New Horizons: Government consults on mental health and well-being
23 July 2009
New vision to make mental health everyone’s business
Urban allotments, reading groups and computer training for the over 50s are just some of the good practice initiatives featured as part of a new approach to public mental health and well-being, announced by Care Services Minister Phil Hope today.‘New Horizons’ marks a new era in mental health. It sets out a dynamic new approach to improving well-being for the whole population, aiming for the first time to create a powerful alliance that can target the root causes of poor mental health.
The consultation launched today was developed with a wide range of partners, all of whom have a vital role to play. As well as health services, the response of local authorities and education will be critical. From schools to employers, and the NHS to the criminal justice system, New Horizons makes mental health everyone’s business.
A number of key themes are being consulted on:
- prevention and public mental
health – recognising the need to prevent
as well as treat mental health and promote mental
health and well-being.
- stigma – strengthening our
focus on social inclusion and tackling stigma and
discrimination wherever they occur.
- early intervention – expanding
the principle of early intervention to improve long
term outcomes.
- personalised care – ensuring
care is based on individuals’ needs and wishes
leading to recovery.
- multi-agency
commissioning/collaboration – working to
achieve a joint approach between local authorities,
the NHS and others, mirrored by cross government
collaboration.
- innovation – seeking out new
and dynamic ways to achieve our objectives based on
research and new technologies.
- value for money – delivering
cost-effective and innovative services in a period
of recession.
strengthening transition – improving the often difficult transition from child and adolescent mental health services to adult services, for those with continuing needs and issues.
One in six of us experience a mental health problem at any one time. Mental health care has been transformed over recent years, and services in England are now recognised as international leaders, but New Horizons aims to take that even further.
As we enter the next decade, services need to be personalised, allowing the patient to make decisions about their treatment, monitor their own condition and tell the professionals what it is they want to help get their life back on track.
Care Services Minister Phil Hope said:
“Better mental health and well-being is vital for a healthy society. People with mental health problems are more likely to do other things that damage their health, such as have a poor diet, smoke or take drugs. So promoting good mental health is a key part of tackling many other health inequalities.
“Over the last ten years of the national service framework we’ve transformed mental healthcare but now we want to go further. Our aim is to build on recent achievements, whilst simultaneously taking the next logical step – helping to prevent mental health problems from developing in the first place. New Horizons will help us do this.
“We want to involve everyone in building mentally healthier communities, which is why it is important that people up and down the country tell us what they think about the ideas set out in New Horizons.”
Steve Shrubb, Director of the Mental Health Network of the NHS Confederation said:
“The strength of this consultation is that it has been developed with the involvement of a full range of organisations* in mental healthcare. Promoting mental health is everyone's business and the coalition fully supports the move to embedding good mental health across society while continuing to improve services.
“Only by working together across government can we address problems as early as possible, combat stigma and put mental health service users in charge of the support they receive. We know there can be no health without mental health. Fostering good mental well-being will be a vital part of how we respond as a society to the challenges of the recession.”*The Future Vision Coalition consists of the following national organisations:
- Association of
Directors of Adult Social Services
- Association of
Directors of Children’s Services
- Local Government
Association
- Mental Health
Foundation
- Mental Health
Network, NHS Confederation
- Mental Health
Providers Forum, NHS Confederation
- Mind
- Rethink
- Royal College of
Psychiatrists
- Sainsbury Centre
for Mental Health
- Together
“Around 50% of lifetime mental illness starts before the age of 14 and continues to have a detrimental affect on people’s lives. Potentially half of these problems are preventable.
“The New Horizons vision is about promoting better mental health and well-being. It is also about high quality, responsive services, that intervene early and effectively to lessen the long-term effects of mental ill-health. Services that are focused not only on treatment outcomes, but on wider quality of life issues, strengthened by efforts to promote social inclusion and tackle stigma and discrimination of every kind.”
“Poor mental health is already believed to cost the economy £77billion a year, with the King’s Fund predicting that the cost in terms of GDP will double to over 10% by 2026. The indirect costs of poor mental health include poor educational attainment, unemployment and increased crime and anti-social behaviour.”
Ends
Notes to Editors:
To contribute to the New Horizon consultation please visit www.dh.gov.uk/mentalhealthOver the past ten years, the Government has vastly improved mental health services. Examples include:
- More patients helped: In the
year 2007/08, crisis resolution teams provided over
106,000 episodes of home treatment for patients who
would otherwise have been admitted to hospital.
- More staff: There are now 64
per cent more consultant psychiatrists, 71 per cent
more clinical psychologists and 21 per cent more
mental health nurses than in 1997, providing better
care and support for people with mental health
problems.
- More services: There are now more than 740 new community mental health teams offering home treatment, early intervention, or intensive support for people who might otherwise have been admitted to hospital.