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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament 27 November 2019

27 Nov 2019 · S5 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Mental Health

I thank the Liberal Democrats for bringing this important debate to the chamber. No one in the chamber can deny the growing recognition in Scotland of the need to embark on a step change in mental health support. A staggering one in three Scots are estimated to experience mental health problems, sometimes with knock-on effects on physical health, personal relationships and work.

The Scottish Conservatives believe that it is vital that we move towards parity of esteem between mental and physical health. We need to start valuing mental health as much as we value other kinds of health. We cannot let it be seen as something that can be overlooked. It cannot take a back seat.

We have come a long way in how we value mental health, but there is still much further to go. Scotland could be a world leader in the area, but it is clear that, right now, we are not—nowhere near it. Last year, the mental health themed programme for government promised

“Speedier access to specialist care for all those who need it”,

yet, in that time and under this Government, nearly one quarter of adults wait too long for psychological therapy. That is not good enough. The Government has made a habit of making grand promises and not delivering on them. Mental health is just another area in which the Government’s words are not matched by its actions.

That is particularly a problem among young patients, with the latest CAMHS statistics revealing that almost a third of vulnerable children are waiting too long for mental health treatment. Last year, an Audit Scotland report stated that mental health services for children were too “complex and fragmented”. Even the Scottish Government's own children and young people’s mental health task force published recommendations earlier this year calling for transformational change to mental health services for young people.

Urgent improvements to access to services must be made to ensure that all children get a speedy and appropriate diagnosis. Anything less will fail children and their families. We should be trying to tackle mental health problems as soon as they occur and at the earliest possible age. Instead, issues are going untreated and, in many cases, getting much worse.

The latest figures also show a high number of vacancies for mental health services. The vacancy rate of 8.6 per cent across psychological services is the highest rate ever reported for the month of June. The Royal College of Psychiatrists has warned that psychiatric services in Scotland are facing a workforce crisis and child services are once again in the firing line, with the college warning that data from its 2019 census reveals that one in six consultant posts in the service are unfilled.

We welcomed the Scottish Government's announcement that it would provide funding to support the employment of 800 additional mental health workers by 2021-22. However, progress has moved at a glacial pace. More than two years since that pledge was made, the Government’s figures show that only 327 whole-time equivalent posts have been filled. In addition, only 112 of the 250 link workers that the Government pledged have been recruited so far, which is less than half the promised number. Those targets must be met.

In the same item of business

The Presiding Officer (Ken Macintosh) NPA
The next item of business is a Scottish Liberal Democrat debate on motion S5M-03438, in the name of Willie Rennie, on mental health. 14:39
Willie Rennie (North East Fife) (LD) LD
What I am about to tell the chamber is quite shocking; it should shake the Government to the core. I am disappointed that Humza Yousaf, the Cabinet Secretary...
Keith Brown (Clackmannanshire and Dunblane) (SNP) SNP
On the subject of being ashamed, is Willie Rennie ashamed that the last time that the Liberal Democrats were in power, they oversaw huge budget cuts to menta...
Willie Rennie LD
Police officers across the country will be listening to the deputy leader of the Scottish National Party. They will be furious that he has ignored every word...
Neil Findlay (Lothian) (Lab) Lab
Will Willie Rennie give way?
Willie Rennie LD
I will in a second. Only 3 per cent of officers think that Police Scotland cares, and 35 per cent turn up for work mentally unwell. The Government should be...
Neil Findlay Lab
When they turn up at work, those very same officers have to deal with increasing numbers of mental health cases in their duties every day. The officers I was...
Willie Rennie LD
Neil Findlay is very much in touch with what is happening. He understands the pressures that our police officers are under, which is exactly what I am about ...
The Cabinet Secretary for Health and Sport (Jeane Freeman) SNP
Will Willie Rennie take an intervention?
Willie Rennie LD
I will in a second. I have spoken before about how the strategy was 15 months late, which delayed critical investment. Today, I want to talk about progress ...
Jeane Freeman SNP
Will Willie Rennie give way?
Willie Rennie LD
In a second. A third of the staff hired so far have been diverted to those “other settings”. The Scottish Association for Mental Health wants clarification ...
Jeane Freeman SNP
Notwithstanding Willie Rennie’s point about psychological therapies, which I do not dismiss, eight out of 10 patients are seen within the 18-week period that...
Willie Rennie LD
That is fine, but it is not what the Government promised. The Government promised that the personnel would go to “A&E departments, GP practices, police...
The Minister for Public Health, Sport and Wellbeing (Joe FitzPatrick) SNP
Mental health is a priority for the Government. It is not a short-term priority and it is not a here today, gone tomorrow political issue. Instead, mental he...
Neil Findlay Lab
Will the minister take an intervention on that point?
Joe FitzPatrick SNP
I would like to make a little progress first, and then I will see whether I have time. The Government is taking a long-term, wide-ranging approach to mental...
Miles Briggs (Lothian) (Con) Con
I notice that the Government’s amendment attempts to delete the word “crisis” from the Liberal Democrats’ motion. Recently, the Royal College of Psychiatrist...
Joe FitzPatrick SNP
Through the policies that it is putting in place, the Scottish Government is making stringent efforts to improve the situation. There is a huge contrast betw...
Alex Cole-Hamilton (Edinburgh Western) (LD) LD
Will the member take an intervention?
Joe FitzPatrick SNP
I will cover some of the points that Mr Rennie made earlier. As of October, more than 320 full-time equivalent mental health workers have been recruited and...
Willie Rennie LD
Will the member take an intervention?
Joe FitzPatrick SNP
Time is tight and I want to cover one of the main areas that Willie Rennie covered. Through a strong collaborative approach across different services, the p...
Annie Wells (Glasgow) (Con) Con
I thank the Liberal Democrats for bringing this important debate to the chamber. No one in the chamber can deny the growing recognition in Scotland of the ne...
Jeane Freeman SNP
Does Ms Wells accept that, as we are halfway through the period, having half the number of community link workers that was committed to is a reasonable posit...
Annie Wells Con
We have one year left in which to recruit. We have seen the number move at such a slow pace. I just want to make sure that the targets are met, so I am looki...
Mary Fee (West Scotland) (Lab) Lab
I thank the Liberal Democrats for lodging today’s motion on mental health. I associate myself with what has been said about the frankly shocking statistics o...
Emma Harper (South Scotland) (SNP) SNP
Will the member take an intervention?
Mary Fee Lab
I would like to make some progress, please. Despite the higher profile of mental health, it is still not discussed as much as, and treated on a par with, ph...
Jeane Freeman SNP
Mary Fee knows that I share her commitment to the quality of work that is done with offenders. Does she accept that the approach has to be collaborative? If ...