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Scots charities hit out at lack of training on new Mental Health Act

Posted: 06 October 2005 | Subscribe Online


Voluntary sector staff in Scotland might be unprepared for the introduction of the new Mental Health Act this week because some have been unable to undergo training, campaigners fear.

Two of the main voluntary sector providers of care services say training in the workings of the new act has focused mainly on the legal responsibilities of front-line staff, such as mental health officers, and neglected community care staff.

With the new act - which came in on 5 October - strengthening compulsion powers and introducing community-based compulsory treatment orders, community care staff are likely to have a greater role in caring for clients.

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Nigel Henderson, chief executive of service provider Penumbra, said most of the emphasis had been on training the statutory sector.

"A community treatment order may say where a person has to live or spend some of their time - that is likely to be in the voluntary sector but there's been less emphasis on bringing staff up to speed," he said.

"A number of our staff have been able to piggyback onto local authority training courses but that's by no means uniform across the country."

The Scottish Association for Mental Health backed Henderson's concerns. Legal officer Sandra McDougall said training had focused on MHOs and psychiatrists at the expense of nursing staff.

"The executive focus has been on front-line compulsory duties but part of a community-based order could be to stay in a particular treatment facility or visit a community care service," she added.
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She also raised concerns that the new Mental Health Tribunal would not be able to cope with the expected demand because case hearings would be more thorough and many people held under the old act would have waited to appeal their case under the new act. 

But tribunal president Eileen Davie said it was prepared, and had estimated the six tribunal sites would handle 3,500 to 5,000 cases in the first year.

"People may want to seek a revocation of an order when they may not have done before but we have taken account of that," she added.


 



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