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It Only Takes a Minute... (Read 568 times)
Annie Anthrax
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It Only Takes a Minute...
Jun 22nd, 2010 at 8:27pm
 
I hope this isn't against the forum rules, but I thought it important enough to post.  

The following is from a Get Up email:


Quote:
"I lost my beautiful youngest daughter to suicide 3 years ago... She was not referred on to an appropriate service after suffering post-natal depression... She had 3 children whom she adored, and she had so much to live for. She said to me not long before she died, 'Mum, I wish I had cancer, then people would be more understanding and caring'. We need improved and increased specialised services NOW." --Mary, a GetUp member who shared her story.


--- A message to you from Prof John Mendoza ---

On Friday I resigned my position as the head advisor to the Rudd Government on mental health. And it's because of stories like Mary's and my frustration over the Government's failure to do more to prevent them.

So, today I'm taking the unusual step of writing to you through GetUp to ask you to sign this petition, because I've come to the regrettable conclusion that my advice was not getting through - only public pressure will spur politicians into action.

Every day 330 Australians with serious mental illnesses are turned away from Emergency Departments, and 1,200 Australians are refused admission to a public or private psychiatric unit.

Every day more than 7 people die as a result of suicide, and more than a third of those have been discharged too early or without care from hospitals. For each of those 7 Australians, there are 7 families who mourn them, 7 groups of friends who ask themselves, 'why?'

And every day our political leaders fail to take action, this crisis worsens. This petition will be presented at Parliament House on Thursday - please add your name now through the GetUp website below:

www.getup.org.au/campaign/MentalHealth

On Thursday, I and over 60 mental health organisations from across Australia intend to present a letter to Kevin Rudd with a plan of action for mental health. But so far, the Prime Minister has declined to receive it, and so too has the Health Minister, Nicola Roxon.

If 60,000 Australians get behind those 60 organisations by signing this petition, perhaps the Government will stand up and take notice. Please join us by adding your name through the GetUp website below:

www.getup.org.au/campaign/MentalHealth

There are programs on the ground right now, proven to be effective - but we need real leadership and new investment to roll them out nationally. The Headspace youth mental health centres and psychosis intervention services pioneered by Professor McGorry are excellent and can reach hundreds of thousands of young Australians, if we make an additional investment of $250 million a year. The lack of spending right now means that tens of thousands of young Australians have no access to care.

We also need to expand programs for child mental health, so that the parents of every child with a learning or developmental disorder can access effective services. We must also provide more support for the 63,000 homeless Australians suffering from mental illness, and invest in e-health services that can reach hundreds of thousands of sufferers cost effectively.

Lastly, we owe it to our children, and their peers, to implement a national suicide prevention service. Suicide is the number 1 cause of death for men 16-44 and women 16-34 years. But across Australia, life-saving suicide prevention services are starved for funds. $100 million would expand these crucial services and concentrate on suicide hot spots like 'The Gap' in Sydney, where just last week the Federal and NSW Governments passed up on the opportunity to fund an effective suicide prevention project.

For too long, successive Governments have failed to take mental health seriously. It's now the leading cause of disability for all Australians and the leading killer of those under 44. On Friday, the Prime Minister restated his commitment "to do more on mental health" and that the next cab off the rank was mental health." They've been saying that for six months, but if they're serious, these sensible investments can start saving lives and alleviate suffering today.

The concerted efforts of mental health campaigners, including GetUp members, have been effective in securing small pledges from the Government this year - but we need an investment of at least $500 million to start turning this health crisis around. It's within our grasp. A poll commissioned by GetUp this weekend found that 83% of Australians would be in favour of investing $500 million in mental health immediately.
The policies are there, the public support is there and million of Australians are waiting for help - now we need the public political pressure to make it happen. Please join the call by adding your name at: http://www.getup.org.au/campaign/MentalHealth

Thanks,
Prof. John Mendoza

*Mary is a GetUp member who shared her family's story with other GetUp members when we launched the mental health campaign. Her name has been changed in respect for her privacy.

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Annie Anthrax
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Re: It Only Takes a Minute...
Reply #1 - Jun 22nd, 2010 at 8:36pm
 
And a pretty good interview with Mendoza on his resignation..

Quote:


MARK COLVIN: The Federal Government’s approach to mental health is under attack in the wake of the resignation of the chairman of its National Advisory Council on the subject. The Government is claiming that professor John Mendoza resigned on the basis of scuttlebutt about a lack of funding. He says he went because the council no longer has the Government’s confidence. He accuses the Government of having no vision or commitment to mental health.

I asked professor Mendoza what developments had made him angry enough to resign.

JOHN MENDOZA: Well it’s a frustration rather than anger. When I took this role on I genuinely believed that the Government was going to take a different approach to mental health reform. They’d certainly made clear in opposition that they were determined to address the long standing problems in this area.

They had commented on many aspects of the Howard government’s response in this area as being inadequate and wanting to do a lot better and, in fact, the formation of the council was specifically in response to, I guess, the lack of progress from the reform policy agenda that had been in place for some time.

So after two years, however, it was pretty clear we were getting nowhere.

MARK COLVIN: So you’re saying it’s a case of shattered ideals, if you like?

JOHN MENDOZA: Well, in a sense, Mark. I’ve got to make judgements about where I can make the greatest contribution to this agenda that I see as fairly critical to Australia’s future. And certainly I was not making much progress in the role that I had with the Federal Government.

MARK COLVIN: The council that you were on was not being listened to by Government?

JOHN MENDOZA: The council has provided a large amount of advice to the Government over the last two years, starting with a stock-take if you like of all the programs that are in place and the Government accepted there were very large gaps in services. There were problems with existing programs.

But all we have heard really for six months now, since December 2009, when the Prime Minister made his first formal response to the Bennett commission, the Health and Hospital Reform Commission, that commission had identified mental health and dental health as the two highest priorities in healthcare reform.

And since then we have simply heard the Prime Minister repeatedly say, we recognise there’s more to be done on mental health. Well, tell us what that is. He’s had several questions directed to him from the media in recent months. He has not elaborated on any aspect of that and I’m certainly not privy to any design or project that’s underway in this area and that’s deeply regrettable.

MARK COLVIN: I’ve seen the Health Minister Nicola Roxon quoted today as saying that you always knew that she had said to you that mental health reform was for the second term.

JOHN MENDOZA: Well, that’s not the case. That had become part of the rhetoric in recent times and, in fact, the Government’s rhetoric around this is confusing, Mark. On one hand we hear, as I said, the Prime Minister repeatedly saying we’re going to do more on mental health in the next agenda. It’s the next cab off the rank.

But repeatedly the Health Minister has said, under pressure to justify the non-decisions you might say of the Government in this area, that we’re already investing a lot which is code for there’s no more money.

So I think these are hollow statements. They’re contradictory statements and it’s very clear that the Government, even before coming to government, was determined to do a lot more on mental health and, despite all of the evidence that supports a significant increase in investment and new investment, not investment into old, failed services, they have not done so.



The full interview is here:

http://www.abc.net.au/pm/content/2010/s2932959.htm

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Lisa Jones
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Re: It Only Takes a Minute...
Reply #2 - Jun 22nd, 2010 at 8:43pm
 
Excellent topic Annie!

Many thanks for posting it Smiley
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