Recent years have seen a surge of interest in mental healthcare. Media columns, royal endorsements, prominence in policy and legislative agenda all point to the gradual erosion of stigma surrounding mental illness. However, the most recent Care Quality Commission report on mental health services showed that services still struggle to provide people with the help they need, with 40% of National Health Service (NHS) providers being rated as poor or requiring improvement in the most fundamental domain of all, safety.1 Although this is widely acknowledged, it has not as yet been remedied and is particularly problematic in the management of so-called mental health crises.
Emergency medical services still operate on the historically established principles developed during the birth of the NHS, with a single means of emergency transport to large accident and emergency (A&E) departments staffed and equipped to largely deal with physical problems. This was entirely understandable in an era when few treatments were available for mental health crises and few people presented to services, but it has become increasingly outdated over time. A significant and rising proportion of A&E attenders come with a mental health crisis of some sort.Reference Barratt, Rojas-García, Clarke, Moore, Whittington and Stockton2,Reference Lowthian, Curtis, Cameron, Stoelwinder, Cooke and McNeil3 Many community mental health services (for all age groups) are increasingly stretched owing to a period of significantly rising demand, and the relatively flat workforce is leading to more people presenting in crisis as we are less able to intervene early and avoid such presentations. It is important to bear this wider picture in mind while thinking about emergency mental healthcare.
There have been welcome developments in emergency mental healthcare, including crisis teams,4,Reference Glover, Arts and Babu5 but these are generally restricted to those already under secondary mental healthcare, with only one service in England to our knowledge being genuinely ‘open access’, with people able to just turn up and be seen. Otherwise, people must go through a general practitioner, the police, or A&E. Indeed, many crisis services have shrunk in recent years, with providers being ‘freed’ from adhering to the evidence-based care of the national service framework and operating under reduced funding.Reference Gilburt6 Many struggle to offer a fast and flexible service to those in need in the face of increasing demand, and many people are discharged early from hospital or not admitted owing to chronic NHS mental health bed shortages.
Other developments have included police street triage services,Reference Kirubarajan, Puntis, Perfect, Tarbit, Buckman and Molodynski7 which despite their name often support people in mental health crises in their own homes as well as in public places. Their introduction has come alongside a welcome drop in the use of police custody for up to 24 h under section 136 of the Mental Health Act, although overall section 136 use has not seen such reductions.8 However, these welcome reductions in police custody use are not universal and cannot solely be attributed to triage services, as both legislation and policy have also substantially changed.9 Street triage services vary markedly; while being part of a crucial safety net, they operate alongside police officers, which consumes significant police time and means that for many the response to their health crisis comes in a police car – a marked contrast to physical care, and distressing and stigmatising for many.
Other welcome initiatives include places where people in crisis can drop in and receive support, generally from staff employed in the charity/third sector. Terminology varies (crisis café, safe haven, etc.), as do mode and hours of operation. Again, provision is variable and few such places, if any, are open 24/7. We could find no empirical evidence for their effectiveness or specific service models or components of models.
The result of all the above is a patchwork of provision developed during isolated attempts to patch up the problem of mental health crisis response rather than developing system-wide solutions. They make crisis care hard to negotiate for anyone, let alone people in distress and their families. It is widely agreed that the current evidence base is poor.Reference Barratt, Rojas-García, Clarke, Moore, Whittington and Stockton2,Reference Murphy, Irving, Adam and Waqar10–Reference Kirst, Pridham, Narrandes, Matheson, Young and Niedra12 We need to ask ourselves some fundamental and difficult questions. Are busy A&E departments the right place for those in crisis, such as those at risk of suicide or self-harm, or those with symptoms of psychosis? Are uniformed police officers the correct response to people in distress who have not acted unlawfully? Why are there so many cracks in provision that people can, and do, fall through during crisis?
We believe a root and branch review of crisis services based upon evidence from this country and overseas is needed. This should be guided by those who receive services and their families, alongside those who provide them. Such a process could move our mental health crisis services (belatedly) into the 21st century. We need to be bold. Initial evaluations of dedicated mental health ambulances in Sweden that work on a similar basis to their physical counterparts are encouraging, with much demand and favourable reports of patient experience.Reference Bouveng, Bengtsson and Carlborg13 In Australia, projects of peer-to-peer support with care packages to avoid hospital admission have shown encouraging results.Reference Lawn, Smith and Hunter14 We need to evaluate the current movement of crisis cafes and safe havens rigorously, both in terms of effectiveness and of models that work (or don't).
The NHS long-term plan (www.longtermplan.nhs.uk) has an ambitious vision for emergency mental health services in particular, with improved access and greater patient focus. It also promises a bolstering of services for people with severe and enduring mental illnesses, and that out of area placements (OAPs) will end. Unfortunately, a very recent NHS reportReference Wyatt, Aldridge, Callaghan, Dyke and Moulin15 has shown that OAPs are actually rising again. However, detailed analysis of spending commitments and the current worsening workforce problems in all disciplines makes it clear that these worthy ambitions cannot be realised without a step change in our thinking about and our valuing of mental healthcare. This, alongside the review of mental health legislation and the universal acknowledgment that services are inadequate, means that now is the time to invest in the future by taking a considered and evidence-based approach to decide what should be available to provide the best experiences of care and the best outcomes. To continue with our ongoing ad hoc, piecemeal approach does our patients a disservice.
About the authors
Andrew Molodynski is the mental health policy lead for the British Medical Association Consultant Committee and a full-time NHS clinical psychiatrist, Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust and Oxford University, Oxford, UK. Stephen Puntis is a senior researcher with an interest in mental health service provision in the Department of Psychiatry, Oxford University, Oxford, UK. Em Mcallister is a Lived Experience Advisor, UK. Hannah Wheeler is a Metropolitan Police Service officer seconded to Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire and Rescue Services, London, UK. Keith Cooper is a senior staff writer at The Doctor Magazine, British Medical Association, London, UK.
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