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Patients rely on charities for new clothes as trusts 'shirk obligations'

Posted: 08 April 2004 | Subscribe Online


People with mental health problems who spend a long time in hospital receiving treatment are being denied suitable clothing by mental health trusts.

Many patients have to rely on the hospital to provide their clothes as they are unable to afford them. Under current legislation, people who stay in hospital for more than a year automatically have their benefits cut to £15.50 a week, which is to cover all necessities from haircuts to transport for home visits.

Mental health charity Mind has received a letter from a social worker asking for a clothing grant of around £150 so that his client can buy some new clothes.
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The client, who is diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia, has been detained under the Mental Health Act 1983 since 1972, but the aim is to move him on to a high support hostel in his home area. However, the man only has a few clothes that are old and need replacing.

The social worker, who did not want to be named, said that funds for clothing were not made available by his trust. To combat this, he has been forced to come up with "creative solutions" in order to meet clients' clothing needs, using the Social Fund and voluntary groups.

Richard Brook, chief executive of Mind, said that the refusal of mental health trusts to honour their obligation under the National Service Framework for Mental Health to provide essential clothing was widespread, and called on the government to remind them they cannot "shirk their responsibilities".
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"In a supposedly civilised society, we shouldn't be seeing people with mental health problems kept so far below the poverty line and deprived of their self-esteem," he said.

Last month, health minister Rosie Winterton said that the NSF made it clear that trusts should ensure arrangements were in place to bring about "good standards of privacy and dignity for hospital patients".

In a written answer to the House of Commons, she added that the care programme approach required patients' health and social care needs to be fully addressed in their care plans, which should be regularly reviewed, particularly upon discharge from hospital.


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