Friday, March 31, 2006

Senate Inquiry into Mental Health releases its First Report

On 8 March 2005 the Federal government appointed a Select Senate Committee of Inquiry into Mental Health in Australia. The first report of this Inquiry was released on 30 March, 2006. Apart from coverage on the 7.30 Report on ABC television and in The Australian newspaper and the Canberra Times it seems to have drawn little comment. As far as I am concerned the report is just more of the same that has been policy for over 20 years. The report is at the following link:
http://www.aph.gov.au/Senate/committee/mentalhealth_ctte/index.htm

I am also enclosing correspondence which I have had with Senator Lyn Allison Democrat Senator from South Australia who chaired the Committee of Inquiry. See below.

First corro
-----Original Message-----From: Mary Lou Carter [mailto:lairymoo@bigpond.net.au] Sent: Thursday, 30 March 2006 10:58 PMTo: Allison, Lyn (Senator)Subject: Mental Health Inquiry
Dear Ms Allison

Today the report on the Senate Inquiry into Mental Health was released. No-where in the recommendations is there hope for those who are now so mentally ill that only a stint in a hospital setting surrounded by beauty, peace tranquility and professionals to care and treat them will see their sanity and well-being restored. Where is the hope for these people? I couldn't find anything for them. These are the people who have been betrayed by a deliberate, cruel and delinquent policy which never gave them a chance. Or are they to be merely forgotten, left to rot on the streets or incarcerated in the other detention centres, our gaols? Victims of the Oops factor. Where is the social justice for them, social justice being central to your philosophy, honed from your years teaching the disadvantaged? Or is social justice merely thematic?

I am absolutely appalled that nowhere in your recommendations is there a place for hospitals. Do you regard specialist psychiatric hospitals as illegitimate for people with mental illness, after all it is only an illness. If mental illness is to be rendered completely community-based, why not cancer-care or paediatric care or neo-natal care?. The suggestion, which is implicit in your report, is that one is automatically stigmatised by virtue of mental illness. What will happen to the many thousands who are now suffering acute mental illness and acute psychosis, because I can tell you there is not a psychologist alive that can talk someone out of psychosis.

If the recommendations are followed through there may be hope for the future but not for the sufferers today or tomorrow or next week or next year. I am bitterly disappointed for the thousands of families whose loved ones are lost to them thorugh this terrible scourge. If loving them were enough we'd have no need for inquiries of this kind, but they can't love them back to health. What comfort is there for these despairing families,certainly none from this report. It is the right of every citizen to health care treatment and care of the highest quality, it seems that's the case for every person except someone with mental illness.


My sister has a son who suffers mental illness, she also has a son who was an oncology patient. She asks why was every effort made in paediatric onoclogy for even the most hopeless of cases and yet her son with mental illness was told that he was not sick enough to be admitted to hospital with his mental illness. She said that the parents of children with cancer were offered hope when the mentally ill are just offered spin. I think that sums it up beautifully. Smart girl my sister.

The Senate has produced a futuristic report a pity the problems of the here-and-now were not given due consideration.

Yours faithfully


Mary Lou Carter

Response:
From: Allison, Lyn (Senator)
To: Mary Lou Carter
Sent: Friday, March 31, 2006 10:23 AM
Subject: RE: Mental Health Inquiry
Dear Ms Carter
We have indeed made recommendations for long-stay psychiatric hospitals for the chronically mentally ill. Furthermore, this is just the first report which has only those recommendations relevant to the current CoAG process (we were otherwise due to report at the end of April but brought it forward so it would be influential on that process). Another report will follow in a week or two with much more extensive recommendations.
I trust this assists.
Lyn Allison
Chair
Senate Select Committee on Mental Health

Second corro

-----Original Message-----From: Mary Lou Carter [mailto:lairymoo@bigpond.net.au] Sent: Friday, 31 March 2006 11:01 AMTo: Allison, Lyn (Senator)Subject: First report of Senate Inquiry into Mental Illness
Dear Ms Allison
Thank you for your swift response. Yes, this is indeed the case but they are long-stay hospitals for those already regarded as incurables. My concern is that there is no general acceptance that specialist psychiatric hospitals have a place in the integrated service delivery to the mentally ill. Short stays in hospital for any illness is generally accepted except it seems for the mentally ill. It is this very issue which makes mental illness something other than an illness and will continue to cause stigmatisation of the mentally ill if it is treated in a way that is markedly different for other illnesses.

This will continue until there is acceptance by policy-makers, policy-drivers, bureaucrats and politicians that specialist psychiatric hospitals are a legitimate part of the answer. They are not institutions, they are hospitals wherein a broad integrated range of rehabilitative, adaptive, pharmacological, counselling and contemplative therapies are possible. The therapeutic benefits of tranquility of setting must also be accepted because the very busy environs of general hospitals would merely exacerbate the anxiety and confusion of people with mental illness. To say that people with mental illness in a psychotic state should be subjected to waiting in an accident and emergency admission department is not only dangerous to the person with the illness but to the staff and the general public.The mentally ill must have the dignity of knowing that if they are sick they will be cared for promptly, humanely and appropriately.

Unfortunately every Inquiry in the past and they now number in double figures very little positive change was sustained at best it was sporadic and at worst it was sporadic.

I look forward to your second report. All I want is for the heartbreak for the parents and families to stop and for those with mental illness who are in crisis NOW to have a solution NOW.

I appreciate your taking the time to respond to my very emotional email it was late and I was very tearful.

Best wishes

Mary Lou Carter

Response:

From: Allison, Lyn (Senator)
To: Mary Lou Carter
Sent: Friday, March 31, 2006 12:23 PM
Subject: RE: First report of Senate Inquiry into Mental Illness
I certainly understand your concern and it is true that there were those who proposed ongoing stand alone psychiatric hospitals but most others disagreed.
Lyn

______________________________________

I find this response very disturbing because it would seem that the decision to report in the manner published was a matter of numbers rather than efficacy, that is to make things better for the mentally ill. It is mind boggling. This report seems to be just a rehash of the Not for Service report which was a moving chronical of horror and despair but which has given little in the way of hope for those depicted in those stories. What will happen to those people suffering mental illness who are completely forgotten, who suffer injustices, stigma and continuing illness.

1 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Dear Lairy moo,
Your comments are totally justified, it is of course just a bit of icing to cover a half cooked reck of a cake.
Nothing at all was here to assist the really sick and desperate people who wander and sleep on our streets at night.
Nothing short of a lot of long term rehabilitation beds will ease their plight.
Another snow job is wot this is.

7:37 AM  

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