Mental health Funding Abused By Local Bodies

Mental health Funding Abused By Local Bodies

By Lucy Caulkett-

Local health bodies have been diverting new funding received for children’s mental health to other priorities.

 

Charity, young minds, found in a research that only 36% increased their children’s health mental services spend during 2015-2016.

 

Nearly two-thirds (64%) of CCGs responded that they used some or all of the extra money to backfill cuts or to spend on other priorities.

A similar pattern for the 2016-17 financial year was also discovered by the charity. Only half of CCGs who responded increased their Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) spend to reflect thei additional Government funds. The other half, according to the research said they were using some or all of the extra money for other priorities.

The finding is shameful and really calls for an investigation. Mental health is a serious issue and government money should never be abused in that manner.

 

Sarah Brennan, the chief executive of young minds said the finding was deeply concerning.   ‘‘after years of cuts, the government’s recent investment in children’s mental health services was hugely welcome, and we should now be witnessing significant improvements across the country,’ said Sarah Brennan, chief executive of Young Minds.

‘But the reality is that the situation varies enormously from one area to the next. While some CCGs have made big increases in their spending, it’s deeply concerning that so many others are using some of the new money to backfill cuts or to spend on other priorities.’

An alarming finding of the research according to Sarah Brennan was that fewer than half of the CCGs who responded were able to provide full information about their CAMHS budgets,

‘If they aren’t properly tracking how much money they are spending, it is impossible to say whether services are improving,’ she said.

Responding to the charity’s findings, the chief executive of NHS Clinical Commissioners Julie Wood said: ‘Clinical commissioners are serious and ambitious about improving mental health services and achieving parity of esteem for patients, carers and local populations.

‘Mental health trusts provide invaluable and critical services but mental health service provision is wider than this and it is the overall picture of mental health services which matters.’

‘The commitment that CCGs have towards improving mental health and the investment that they are making is real but it is a fact that they are working in an incredibly financially challenged climate, with a number of high priority and competing demands on their budgets,’ Ms Wood added.

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