The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Plan for mental health crisis centre ‘in weeks’

- LINDSEY HAMILTON

Campaigner­s have given a cautious welcome to the news that an announceme­nt about a 24-hour mental health crisis centre for Dundee could be only weeks away.

Councillor Ken Lynn, Dundee City Council’s health spokesman and chairman of Dundee City Health and Social Care integrated joint board, has said he hopes there will be more detail about agreed proposals for a centre within weeks rather than months.

The councillor said he is “fully behind” the call for a 24/7 dedicated centre, adding: “This has already been agreed by councillor­s and we are at the stage of firming up the details of providing a centre of this type.

“The pandemic has very much got in the way of this happening so far but hopefully it will now be weeks rather than months before some further detail and informatio­n regarding proposals can be shared.”

It comes after a number of calls for a centre of this kind, sparked by recent deaths in the city.

An independen­t inquiry into mental health services in Tayside also suggested a centre as part of a raft of improvemen­ts.

It is hoped patients will be able to put themselves in for treatment, without the need for a doctor’s referral.

Mr Lynn added: “At a meeting of a mental health sub group of the IJB we listened to comment from Dundee’s Fairness Commission on this subject who recommende­d a crisis centre very strongly.

“We also are aware that the Strang Report advocated a centre and we as a health care partnershi­p in the city realise we need to listen to what people are asking for.

“We are listening to people’s experience­s. There is a mental health crisis in Dundee and the pandemic has added to that.”

One of Dundee’s main campaigner­s for the centre, Phil Welsh, said: “If Dundee councillor­s have backed, unanimousl­y, support for a non-referral 24-hour crisis centre, this is long awaited good news for the city.”

Mr Welsh, who runs the campaign group Not in Vain for Lee in memory of his son Lee who took his own life in August 2017, said he had been pleading with the authoritie­s to do something.

He added: “Dundee has suffered more than its fair share of suicides over the last few years. If this centre can help anyone when they reach that pinnacle of crisis then through our campaign Lee’s death will indeed not have been in vain.”

Mandy McLaren, whose son Dale Thomson took his own life in January 2015, just days afte r spending time in Dundee’s mental health facility, the Carseview Centre, said she gave a cautious welcome to the announceme­nt.

She said: “I would need to hear an awful lot more detail about how this would work and who would operate it.

“We need a crisis centre but we also need more than that.

“We need early interventi­on to stop people getting to the stage where they feel they are in crisis and we need after-care as well.

“We also need support for families of people in crisis, for the mums and dads and other family members who are also affected.

“Changes are needed to the entire system.”

Brook Marshall, chief executive of youth mental health charity Feeling Strong, also stressed the need for self-referrals to be available at any future centre.

He said: “We are strongly in favour of an accessible 24/7 crisis centre in Dundee which accepts self-referrals.”

The announceme­nt came as councillor­s considered a new Tayside Mental Health and Wellbeing Strategy report – Living Life Well – presented at a full council meeting on Monday night.

The report said work is ongoing to develop a “world class” mental health strategy for the “coming years”.

 ??  ?? HELP FOR OTHERS: Phil Welsh, who runs the campaign group Not in Vain for Lee, with a picture of his son Lee who took his own life in 2017.
HELP FOR OTHERS: Phil Welsh, who runs the campaign group Not in Vain for Lee, with a picture of his son Lee who took his own life in 2017.

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