Mental health chief admits NHS is racist

    The chief executive of the National Institute for Mental Health
    admitted that parts of the NHS are institutionally racist,
    writes Katie Leason.

    Giving evidence at the independent inquiry into the death of
    mental health inpatient David Bennett, NIMHE chief executive
    Anthony Sheehan was asked if the NHS was racist, and he said:
    “It is true. We should have no tolerance of it.”

    Bennett, a 38-year-old Afro-Caribbean patient, died in The
    Norvic Clinic, a medium secure psychiatric unit in Norwich, at the
    end of October 1998 after being restrained by staff.

    When asked what he could do to help tackle racism in mental
    health services, Sheehan replied that there would be “a
    strong and visible black presence in NIMHE”, with 12 more
    appointments being made by the end of the year. Currently only two
    out of 28 of the institute’s senior managers are from black and
    ethnic minorities.

    Consultant psychiatrist Sashi Sashidharan, sitting on the panel,
    asked Sheehan how commitment towards improving mental health
    services for black and ethnic minorities could really be judged
    given that the history of mental health services and the DoH was
    “so awfully inadequate”.

     “I do not believe this organisation can tackle all racism
    in the NHS, but it will begin to tackle it in mental health,”
    replied Sheehan.

    Earlier, chairperson of the inquiry Sir John Blofeld, a retired
    high court judge, said that the general impression was that there
    was “a lot of good will, but that everyone was leaving it to
    someone else to say what should be done”.

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