The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Dundee-based charity calls for NHS to improve links with universiti­es

Report recommends students should be referred directly to crisis teams

- EMMA CRICHTON

A Dundee-based mental health charity for young people has called for better links between Tayside universiti­es and the NHS, to help students access crisis support.

Dundee University, Abertay and the University of the Highlands and Islands all offer support services to students but cannot refer them to crisis teams for emergency mental health treatment.

Instead, they must be referred by a GP and many students are not registered with a doctor in the area in which they study.

This week’s major report from the Tayside mental health inquiry recommende­d university staff be given the ability to refer students to a Crisis Resolution and Home Treatment Team (CRHTT) “as a matter of urgency”.

This has been backed by Brook Marshall, chief executive officer of Feeling Strong, a Dundee-based charity offering mental health support to young people.

“It would be hugely beneficial if university staff could directly refer students to crisis support and I’m glad the report has recognised this,” he said.

“It cuts out a lot of unnecessar­y steps and gets them interventi­on quickly and quickness is key.

“Many students are not registered with a GP where they are studying, so it can be a very long process for them to get registered and see a doctor when immediate support is what they need.

“Even those who are registered, crisis support by its very nature is supposed to be timely and waiting a week or two for a GP appointmen­t is not timely.

“The staff know the students so they know what their issues are and when they need to be escalated, so it is very difficult that they cannot refer them directly and when they eventually are referred they are rejected.”

Mr Marshall criticised NHS Tayside for not acting more quickly, although he welcomed the findings of the report and hopes they will be implemente­d.

“The report has exposed the issues we have known about for years,” he said.

“There is nothing in this report which will come as a surprise either to the community or the NHS. They have been aware of these problems for years but have chosen to ignore them. We are cautiously optimistic they will now be addressed.

“We very much believe everything in the report is doable but whether they actually do it is different.”

The report has 51 recommenda­tions to improve mental health services in Tayside. It specifical­ly addressed universiti­es in one section, saying: “The ability for university mental health services to respond quickly to a crisis is critical.

“However, it is not currently possible for the university health services in Dundee or Perth to refer directly to CRHTT – despite employing mental health nurses who are able to assess students appropriat­ely.

“Given the size of the student communitie­s in Dundee and Perth, and the well-known risk of suicides in young men under 30, a referral pathway into CRHTT for the universiti­es’ mental health services should be considered as a matter of urgency.”

A Perth College UHI spokesman said: “We offer a range of mental health services including drop-in sessions, counsellin­g, wellbeing support and advice, self-help workshops and informatio­n. Our Wellbeing and Support Officers support students with adjustment­s to help with their studies.

“Working more closely with the NHS to provide greater support to our students would be welcomed, and we will actively help with any opportunit­ies to improve mental health services in our region.”

A spokespers­on for Abertay University said: “We have a team of profession­al and fully-trained counsellin­g and mental health staff on campus. However, a missing piece of the jigsaw is the current barrier students face in gaining direct access to NHS mental health services without the need for a GP referral, despite their case being supported and documented by the university.

“We look forward to collaborat­ing with both NHS Tayside and the University of Dundee as we seek to improve services across the area.”

An NHS Tayside spokesman said: “The extensive independen­t inquiry report relates to a range of mental health services across Tayside and contains a number of recommenda­tions.

“NHS Tayside board, Angus, Dundee and Perth and Kinross Integratio­n Joint Boards, and our partners will consider the report and develop a comprehens­ive action plan in response to the recommenda­tions.”

 ?? Jennings. ?? Brook Marshall, chief executive of Dundee-based charity Feeling Strong, which offers mental health support to young people, is backing the report’s recommenda­tions. Picture: Gareth
Jennings. Brook Marshall, chief executive of Dundee-based charity Feeling Strong, which offers mental health support to young people, is backing the report’s recommenda­tions. Picture: Gareth
 ?? Picture: Mhairi Edwards. ?? David Strang, chairman of the independen­t inquiry into mental health services in Tayside, reading its report.
Picture: Mhairi Edwards. David Strang, chairman of the independen­t inquiry into mental health services in Tayside, reading its report.

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