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When it comes to mental heath, a radical approach is the only hope for real change

Mind

3 min read Partner content

Whoever forms our next government, it is clear that greater ambition is needed on mental health, writes Mind. 


The last two UK General Elections were landmark moments for mental health, demonstrating its meteoric rise up the political agenda. In 2015, for the first time, it was mentioned in every party’s manifesto. In 2017 it was included more times than any other health condition in any election since 1945. It’s been an encouraging few years, with parties of every hue seemingly listening carefully to what people with mental health problems have to say.

This election, the mood is a little different. The promises of the last few years haven’t yet translated into meaningful change. With so much parliamentary and media time absorbed by Brexit, there’s been growing impatience with pressing issues related to mental health being put on pause. People have continue to wait too long for the support they need and become more unwell in the process, often leading to greater pressure on crisis services. Urgent problems – from plummeting care standards to benefits-related deaths – have received little attention.

This time, mental health still features, if not with the same prominence across the board that it once had. Each of the main parties’ manifestos include some positive proposals: renewed commitments to treating mental health with the same importance as physical health; pots of money for NHS services; changes to the benefits system; better protection for people with mental health problems in work; and reducing inequalities for BAME and LGBT+ groups.

But every party is missing the bigger picture. Whoever forms our next government looks set to continue addressing one problem at a time, but it’s clear that greater ambition is needed. A radical approach is the only hope for real change - we must see a robust plan for mental health that covers all policy areas. Because it isn’t just a health problem, it has an impact on and can be affected by every aspect of life – from employment to housing, the benefits system to poverty, and isolation to domestic abuse. If we want to stop the tidal wave of people seeking support from an NHS that can’t cope with the demand, all of these issues must be looked at through the same lens.

A cross-government strategy would put people at the heart of policy-making, and take into account that just as people’s life is complex, none of these issues exists in isolation. There is little point having targets for talking therapies while there is a benefits system in place that drives people to suicide, or encouraging people to look after their wellbeing if they don’t feel safe and secure in their own homes. At the very least, it is the responsibility of government not to make people’s mental health worse. We can’t afford to tinker around the edges of mental health and hope for the best – it needs to be front and centre of any government’s agenda.  

Whoever steps into Downing Street next week must, as a matter of urgency, be clear about how their plans will transform the lives of people with mental health problems. We will not accept any more failure to deliver on promises.

You can read Mind's full manifesto HERE.

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