On behalf of the Health and Social Care Committee, it is a pleasure to present to the House our report on the subject of community mental health services. I thank the Backbench Business Committee for allocating time for this statement.
Mental health services are failing too many people. As MPs, we hear heartbreaking stories from our constituents every day: individuals who struggle to navigate a complex, poorly resourced system; clinicians frustrated that they cannot provide the level of care they would like to; or, worst of all, families who have tragically lost loved ones, knowing that they could have been saved if care had been more responsive. This area is also personal to me, as my partner, Rosy, lives with bipolar, and I have seen at first hand the good, the bad and the downright absent of the mental healthcare system.
The inquiry looked under the bonnet of community care, especially for those with severe mental illness. We received a wealth of evidence but the most compelling came from those who we call “experts by experience”, such as Chris Frederick, who said:
“Despite some of the referrals, recommendations and lots of content on social media—‘You should try these different techniques’—you really are on your own. There is nobody there to support you.”
Powerful stories like this drove our 22 recommendations to improve community mental health provision, but today I only have time to highlight just a few.
First, we need proper, integrated mental health care in the community. There is an NHS England pilot programme for six 24/7 neighbourhood mental health centres, and we saw at first hand in Barnsley Street how patients were able to walk in and receive the treatment and care that they needed. There were no complicated referrals and no “pathway says no”; they were able to take the brave step of asking for help and getting it. And it is not just about help with clinical needs, because in the same building there are people who help with housing, benefits and more. One staff member said,
“this place helps people feel like a skilled person, not just an ill person”.
That makes perfect sense, because a person is not just their diagnosis and we get better results by taking a more deliberate, holistic approach.
The outcomes of the pilots are emerging, but clinicians told me that they are seeing fewer patients in the local A&E in crisis and fewer needing expensive in-patient care. The approach works for patients but also for staff and families. In an unusually bleak landscape, it felt like an oasis in the desert. The Committee is therefore disappointed that the Government rejected our recommendation to extend the pilots by another 12 months beyond April 2026. However, they do agree that the learning should be rolled out nationwide, so I welcome the £473 million of funding to be made available to integrated care boards to invest in models like the pilots. I am, however, hearing from existing centres that they are deeply concerned about the future, with funding ending and their ICBs already reprioritising. What a waste.