(C) OpenDemocracy
This story was originally published by OpenDemocracy and is unaltered.
. . . . . . . . . .



NHS to take over mental health emergency calls – but will get no extra cash [1]

[]

Date: 2023-07

Health services will not get any new funding when they take over responsibility for mental health emergencies from police as soon as next month, NHS England has confirmed to openDemocracy.

The government announced on Wednesday that police forces across England would no longer attend emergencies related to mental health unless there was a risk to life, or a crime being committed.

It claimed it would provide £150m over four years to build new and improved mental health urgent and emergency care services – but this appears to be a reference to funding announced in 2021, which did not include any money for new staff. The government also touted a separate annual figure of £1bn to support community mental health services for people with serious mental illness, but this was announced in 2019, long before the decision was taken to withdraw police support.

Now NHS England has said no new funding is being provided for the plan, and that any additional resources required to answer more calls will have to come out of health trusts and councils’ existing budgets. It could require up to a million hours of staff time each year, based on estimates by Met Police chief Mark Rowley and Sarah Hughes, chief exec of the charity Mind.

Help us uncover the truth about Covid-19 The Covid-19 public inquiry is a historic chance to find out what really happened. Make a donation

Hughes said: “It is simply impossible to take a million hours of support out of the system without replacing it with investment, and mental health services are not resourced to step up overnight. These changes must be introduced slowly and carefully, so no one is abandoned without support.”

Councils have also expressed alarm that some police forces are moving to implement the plans, known as ‘Right Care, Right Person’, too soon.

The Metropolitan Police, which made a similar announcement two months ago, gave local health services just 13 weeks’ notice that it would stop attending mental health calls unless there was a threat to life on 31 August. By contrast, a pilot of the scheme took three years to implement in Humberside.

Last week, councillors in the London Borough of Hackney were warned by local officials that there would be “potential for [an] increase in incidents leading to harm, serious injury or risk to life due to timescales for implementation”.

A report by the council’s adult social care director said it was not known how ambulances and health services would meet the additional costs they could face.

Another London council, Merton, has said the Met is already refusing requests to attend mental health assessments organised by local authorities ahead of the deadline.

[END]
---
[1] Url: https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/mental-health-emergency-crisis-calls-police-nhs-councils/

Published and (C) by OpenDemocracy
Content appears here under this condition or license: Creative Commons CC BY-ND 4.0.

via Magical.Fish Gopher News Feeds:
gopher://magical.fish/1/feeds/news/opendemocracy/