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New services plan for ethnic minorities

Posted: 23 October 2003 | Subscribe Online


An ambitious draft framework to improve mental health services for ethnic minorities over the next 10 years has been published by the Department of Health.

It is hoped that the consultation will produce services that better reflect "the needs and aspirations" of service users from these groups.

Among the aims are more effective treatment, reduced fear of mental health services and a greater readiness among people from ethnic minorities to engage with services.

"The pathways to care of black and minority ethnic users will thus realign with the majority population, with fewer entering services compulsorily and/or via the criminal justice system," the document says.
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It outlines what those planning, delivering and monitoring local primary care and mental health services must do to remedy the current situation which, it says, is "unacceptable and unsustainable".

It recommends that patients' ethnicity is recorded and that the workforce is made representative of the community it serves.

The chief executive of the Sainsbury Centre for Mental Health, Matt Muijen, welcomed the strategy. He said: "Black people fear seeking help with mental health problems because they are still far more likely than others to be diagnosed with schizophrenia, to be treated compulsorily and to be taken to hospital by the police." 

- Delivering Race Equality: A Framework for Action from www.doh.gov.uk/deliveringraceequality 


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