Prime Minister unveils plans to transform mental health support

9 Jan 2017 01:54 PM

Theresa May announces a comprehensive package of measures to transform mental health support in our schools, workplaces and communities.

Delivering the annual Charity Commission lecture today, Prime Minister Theresa May will announce a comprehensive package of measures to transform mental health support in our schools, workplaces and communities.

The Prime Minister will say that true parity for mental and physical health can only be achieved if every institution recognises the vital role it can play in delivering this objective.

Prime Minister Theresa May is expected to say:

For too long mental illness has been something of a hidden injustice in our country, shrouded in a completely unacceptable stigma and dangerously disregarded as a secondary issue to physical health. Yet left unaddressed, it destroys lives, it separates people from each other and deepens the divisions within our society. Changing this goes right to the heart of our humanity; to the heart of the kind of country we are, the values we share, the attitudes we hold and our determination to come together and support each other.

I want us to employ the power of government as a force for good to transform the way we deal with mental health problems right across society, and at every stage of life.

What I am announcing are the first steps in our plan to transform the way we deal with mental illness in this country at every stage of a person’s life: not in our hospitals, but in our classrooms, at work and in our communities.

This starts with ensuring that children and young people get the help and support they need and deserve – because we know that mental illness too often starts in childhood and that when left untreated, can blight lives, and become entrenched.

This is a historic opportunity to right a wrong, and give people deserving of compassion and support the attention and treatment they deserve. And for all of us to change the way we view mental illness so that striving to improve mental wellbeing is seen as just as natural, positive and good as striving to improve our physical wellbeing.

The plans to tackle the burning injustice of mental illness form part of the government’s wider commitment to wholesale social reform – and its mission to create a country that works for everyone, not just the privileged few.

The Prime Minister’s speech this morning follows her words on the steps of Downing Street, where she vowed to create a country where if you struggle to get by, the government will do what it can to help; and a government which stands up to vested interests and tackles the everyday injustices that have been ignored for too long.

The speech will set out her determination to build a shared society based on the values of citizenship, responsibility and fairness, backed by a government which takes an active role in helping those who feel they have been ignored for too long.

The plans aim to make mental health an everyday concern for every bit of the system, helping ensure that no one affected by mental ill-health goes unattended. It includes:

One in 4 people has a common mental disorder at any one time and the economic and social cost of mental illness is £105 billion – similar to the entire annual NHS budget.

Figures show mental illness also disproportionately affects young people and those on lower and middle incomes with over half of mental health problems starting by the age of 14 and 75% by 18.

In 2014 mental health conditions affected almost 1 in 5 of all working-age people and around 1 in 7 of people in full-time employment. In the workplace 18 million days were lost to sickness absence caused by mental health conditions in 2015 at a cost of around £9 billion a year to employers.

Today’s announcements build on improvements to mental health support since 2010. The government is currently investing more in mental health than ever before – spending an estimated £11.7 billion a year and has already legislated to give mental and physical health equal priority in law.

The first ever access and waiting standards have also been introduced for both talking therapies and early intervention in psychosis and the government is investing £1.4 billion over the course of this Parliament into mental health support for children and young people.

Paul Farmer, Chief Executive of Mind, the mental health charity, said:

It’s important to see the Prime Minister talking about mental health and shows how far we have come in bringing the experiences of people with mental health problems up the political agenda. Mental health should be at the heart of government, and at the heart of society and communities – it’s been on the periphery for far too long.

We welcome the announcements around a focus on prevention in schools and workplaces and support for people in crisis. The proof will be in the difference it makes to the day-to-day experience of the 1 in 4 who will experience a mental health problem this year. Mental health is everyone’s business and we need to see sustained leadership to make sure services and support improve for all of us with mental health problems. Having been neglected for decades, we need to see it made a priority for decades to come to make sure everyone with mental health problems can live the life they want to lead.

In a statement issued today, Sir Ian Cheshire, Chairman of the Heads Together campaign, said:

The Prime Minister’s announcements today are extremely important and very welcome, as they show both a willingness to tackle the broad challenge of mental health support and a practical grasp of how to start making a real difference.

As the chair of Heads Together, an alliance of charity and corporate partners committed to changing the national conversation on mental health, I would urge all involved in the sector to collaborate and build on these initiatives.

Read the Prime Minister’s article for the Huffington Post on the mental health reforms.

Background

Mental health training for teachers and staff will be rolled out to a third of secondary schools this year (around 1,200 schools), with the remaining two-thirds of secondary schools offered this training in the following 2 years. The training will be run by Mental Health First Aid UK working with the government.

The government will also consult employers, charities and legal experts to gather evidence about current discrimination protections for workers with mental ill-health.

Existing laws already protect people when mental illness is classed as a disability – when the illness persists for a year or more – but for many common disorders, such as depression, average length of illness can be much shorter and there is anecdotal evidence of people facing issues in employment in these situations.