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Axe falls on mental health commission

Posted: 29 July 2004 | Subscribe Online


The Mental Health Act Commission is to be abolished in the forthcoming mental health bill.

Responsibility for the regulation of the care of people detained under the 1983 legislation will be passed to the Healthcare Commission, which replaced the Commission for Health Improvement in April.

The change, announced last week, is part of the Department of Health's drive to increase efficiency by reducing the number of its arm's length public bodies from 38 to 20.

Whether all the commissioners employed by the Mental Health Act Commission will transfer and retain the same freedoms and powers to visit and interview detained patients in private and consider both the lawfulness of detention and the overall quality of care is yet to be decided.
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Details are expected to be published in the autumn, perhaps alongside the revised version of the draft Mental Health Bill, which is due in September.

The General Social Care Council, Commission for Social Care Inspection and National Treatment Agency all survived the DoH's cull.

GSCC chair Rodney Brooke said the council was delighted that the government decision would enable it to continue driving up standards.

He said: "The 1.5 million people using social care every day are at the heart of our mission. It is important for them that the social care workforce is properly trained, checked and accountable for delivering high standards of care."


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