Mental health services are providing an "appalling" level of care to black and mixed race in-patients, a government watchdog has found.
In the first survey of its kind, the Mental Health Act Commission looked at 425 service users and found that a third of black people said they had faced discrimination because of race and more than three times as many black patients than white patients believed nurses were rarely or never helpful.
Mixed race patients were twice as likely to say their psychiatrist was rarely or never friendly compared with white patients. Black and mixed race patients were also more likely to have been restrained during their current stay in hospital or have experienced unwanted sexual advances from staff than all other groups.
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