Mental Health Services 'Struggling To Cope', Care Quality Commission Says

Police And Ambulance Crews 'Sometimes More Caring' Than Mental Health Professionals
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Public services need to "wake up" to "unacceptable" gaps in mental health crisis care, the UK's biggest health regulator has warned.

The Care Quality Commission released a report on Friday saying it was clear that A&E staff appeared to lack compassion and warmth in how they cared for people having a crisis, particularly those who had harmed themselves.

"One of the clearest findings from our call for evidence was that people are not satisfied with how A&E departments respond to people in crisis," the document said.

"While we recognise the pressure that A&E departments are under, it does not excuse the fact that this figure remains unacceptably low.

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Emergency departments came under criticism from the CQC

"Feedback from people who came into contact with the police showed the service in a more positive light than many of the specialist mental health services. It is encouraging that a professional working outside of specialist services can get it right and this should act as a challenge to those working in the health service to do the same."

Dr Paul Lelliott, the CQC's deputy chief inspector of hospitals and mental health lead, said the latest findings should act as "a wake up call to our public services".

Speaking following the report's publication, he bemoaned the disparity between patient satisfaction levels in physical and mental health services.

"It is not acceptable for people with mental health problems to be treated differently to those with physical health problems," he said.

"The majority of people who have a mental health crisis experience it out of normal office hours, and so the NHS and our other public services must make sure they are equipped to provide the specialist and urgent care that is needed around the clock.

"What's more, we found that when people do receive help, hospital and mental healthcare staff are not always compassionate and caring.

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Care Minister Alistair Burt MP

"Worryingly, many people told us that when they were having a crisis, they often felt the police and ambulance crews were more caring and took their concerns more seriously than the medical and mental health professionals they encountered."

The report's conclusions suggested there existed "a health and care landscape that is struggling to provide the appropriate levels and quality of responses and support across the system".

It called on local providers to ask serious questions about whether the services they provide are safe and warned there was too much variation across the country, variation disparities within the same local authority areas.

Care Minister Alistair Burt said the government was trying to tackle the problems identified in the report with its new treatment targets and extra funding.

"Improving mental health care is my priority," he said.

But the latest suggestions that hospitals were struggling to cope came just weeks after mental health trusts in England were revealed to be forecasting significant funding cuts over the coming four years.

Services said they expected to see gross income decrease by 8% in real terms.

9 People Who Have Changed The Conversation Around Mental Health
Terry Bradshaw(01 of09)
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Don't be fooled by Terry Bradshaw's demeanour on NFL broadcasts; even tough guys like the Super Bowl-winning former quarterback have struggled with depression.

The ex-Pittsburgh Steeler opened up about his struggle with the illness in 2004, and how he had difficulty "bouncing back" after a divorce.

"With any bad situations I'd experienced before — a bad game or my two previous divorces — I got over them. This time I just could not get out of the hole."

He has also talked openly about his struggles with memory loss, which resulted from concussions he sustained in his playing days.
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Bradley Cooper(02 of09)
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In "Silver Linings Playbook," Bradley Cooper played Pat Solitano, a Philadelphia man struggling with bipolar disorder after being released from an institution.

Cooper admitted to knowing very little about the illness before the role, but he has since spoken openly about mental health, talking about veterans dealing with PTSD in a speech at the MTV Movie Awards, and attending the White House's National Conference on Mental Health in 2013.

At the conference, he talked about how a friend was diagnosed with bipolar disorder, and how people dealt with it by not talking about it.

Cooper encouraged delegates to "[help] people understand that they're not alone, that the thing they're feeling, it probably has a name."
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Robert De Niro(03 of09)
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Last year, as Robert De Niro's film "Silver Linings Playbook" was in theatres, he broke down crying while talking to Katie Couric about his father's difficulties with bipolar disorder.

"I don't like to get emotional, but I know exactly what he goes through," he said of the film's character Pat Solitano (played by Bradley Cooper).

De Niro's public discussion helped to show how families also suffer when people close to them experience mental illness.
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Clara Hughes(04 of09)
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Canadian Olympic medallist Clara Hughes is among the most prominent voices speaking out about mental health in the Great White North.

The speed skater and cyclist, who is the only person to ever win multiple medals in both the Summer and Winter Olympics, has been open about her struggles with depression, which have been present throughout her athletic career.

Hughes took that experience and channeled it into a job as spokesperson for Bell Let's Talk, an initiative that aims to end the stigma around mental illness. She cycled across Canada for 11,000 kilometres as part of "Clara's Big Ride for Bell Let's Talk," which triggered a conversation around mental health from coast to coast to coast.

Hughes visited 105 communities and 80 schools and youth groups as part of the ride.
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Michael Landsberg(05 of09)
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Michael Landsberg, host of TSN's Off the Record, cuts an energetic figure on TV.

But in 2010, he went public about his struggles with depression in a TSN special alongside ex-NHLer Stephane Richer in an effort to let men know that it's OK to talk about it.

The special triggered as many as 30 emails, all of them from men, Landsberg told The Toronto Star.

Years later, he helped a woman who tweeted at him about her plans to kill herself. Landsberg found the woman and sought help for her from the police.
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Demi Lovato(06 of09)
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Actress and singer Demi Lovato did not have a strong relationship with her father, but when he died, she went public about both his and her own struggles with mental illness.

She also established the Lovato Treatment Scholarship, which helps to pay for people's treatment.
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Elizabeth Manley(07 of09)
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As a figure skater, Elizabeth Manley did Canada proud by winning a silver medal in ladies' singles at the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary.

Prior to the 1984 Sarajevo Olympics, she experienced a series of unfortunate events. Her coach left her, she ended up training in the U.S. away from those closest to her, and her parents divorced.

Manley gained weight and her hair fell out. She was diagnosed with a nervous breakdown and depression.

Manley has since become a spokeswoman on mental health issues. She told her story in her 1990 autobiography "Thumbs Up!" and organized "Elizabeth Manley and Friends," a 2012 benefit show whose proceeds went to teen mental health initiatives.

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Amanda Todd(08 of09)
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Who can forget Amanda? The 15-year-old from Port Coquitlam, B.C. jumpstarted a whole new discussion on bullying and mental health after she went public with allegations of harassment in a heartbreaking video that was posted on YouTube.

Then on Oct. 10, just over a month later, she killed herself.

Her death sparked an outpouring of emotion from around the world, and prominent voices such as B.C. Premier Christy Clark cited her in speeches at We Day 2012 in Vancouver.

Her mother Carol Todd also set up a trust fund at Royal Bank of Canada, which would raise money for young people living with mental health issues.
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Margaret Trudeau(09 of09)
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In 2006, Margaret Trudeau, ex-wife of former prime minister Pierre Trudeau, went public over her struggle with bipolar disorder, and how she used marijuana to cope with it.

She has spent subsequent years since giving speeches about the condition, telling packed audiences about her highs and lows.

Her book "Changing My Mind" details her life as it's been affected by the disorder and offers advice to others who live with it.
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