£120m and new standards for mental health services in England

by | 8th Oct 2014 | News

NHS England has announced extra investment totalling £120 million plus a set of new standards to accelerate improvements in mental health services, transforming care for patients and saving some precious cash at the same time.

NHS England has announced extra investment totalling £120 million plus a set of new standards to accelerate improvements in mental health services, transforming care for patients and saving some precious cash at the same time.

The move follows long-term criticism of the state of mental health services in the country, a bleak picture in which around three-quarters of people are estimated to receive no treatment while those that do have to wait ages for it, community services are unaccessible*, and crisis care is in crisis with mental health beds in very short supply.

Under the new approach, a cash injection of £40 million in the current financial year will see £7 million go into ensuring that young people are no longer admitted to mental health beds far from where they live or inappropriately to adult wards, while £33 million will support people in mental health crisis and boost early intervention services, in the hope of securing better outcomes.

For 2015/16, NHS England has committed £80 million to help underpin new access and waiting times standards, as well as help those crisis get effective support in acute hospitals. The new standards call for 75% of people referred for talking therapies to start their treatment within six weeks and 95% within 18 weeks, and for at least 50% of those going through their first episode of psychosis to get NICE-approved help within two weeks of referral.

NHS England chief executive Simon Stevens and Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg will say this morning (Wednesday) that the moves are part of a five-year ambition to put mental health on an equal footing with physical health services.

But crucially they are also expected to make “huge savings” for the NHS, including £44 million a year in reduced hospital admissions from improving early treatment for psychosis, and an average of £5 million a year per hospital through improvement of psychiatric liaison services in A&E departments.

*A recent survey by the Care Quality Commission revealed that 32% of people receiving community mental health services don’t know where to go if they need help while 20% of those that do fail to get the help they need.

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