Tory Candidate Chamali Fernando Wants Identifying Wristbands For People With Mental Health Issues

Compassionate Tory Wants Identifying Wristbands For People With Mental Health Issues
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'Maybe it's something as simple as there are certain conditions which are more common, where people can wear a wristband to identify they have that condition'
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People with mental health issues should wear identifying wristbands, according to a compassionate Conservative standing for election.

Chamali Fernando made the suggestion at a hustings in Cambridge, saying the move could help police, medical and legal professionals understand otherwise apparently obstructive behaviour of someone unable to explain themselves.

The barrister said that she was not trained to deal with situations such as people in custody not getting the treatment they need and called for more to be done. "Maybe it's something as simple as there are certain conditions which are more common, where people can wear a wristband to identify they have that condition, so that then we can perhaps, not diagnose, but spot it earlier and ensure that we deal with it," she was reported to have said.

Unsurprisingly, the notion was immediately attacked, with the Liberal Democrats -- who are defending a 6,792 majority in the city -- calling the remarks "shocking" and "outrageous".

Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg, who has campaigned to improve treatment of mental health, told MailOnline: "The Liberal Democrats have spent many years campaigning for an end to the stigma around mental health. Silly ideas like making people suffering from mental health issues wear wristbands would only increase the discrimination and stigma around mental health, rather than end it."

Fernando subsequently said her comments had been distorted for political ends while here party insisted she was not making the "draconian" suggestion of compulsory wristbands.

Lib Dem Health Minister Norman Lamb said: "I'm absolutely horrified at this frankly outrageous suggestion that people with mental health problems should be forced to wear wristbands. This follows the launch of a manifesto where the Tories are again threatening to reduce benefits for people who reject forced mental health treatment. It seems like once again we're seeing the same old Tories with archaic attitudes to mental health that will only entrench stigma and make people's lives more difficult."

Her Lib Dem rival Julian Huppert said: "I hope Chamali regrets her comments and will think carefully about her attitude to mental illness in the future."

The comment came after the chairman of the city's National Autistic Society said he carried a green card in his wallet to identify his condition, a local Tory spokesman said. "Chamali Fernando gave the example of how people are wrongly accused of obstructing the course of justice for failure to co-operate with the police through no fault of their own and in those instances an identifier could prove useful."

He added: "It would be a matter of individual choice and through consultation with experts and would need to be accompanied with the requisite training for health care and law enforcement professionals."

Below are 8 graphs David Cameron does not want you to see:

8 Graphs David Cameron Does Not Want You To See
Your pay won't be back to normal for years...(01 of08)
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Inflation is still eating at your pay packet, which means you're getting poorer in real terms, and it will take a while before it not just starts to improve, but returns to pre-recession levels. Your pay packet is still continuing to fall by more than in any prior recovery and is down 8% since May 2010, experts warn.
You're still worse off than back in 2008(02 of08)
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Portes said: "What really matters is how rich we are - per capita GDP - and that's well below the level of 2008 and won't get back to its previous level for a couple of years."As the picture for GDP per capita, charting individual output per person, Britain is lagging behind France, Germany, Japan and the US and is nowhere near where it was back in 2008.
Britons are getting more in debt (03 of08)
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The country's own debt is still rising (04 of08)
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Osborne pledged to ensure that debt was falling by 2015-2016 in his first budget, but now is set to see debt only start to fall by 2016-2017 as it soars further and further past £1 trillion
Osborne will keep struggling to get us exporting (05 of08)
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Despite Osborne warning in his Budget that he wants businesses to export more, the OBR predicts that the UK's exports will still fail to make a net contribution to the country's growth. It said: "Net trade is expected to make little contribution to growth over the remainder of the forecast period, reflecting the weakness of export market growth and a gradual decline in export market share."
Osborne borrowed more in 3 years than Labour in 13 (06 of08)
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Osborne's austerity message was brutally undermined last November when the Office for National Statistics found that the coalition had borrowed £430.072 billion since it took over, whereas the last Labour government managed to borrow just £429.975 billion.
We're still not very productive...(07 of08)
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The ONS states: "The headline story of weak productivity remains, and the latest GDP growth revisions do not offer a solution to the ‘productivity conundrum’." Economic productivity was still 2.5% below its pre-crisis peak in the last quarter of 2012, the statistics body said.
How's that deficit reduction going? (08 of08)
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George Osborne's hopes of eliminating Britain's deficit by 2018 look to be increasingly hard as the decline in the country's rate of borrowing appears to have stalled.