Association of Police and Crime Commissioners
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Detainees and victims of crime with mental health problems need better support

The first Mental Health Concordat has been unveiled today. It sets out shared national principles to bring together a multi-agency response to individuals in mental health crisis. Police and Crime Commissioners will be a leading partner in delivering the local action plans that will deliver the Concordat’s goals.

Police and Crime Commissioners and a number of national organisations have signed a pledge to improve crisis care for people with mental health needs across England. Care for individuals with mental health issues has been a serious concern for Police and Crime Commissioners for some time.  Reports indicate that responding to the needs of individuals with mental health needs can account for up to 20% of police time when, in many cases, many of these individuals need help from health and social care agencies, not the police.

Statistics show that of all the detentions under section 136 of the Mental Health Act 1983, in 36% of cases individuals were taken to police cells, not a place of safety with trained health professionals.  The legislation was designed so that police cells could be used only exceptionally as places of safety.  Police and Crime Commissioners have undertaken significant work nationally, regionally and locally to address this so that individuals with mental health needs, many of whom have committed no crime, get the health based response they need as they would for any physical health condition.

The Concordat core principles and outcomes are:

• Access to support before crisis point.

• Urgent and emergency access to crisis care with the explicit recognition that police officers should not have to consider using police custody as an alternative just because there is a lack of local mental health provision, or unavailability at certain times of the day or night.

• The right quality of treatment and care when in crisis.

• Recovery and staying well, and preventing future crises.

Martyn Underhill, Chairman of the PCC Mental Health Working Group and PCC for Dorset, said:

“Police and Crime Commissioners have led a vigorous campaign to ensure that detainees and victims of crime with mental health problems receive the right care, at the right time and in the right place.

“The Mental Health Concordat brings Police and Crime Commissioners and partner agencies together under a joint approach for assessing and improving the care of people in mental health crisis. My colleagues and I are leading work locally to develop action plans to deliver the Mental Health Concordat’s principles.

“In Dorset, in keeping with several other areas of the country, we have a pilot street triage scheme to improve mental health care for those in crisis launching in a few weeks’ time. We also have a Liaison and Diversion pilot in our custody suites.

PCCs’ nationally would like to see both types of approach expanded across the country as soon as possible to ensure a consistent approach to these cases.”

Ends.

Notes to Editors

1. For interviews / further information please contact Joel Charles on 07703 124 174.

2. The statistics on usage of Section 136 are taken from the Inpatients formally detained in hospitals under the Mental Health Act 1983 and patients subject to Supervised Community Treatment Annual Figures, England 2012/13 published by the Health and Social Care Information Centre at the end of October. http://www.hscic.gov.uk/article/3668/Mental-Health-Act-detentions-top-50000-a-year

3. The Government has committed to ensuring parity of esteem in cases of mental and physical health and its recent publication Closing the Gap explicitly recognised the need to divert individuals with mental health needs away from the Criminal Justice System and the needs of victims with mental health needs.

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