Mental illness 'under-treated by NHS'

Behind the Headlines

Monday June 18 2012

Report says too few are treated on the NHS for mental illness

“The NHS is failing mental health patients,” The Independent informs us today. Meanwhile, BBC News warns that NHS managers have been accused of “shocking discrimination” in providing mental health services.

The news is based on an academic policy report on the state of mental health services in Britain. The report found that mental illness accounts for nearly half of all ill health in people younger than 65, and that only a quarter of people in need of treatment currently get it. The report concludes that money spent on treating physical conditions could be better spent on cost-effective psychological therapies, which are still not widely enough available.

This story is covered appropriately by The Independent and other news sources. However, it is important to note that terms such as "discrimination" and "horrific scale" come from a press release, rather than from the more cautiously-worded report, which describes "inequalities".

While the report makes several significant recommendations, it is worth bearing in mind that these are aimed at a national and local NHS policy level. They are not recommendations for the care of individuals with mental health problems.

 

How widespread and severe are mental health problems according to the report?

The report, from the London School of Economics Centre for Economic Performance Think Tank, was produced by a team of economists, psychologists, doctors and NHS managers. It says that mental illness is widespread and is generally more debilitating than most chronic physical conditions. The researchers report that a third of all families in Britain have a family member with mental illness. Additionally, nearly half of all ill health in those younger than 65 years is due to mental illness and only a quarter of those needing treatment receive it. The report estimates that 6 million adults have depression or anxiety and 700,000 children have a mental health disorder. The report also found that mental health problems account for nearly half of absenteeism at work and a similar proportion of people on incapacity benefits.

 

What criticisms of mental health care does the report have?

According to the report, mental illness accounts for only 13% of NHS spending on health despite the existence of cost-effective treatments. It offers the explanation that those in charge of planning NHS services (commissioners) are failing to fund the necessary mental health services or expansion of services and are, in some cases, cutting mental health provision, especially for children.

The report states that the under-treatment of people with mental illness is the most glaring case of health inequality in the country. The report goes on to say that mental illness can increase the scale of physical illness and that the extra physical healthcare caused by mental illness now costs the NHS £10 billion. It says that much of this money could be better spent on psychological therapies because the average improvement in physical symptoms is so great that the savings on NHS physical care outweigh the cost of the psychological therapy.

 

Why are mental health problems being under-treated?

In 2008, the government initiated a six-year programme called Improving Access to Psychological Therapy (IAPT). The report says that:

  • as a result of the IAPT initiative, the situation has improved in some areas, while others are failing to meet the needs of those with mental illness
  • many local NHS planners are not using their budgets for their intended purpose
  • where effective psychological treatments do exist, they are sometimes not available widely enough
  • the £400 million earmarked by the government for psychological therapy to local NHS planners was not always used for its intended purpose because there was no obligation to do so
  • more expenditure on common mental disorders would almost certainly cost the NHS nothing overall. According to the report, therapies like cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) lead to rapid recovery from depression or anxiety disorders in more than 40% of cases. If these therapies were more widely available, this would cost the NHS little or nothing due to the savings on physical healthcare and the savings on incapacity benefits and lost taxes.

 

What does the report recommend is done to improve mental health care?

The report recommends that:

  • the government’s Improving Access to Psychological Therapies mental health policy is implemented in every local area and completed as planned. This will include using the £400 million provided to local NHS planners for 2011–2014 to fund services to treat 900,000 people with mental illness
  • targets set by the government are included in the NHS Outcomes Framework document (the official list of government targets that NHS planners are supposed to achieve)
    mental health becomes a priority both locally and at a national level
  • GP training is in keeping with government mental health policy, and recruitment to psychiatry is increased

The report states that beyond 2014 there should be another major expansion of mental health services, aimed especially at the millions of people who have mental illness as well as chronic physical conditions.

The report lead, Lord Layard, has called for the challenges of mental health to be placed at the heart of government. He said that NHS planners “should be expanding their provision of psychological therapy as it will save them so much on their physical healthcare budgets that the net cost will be little or nothing”. Lord Layard concluded that “mental health is so central to the health of individuals and of society that it needs its own cabinet minister”.

Links to the headlines

Scandal of mental illness: only 25% of people in need get help. The Guardian, June 18 2012

NHS is 'failing' mental health patients. The Independent, June 18 2012

Mental health 'shockingly' under-treated, claims report. The Daily Telegraph, June 18 2012

'Shocking discrimination' in mental health services. BBC News, June 18 2012

Further reading

LSE Centre for Economic Performance’s Mental Health Policy Group. How mental illness loses out in the NHS (PDF, 991kb). Published June 18 2012

Press release

London School of Economics. Shocking discrimination against mental illness within the NHS. Published June 18 2012

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Comments are personal views. Any information they give has not been checked and may not be accurate.

Able Scribe said on 27 October 2012

https://www.patientopinion.org.uk/opinions/57242

As can be seen from the above, there are a number of ways in which mental health patients are let down, not least in having their efforts to draw attention to real difficulties suppressed by a cabal of professionals. As Integrated Healthcare comes to be more widely accepted, I express the hope that the issues relating to causation links between atypical medications and contracting diabetes may eventually be addressed - though it is too late for all the people I know who have been so treated and have without exception contracted diabetes! Please start addreessing the physical health of the mentally ill before this proliferates into an epidemic!

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habardfoster said on 25 June 2012


In the telegraph
.Clare Gerada says’ Talking therapies have the potential to transform thousands of patients’ lives and we applaud Lord Layard and his team for their efforts to extend the programme further

. Sane chief executive Marjorie Wallace says: 'We are at an all-time low in the response of mental health services to people with severely disabling mental illness.

'While the Government has put money into psychological therapies, on the other hand resources are being drained from the fundamental care and treatment of people in crisis, those in need of in-patient care such as the suicidal, and those in the community where the cuts are depriving them of the few things that make their lives more tolerable, such as day centres, clubs, activities and occupation. We support Lord Layard's call to action, before there are too many casualties and the services become too fragmented to help them
Lord Layard says in the London school of economics and political science
‘If local NHS Commissioners want to improve their budgets, they should all be expanding their provision of psychological therapy. It will save them so much on their physical healthcare budgets that the net cost will be little or nothing.
so I am guessing here that layland as an economist wants more of the government cutbacks in services to fund more psychological therapies such as cognitive behaviour therapy and the money saved will then pay for a smaller more fragmented service left behind and this is less discriminatory?..
. What happens to those who don’t get better with CBT... what happens if the cutbacks are made and this talking therapy fails to deliver? How are people in crisis going to get the help they need?
I have no doubt the real intention here is more cutbacks to mental health service but to make it sound less unpleasant they insist this will be accomplished by savings made through Cognitive behaviour therapy?
Clare Gerada, the wife of Simon Wessely

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clives health said on 22 June 2012

To whom it may concern,
NHS Choices is the main point of on line access to the NHS for the public. Iam of the opinion that the fact that articles exist on it referring to people looking for help with mental health issues as 'patients' and not 'service users' to be out of date and unacceptable. Could you please ensure that:
1. authors of MH articles are made aware of this
2. management responsible for NHS Choices do not let this happen again
Kind regards,
Clive Spindley
Technician working at West London Mental Health NHS Trust

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Analysis by Bazian

Edited by NHS Choices


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