Mental Health Alliance’s Joint Letter to the Prime Minister on the King’s Speech
Alongside partners in the Mental Health Alliance, The Association has co-signed a joint letter to the Prime Minister expressing our disappointment at the exclusion of the Mental Health Bill in the King’s Speech. Read the full letter below.
Dear Prime Minister,
On behalf of the people we support, we’re writing to express our deep disappointment and concern that the King’s Speech did not include a mental health bill.
Reform of the outdated Mental Health Act 1983 is urgently needed – and has been promised. The 2019 Conservative election manifesto included commitments to “legislate so that patients suffering from mental health conditions, including anxiety or depression, have greater control over their treatment and receive the dignity and respect they deserve” and to “improve how [people with learning disabilities and autism] are treated in law”. There has been a huge investment in the reform process over many years, with an independent review of the act commissioned by former Prime Minister Theresa May in 2017, a white paper in 2021, draft bill in 2022 and pre-legislative scrutiny report in 2023. Many individuals, as well as officials and organisations across the mental health sector, have worked extensively on it.
But more important than the huge effort already put into reform, will be the impact on people across the country going through the worst and most vulnerable time of their lives. Being detained under the Mental Health Act is one of the most serious and traumatic things that can happen to someone. The independent review heard “many stories from service users that detention not only had little beneficial effect, but left some worse, and not better, off”. And “too often and in too many areas the experiences of those of Black African and Caribbean heritage is one of either being excluded or detained”. More and more people are being detained under the Act every year, with Black people being over four times more likely to be detained than White people. Abandoning this reform, betrays the people it set out to support.
Legislative change cannot happen soon enough. In addition, we urgently need resources now to improve mental health care and community support more widely so people can receive treatment and support when they need it, with a focus on preventing crisis situations and inappropriate detention under the Mental Health Act.
Yours sincerely,
Alun Thomas, Chief Executive, Adferiad Recovery
Indy Cross, Chief Executive, Agenda Alliance
Kathy Roberts, Chief Executive, Association of Mental Health Providers
Vava Tampa, Chair, BASW England
Ben Higgins, CEO, Bild
Simon Kitchen, CEO, Bipolar UK
Anna Daroy CEO, British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy
Sarb Bajwa, Chief Executive, British Psychological Society
Andy Bell, Chief Executive, Centre for Mental Health
Viv Cooper OBE, CEO, The Challenging Behaviour Foundation
Amy Whitelock Gibbs, Chair, The Children and Young People’s Mental Health Coalition
Daisy Long, COO, DCC Interactive Ltd (DCC-i)
Dr Vanessa Pinfold, Co-founder and Research Director, McPin Foundation
Jackie O’Sullivan, Acting Chief Executive, Mencap
Sean Duggan OBE, CEO, NHS Confederation’s Mental Health Network
Brian Dow, Chief Executive, Mental Health UK
Sarah Hughes, Chief Executive, Mind
National Autistic Society
Jen Beardsley, Interim CEO, National Survivor User Network
Leigh Wallbank, CEO, OCD Action
Jabeer Butt OBE, Chief Executive, Race Equality Foundation
Mark Winstanley, Chief Executive, Rethink Mental Illness
Marjorie Wallace CBE, Chief Executive, SANE
Linda Bryant, Chief Executive, Together for Mental Wellbeing
Sheilabye Sobrany, President, Royal College of Nursing
Jonathan Senker, CEO, VoiceAbility
Joyce Kallevik, Director, WISH