Publication of the Mental Health Commission's 2010 Report.

We are very pleased to welcome this guest post from Dr. Claire Murray, Lecturer in Law at University College Cork.

Under section 51 of the Mental Health Act 2001 (MHA 2001) the Inspector of Mental Health Services is required to visit every approved centre in the country at least once during the year and to report to the Mental Health Commission. The Commission has a statutory responsibility to promote high standards and good practices in the delivery of mental health services. The 2010 Annual Report of the Commission was published on the 2nd June 2011. As with previous annual reports the slow rate of change in mental health service provision is emphasised. This delay in moving to a modern rights-based mental health framework is particularly frustrating when, as stated by the Inspector, “mental health services have been traditionally neglected, need radical reform/modernisation, are chronically under-resourced and deal with individuals with severe conditions which adversely affect themselves, their families and society.”

Continue reading “Publication of the Mental Health Commission's 2010 Report.”

Publication of the Mental Health Commission's 2010 Report.

The Ongoing Failures in Mental Health Services

The ongoing failures within the mental health services were highlighted this week with the publication of the Mental Health Commission’s (MHC) Annual Report for 2009, available here.  The failures within the prison service were also evident this week with the forcible removal of a mentally ill, homeless, drug-addicted, woman from the Dóchas Centre in Mountjoy Prison see here.  The woman who was four weeks into a six-month sentence was forcibly removed from the prison despite having nowhere to go – and the prison service failing to put any supports in place for her upon her release.  The woman was subsequently arrested by Gardaí when she tried to reenter to the prison and produced a scissors. Continue reading “The Ongoing Failures in Mental Health Services”

The Ongoing Failures in Mental Health Services