All Party Parliamentary Group on Mental Health
Joint Chairs: Dr Lynne Jones MP, Rt Hon Virginia Bottomley MP, Sandra Gidley MP
Secretary: Lord Alderdice
ANNUAL REPORT: 2004
Mental
health services faced another mixed year in 2004. In February the service reached a new
low with the publication of the Rocky Bennett Inquiry Report, which highlighted
institutional racism and bad practice in the health service. The lessons of this tragedy
must but be forgotten. The Social Exclusion
Unit published its Report on Mental Health in June and its recommendations are now being
implemented. In June, Maca (the Mental After Care Association) celebrated its 125th anniversary, it is the
oldest mental health charity in the UK and the Group hopes that it will continuing working
as long as its services are needed. In September
the Department of Health published the long-awaited Revised Draft Mental Health Bill.
Parliament has established a Joint Committee to scrutinise the legislation and the Group
welcomes this move.
Review
of the Year
March
At the first meeting of the year, the Group discussed
Therapeutic Communities and possible treatments for Personality Disorder. Dr Kingsley
Norton (Consultant and Director of Henderson Hospital) and Dr Rex Haigh (Chair Association
of Therapeutic Communities) presented their findings. Dr Norton outlined the difficulties
surrounding the diagnosis of personality disorder, particularly the stigma attached to it,
including prejudice held by the medical profession. The diagnosis is also sometimes used
to exclude people from receiving treatment.
Dr Haigh addressed the issue of whether PD can be treated,
explaining that therapeutic communities have been treating PD since the Second World War
when group therapy experiments began with soldiers. There is evidence that these
communities provide a very effective treatment as well as being cost-effective. Research
is currently being collated for future publication. The Royal College of
Psychiatrists Research Unit hosts the Community of Communities project which aims to
improve the regulation of therapeutic communities and share best practice.
April
In April the Group asked Are Mental Health Services
Improving? Professor Louis Appleby, National Director for Mental Health, outlined
the achievements of NHS mental health provision since the National Service Framework
(1999). He talked through the expenditure on mental health services and the indicators,
showing that the investment is having some success. He also presented detailed statistics on the number of
beds, admissions, discharges, consultants, nurses, NHS plan teams, prescribing patterns of
anti-psychotic drugs, and mortality rates.
Dr Andrew McCulloch, Chief Executive of the Mental Health
Foundation, focused on the premise that mental health provision is primarily about
protecting human rights. He criticised the
Government for not listening to the sector and noted that the draft Mental Health Bill has
united the sector in opposition. He commented that the draft bill is wrong in both
principle and practice. Dr David Taylor, Chief Pharmacist at the Maudsley Hospital detailed the NHS expenditure on services for
schizophrenia and the response to treatment, which have shown a 40% improvement. He
detailed the potential adverse effects of antipsychotic drugs and noted that in atypical
anti-psychotics, the level of adverse effects was markedly improved. Dr Jacqueline
Atkinson from Glasgow University reported on the progress made in Scotland
since the creation of their new Mental Health Act. She
stated that it has been a year since the Mental Health (Care and Treatment) (Scotland)
Act received Royal Assent, despite the fact that the whole process starting after the
reform south of the border.
June
In June the Group joined forces with the Drugs Misuse All Party
Group to discuss whether enough is being done for people with complex needs. Lord Victor Adebowale, Chief Executive of Turning Point
said that his organisation provides substance misuse
services and also provides services for people with mental health problems and learning
disability. Many of their clients have complex needs. Many of the people who Turning Point
work with are homeless and many are from BME backgrounds. Using the term
dual-diagnosis can be helpful as a medical diagnosis of concurrent problems
but it may also cause people to be excluded from services, which fail to provide joined-up
care.
Eloise Cooper, Complex Needs Service
Co-ordinator and Cognitive Behavioural Therapist, at Turning Points Drug link
Hammersmith and Fulham spoke about the people she works with, many of whom have severe and
enduring mental health problems, complicated by substance misuse, physical and/or learning
disabilities. These people were very affected by stigma and exclusion and many faced
exploitation by drug dealers. Liz Garrod, Director
of the London and East of England Regional Office of Maca
spoke about their work, which offers a range of services incorporating people with dial
diagnosis and complex needs. Maca provides residential services, personal development and
forensic workers in probation services.
October
The Group held the first of a series of meetings on the Revised Draft Mental Health
Bill by looking at Workforce Issues with a talk by Dr Mike Shooter, President of the Royal
College of Psychiatrists.
Dr Shooter began by explaining that there are workforce shortages
across mental health including psychiatrists, psychologists, CPNs and social workers. He
noted that the stigma which is attached to mental illness also affects the workforce and
people are often put off entering psychiatry because of prejudice within medicine. The College is working with the Department of Health
and other bodies to address the recruitment and retention problems as well as training
issues. There is also a NIMHE strategy to develop new ways of working for senior
psychiatric personnel.
On the Revised Draft
Mental Health Bill, Dr Shooter noted that the proposals were likely to lead to a huge
increase in workload due to the extension of the use of compulsion. The Bill, as it
stands, would also be detrimental to the relationship between psychiatrists and service
users as more people would fear compulsion and be scared to give their psychiatrist the
full details of their illness.
November & Annual General Meeting
The Group
held its AGM on 9th November followed by a discussion on the Revised Draft
Mental Health Bill which contributions from Rosie Winterton, Minister of State, Professor
Louis Appleby, National Director for Mental Health and Paul Farmer, Chair of the Mental
Health Alliance. This was the best attended meeting of the year and a provided a good
opportunity for Group members to find out more about the proposed legislation. The
Groups officers were re-elected for another year.
Conclusions
1. The
Group welcomes the establishment of the Joint Committee on the Draft Mental Health Bill
and hopes that its report will provide a balanced perspective on this controversial piece
of legislation. The Group will invite the Chair of the Joint Committee to present the
findings of his report to the Group.
2. The Group is
worried that mental health services are currently understaffed and that the proposals in
the Revised Draft Mental Health Bill will further exacerbate this problem.
3. The Group is
very concerned about the lack of provision for people with dual-diagnosis. These people
with complex needs are often neglected by services, which are too rigidly divided into one
area of care or another.
4. The
publication of the Rocky Bennett Inquiry Report presented a shocking picture of
institutional racism in the NHS. The Group hopes that the Inquirys recommendations
will be implemented swiftly and effectively.
5. The Social Exclusion Unit published
its Report on Mental Health and Social Exclusion in June. The Group warmly welcomed this
Report and it is hoped that it will be implemented across government departments.
Programme
for 2005
Details of future meetings will be circulated later this
year. Topics are likely to include further meetings on the Revised Draft Mental Health
Bill including particular aspects such as advocacy; a presentation of the findings of the
Joint Committee on the Draft Mental Health Bill; a meeting on mental health and cannabis
and the findings of the Health Select Committee Inquiry into the Pharmaceutical Industry.
Contacting
the Group
The All Party
Parliamentary Group on Mental Health aims to enable Members of both Houses of Parliament
and other interested groups to become better informed about mental health issues. The
Royal College of Psychiatrists provides the secretarial support for the All Party Group.
If you would like further details please contact:
Agnes
Wheatcroft, Parliamentary
and Policy Officer, The Royal College of
Psychiatrists
17 Belgrave Square, London SW1X 8PG
Tel: 020 7235
2351 x149
Email: awheatcroft@rcpsych.ac.uk
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