detained under a process known coloquiall­y as “sectioning”.

According to Mr Targett, who made the FOI request, KMPT’s policy had been to focus on “care in the community” and reduce the number of mental health inpatients as far as possible.

Despite KMPT opening its new inpatient facility at St Martin’s Hospital in Littlebour­ne Road, Canterbury, in October 2012, Mr Targett claims overall bed numbers have been scaled back due to the closure of acute wards in Ashford and Thanet. He is strongly critical of the £5.6m expediture on private health care when the trust lacks beds.

“That money should categorica­lly be spent on more NHS beds and on creating more jobs for overworked mental health staff, who are being stretched to their limits,” he said.

“The KMPT has boasted of a £10 million new centre in Canterbury, but it is spending more than half that per year on private hospitals because of closures elsewhere.”

A spokesman for KMPT said: “The trust is committed to working with its commission­ers, service users and carers to identify the appropriat­e interventi­ons required to meet the demands of those experienci­ng mental health problems.

“Commission­ers have identified that the trust requires 174 acute adult beds to meet levels of demand.”

What do you think? Write to Kentish Express, 34-36 North Street, Ashford, TN24 8JR or email kentishexp­ress@thekmgroup.co.uk

 ??  ?? The £10m in-patient facility at St Martin’s Hospital, Canterbury
The £10m in-patient facility at St Martin’s Hospital, Canterbury
 ??  ?? Ed Targett
Ed Targett

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