BETTER
MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES FOR ASIANS
(17 October 2003)
Health
Minister, Rosie Winterton, today launched the consultation paper:
Delivering Race Equality: A Framework for Action. This will inform
a period of three months consultation on how best to improve mental
health services for Black and minority ethnic communities. People
from Black and minority ethnic communities express lower satisfaction
rates than the general population within the health service. Rosie
Winterton said: "To achieve race equality and better community
relations, whether in central government, local government, health
services, voluntary groups or local communities, all of us need
to work together to deliver better services for people from Black
and minority ethnic communities. Services that are informed about
their needs, and appropriate and responsive to those needs."
Currently:
- Black
people constitute 30% of the patient group in medium secure services
and 16% of high secure services.
-
Black people are over six times more likely than the majority
population to be detained under the Mental Health Act.
-
Women born in India and East Africa have a 40% higher suicide
rate than those born in England and Wales.
The
Department of Health has been researching these issues to provide
the framework and will work with the health service, voluntary groups
and local communities to consult properly on how best to:
- improve
the provision of services to Black and minority ethniccommunities
-
ensure that those communities are informed about and consulted
on services
-
ensure they are willing and able to work in partnership with services.
The
Department has set a clear target for improvements in services for
people from Black and minority ethnic communities including the
employment of 500 Community Development Workers by 2006. These workers
will play an important part in helping services implement the framework
for action.
To
help services achieve improvements, the National Institute for Mental
Health England (NIMHE) is establishing a major implementation programme
headed by Professor Kamlesh Patel OBE. This will start with high
profile consultation events in all NIMHE regions. The programme
will include
- Ambitious
series of community based projects to identify the recruitment
pool for the 500 new Workers and increase communities' engagement
with services
-
Major national project to improve the quality of data on ethnicity,
in partnership with the inspectorates
-
Creation of 9 new senior regional posts within NIMHE to lead on
Race Equality.
Kamlesh
Patel OBE, Chair of the Mental Health Act Commission and the Director
of the Centre for Ethnicity and Health at the University of Central
Lancashire, said:
"This
is a long-term, whole-system approach designed to gain commitment
and ownership from stakeholders, instill knowledge and confidence
in the workforce and build mutual trust between services and the
communities they serve. I am confident that this holistic, multi-layered
approach will succeed."
The
consultation paper : Delivering
Race Equality: A Framework for Action is available online. A
free print copy can also be found by ringing the Department of Health
response line on 08701 555 455.
The
consultation will run from 17 October 2003 to 23 Jan 2004. This
is a long-term commitment. A full review of implementation will
take place in 2007. A reassessment of the impact of mental health
services on Black and minority ethnic communities, including public
consultation, will be carried out in 2010. The results of both reviews
will be published.
KARMA
NIRVANA
A good
example improved services can be found in Derby. Karma
Nirvana is an Asian women's project in Derby funded by the National
Lottery and others including the local PCT and Social Services.
Its objectives are to support and promote the physical and emotional
health of Asian women, provide a befriending/support service, empower
Asian women to become active participants in promoting their own
health and well-being and liaise with voluntary and statutory bodies
to ensure the needs of Asian women are heard and met. It held a
conference in 2000 on South Asian women self-harm and suicide that
highlighted the significance of the GP role in early diagnosis and
prevention, and the need for training/awareness raising on the risk
factors leading to emotional distress in young Asian women.
Karma
Nirvana is conducting with Derby Mental Health Research Unit a local
research project looking at factors of subordination, shame and
entrapment and how these can affect the mental health of Asian women,
particularly depression, and the implications for service delivery.
It has identified the four main reasons for Asian women not accessing
mental health services to be: 'Izzat' (a learnt complex set of rules
an individual has to follow to protect the family honour and keep
his/her position in the community); confidentiality; fear of being
misunderstood; and unawareness of the available services.
Tel
Karma Nirvana on 01332 604098/299166.
Top
|