Praise for mental health service

By Martin Neville

Sunday, October 21, 2012

 

Praise for mental health service

Paddy Noctor.

MOST community mental health patients are happy with the service they receive, according to a report by a local healthcare watchdog.

The Isle of Wight LINk, which surveyed 126 community mental health patients, found eight out of ten people felt they had good access to services and received a good, or very good, level of empathy and respect.

But concern was raised about the capacity of services to cope with demands placed upon them.

More than seven out of ten said the care they had received was effective or quite effective.

One said "Every time I’ve needed someone, they have been very responsive" and another added "I have had good support with self management."

However, one in ten said they had not received enough help, and the same number said they had received very little empathy and respect.

Nearly one in five said they had not been involved in their care and most of those questioned did not know if they had a crisis plan.

One respondent said: "Mental health services need to be improved dramatically. I know there are limits but no staff have ever fully listened to the traumas I have experienced."

Concerns were raised about the variation in the quality of care depending on individual health workers, and the service was struggling to cope with the number of patients, currently around 1,800.

"What is emerging is the capacity of services to cope with the demands being placed upon it," said the report.

"Workload figures produced by the Isle of Wight NHS Trust reveal a service silting up with patients. The lack of ongoing support mechanisms within the community is creating blockages (500-plus currently in the rehabilitation system and 200-plus in the acute and recovery phase after one year)."

Project lead Paddy Noctor said: "The report, which interviewed a good proportion of community mental health service users on the Island, showed services were accessible and most people received good treatment from staff.

"There were a few areas for improvement, including the inconsistency in crisis planning, support for those living in their own homes and the lack of a really independent service user network.

"We are looking forward to working with commissioners and providers to help implement improvements in these areas."

Reporter: martinn@iwcpmail.co.uk

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by Wendy Hastings

12th February 2013, at 07:13:12

I may be the only voice of dissension in this discussion. I have been in the system for ten years and I can see vast improvement from when I was first diagnosed and sent home with a sheet of A4 telling me what was wrong with me. I used to see a different Psychiatrist, now I usually see the same one. I have had very good support workers, been sent on various courses; WRAP, self esteem, anxiety and have found the help I have recieved very good indeed. Not perfect, but it never could be as no one is. I have improved, recovered, had setbacks and am now volunteering with a view to returning to work. It's worth noting, with respect, that recovery is ultimately in the hands of the patient and they need to be pro active in this. No one can hand you a magic wand cure but you can make your life better by taking better care of yourself.

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by Kevin Barclay-Jay

22nd October 2012, at 21:26:02

Without great pieces of propaganda like this, how are they going to find an investor/buyer for this service...the council have no desire to keep funding it

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by Mrs James

22nd October 2012, at 10:29:22

Well Im speechless for once...!!! Paddy Noctor has worked long and hard but howhe of all people, or anyone else can say Mental Health Services on the Island anything but Dire is beyond me...!!!
I do know that choosing 126 people out of 1,800 to get opinions from shows me they have chosen carefully and of course the forms have boxes to tick which are carefully worded that no matter which box you tick it will give then a positive reply, anyone who has ever done a business study course knows thats how its done but you try phoning the Mental Health Team and see how you get treated I know Ive done it. I agree with what Steven says here I think its a Disgrace also a lot of people will say they are happy as they are scared they will lose what bit of support they get if they speak out, so if someone totally independent were to do a survey of all 1,800 people and asked people to just tell them in their own words, also anon, it would be a very different story ...

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by steven weston

21st October 2012, at 14:47:44

Im sorry but my partner has Mental Health issues and the services on the island over the past 10 years have not helped in anyway. There is one person that has made a difference. After experiencing some of the assessments with the Mental Health team it seems they are the ones with problems. I feel sorry for those that need help.

Any views or opinions presented in the comments above are solely those of the author and do not represent those of the Isle of Wight County Press.

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