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Safety fears as Police prepare to pull back from distress calls

Author
Alex Spence,
Publish Date
Tue, 26 Mar 2024, 7:16am
Mental Health Minister Matt Doocey says he wants a continuous multi-agency system that provides a range of interventions depending on people’s varied needs. Photo / Alex Cairns
Mental Health Minister Matt Doocey says he wants a continuous multi-agency system that provides a range of interventions depending on people鈥檚 varied needs. Photo / Alex Cairns

Safety fears as Police prepare to pull back from distress calls

Author
Alex Spence,
Publish Date
Tue, 26 Mar 2024, 7:16am

Mental Health Minister听Matt Doocey听says he expects to receive a plan for a new mental health crisis system 鈥榲ery soon鈥. But听Alex Spence听reports that frontline clinicians are worried police are planning to pull back before a new system can meet the rising tide of mental distress.听

Police plans to attend fewer mental health-related incidents have alarmed frontline clinicians, who say they are concerned people experiencing a psychological crisis could fall through the cracks while a new health-led system is established.

Frustrated that officers鈥 time has increasingly been taken up by responding to calls involving distressed or suicidal people, Police Ministers and officials have said they want to reprioritise their workloads to focus on 鈥渃ore鈥 criminal justice activities, such as听investigating organised crime, gangs and firearms offences.

The New Zealand Police, the Ministry of Health and Health NZ - Te Whatu Ora have developed a five-year plan for a new system for supporting people in a mental health crisis led by health professionals, with police officers playing a more limited role.

Mental Health Minister Matt Doocey told the听Herald听he expects to receive their joint report 鈥渧ery soon鈥 and for it to be presented to Cabinet in April or May.

Crisis response is an area 鈥渢hat we鈥檙e not doing very well鈥, Doocey said, but he insisted the Government is committed to creating a continuous system that provides rapid support to people in psychological distress.

Several clinicians in different parts of the country told the听Herald听police have already signalled informally at a local level that they will shift sooner than expected, in months rather than years, to a policy of only responding to mental health-related calls if there is an immediate risk to someone鈥檚 physical safety.

The clinicians fear that if the police start pulling back before the Government has established a comprehensive health-led system, it will put more pressure on mental health providers,听hospital emergency departments听and other services already depleted by years of underfunding and crippling workforce shortages. They are also worried more people will be isolated at times of acute distress.

Doocey said he had not heard of police informally indicating they would not wait until a new system has been established to change their approach, but a senior mental health clinician at Health NZ said: 鈥淭hat鈥檚 definitely on the cards.鈥

A psychiatrist in Wellington said: 鈥淭he initial proposal was that this would come in over a couple of years but we鈥檙e now hearing that it will be implemented around September or October. Lots of mental health clinicians are deeply concerned.鈥

At Whakarongorau, the national telehealth service, which operates听phone lines dedicated to triaging people in mental distress, staff last week raised concerns police seem to be already refusing some requests to conduct 鈥渨elfare checks鈥 on troubled callers that they previously would have accepted.

One nurse at Whakarongarau said they feared being 鈥渟tuck in the middle鈥 if police refuse to respond to mental health calls because the crisis teams operated by Health NZ are too short-staffed to visit those people, or may not accept it is their responsibility if the person does not have a recognised psychiatric condition underlying their distress.

鈥淭he system is beyond crisis,鈥 the nurse said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 on its last legs.鈥

In a statement, New Zealand Police said it had been meeting regularly with Health NZ and advised officials it is 鈥減rogressing internal planning on a new approach to our mental health demand鈥. It said no new policies or procedures have been introduced 鈥渁s of today鈥.

鈥淭hese operational changes are still in the early planning stages,鈥 a spokesperson said.

Rates of psychological distress have soared in recent years. According to the latest NZ Health Survey, the percentage of Kiwis who experienced high or very high distress in the past month has nearly doubled to 12 per cent in the last decade. The trend is worse among adolescents.

Those people have varied reasons for experiencing distress and not all have a diagnosable mental illness. One consistent thing, however, is that services can be fragmented, confusing, unresponsive, and hard to access when they need help.

In many situations requests for help go through 111, where under the existing arrangements the Police say the only practical assistance a dispatcher can usually provide is sending a police officer to check on the distressed person. Often police would then take the person to a hospital ED to wait for assessment by mental health specialists.

Over the past decade, police say, the number of mental health events officers attend has increased by more than 150 per cent to 77,043 in the last financial year. The vast majority of these were 鈥渓ow to moderate risk in safety, and do not require a police presence,鈥 a spokesperson said.

In ministerial briefings, New Zealand Police executives have complained these callouts drain resources that could be diverted to crimefighting. They say officers who have minimal training in dealing with mentally unwell people often end up in volatile, complicated situations with limited medical information and no back-up from mental health professionals.

Officers sometimes sit for hours with distressed people in EDs waiting for them to be assessed by mental health teams. 鈥淚t is not uncommon for a single mental health incident to take two staff four to six hours to manage,鈥 officials wrote in one ministerial briefing obtained under the Official Information Act.

The current system of responding to crisis calls is stressful and demoralising for frontline officers, police officials argue, and unsuitable for people in distress who should be seen promptly by professionals with appropriate training and expertise.

Police ministers and officials began pushing to shift the burden of crisis calls to health services under the previous Labour Government.

In March 2023, Police Minister Stuart Nash told Health Minister Ayesha Verrall: 鈥淯ltimately, my preference is for police to only be involved in a mental health incident if there is an immediate risk to the safety of the individual or others around them.鈥

Former Police Minister Stuart Nash told colleagues last year: 鈥淯ltimately, my preference is for police to only be involved in a mental health incident if there is an immediate risk to the safety of the individual or others around them.鈥 Photo / Mark MitchellFormer Police Minister Stuart Nash told colleagues last year: 鈥淯ltimately, my preference is for police to only be involved in a mental health incident if there is an immediate risk to the safety of the individual or others around them.鈥 Photo / Mark Mitchell

In August, the Government announced that police and the health departments were working on a five-year plan to transition to a 鈥渕ulti-agency鈥 national crisis-response system.

The plans are expected to include improved triaging for people when they first reach out for help; increased use of telehealth and digital counselling initiatives; mobile听鈥渃o-response鈥 teams听made up of police, paramedics and mental health nurses; and crisis hubs that distressed people can go to instead of waiting in crowded and chaotic EDs. Police would still have a role when there is a threat to safety.

鈥淚t is going to be a big piece of work,鈥 Doocey said, although he would not comment on specific details or the potential cost of the reforms until he has had a chance to consider the agencies鈥 joint recommendations.

Speaking generally, Doocey said he wants a continuous multi-agency system that provides a range of interventions depending on people鈥檚 varied needs. Not every call for help requires a police presence, Doocey said, and not everyone in distress needs to be seen by a specialist mental health clinician. Some people are stressed because of life events and social pressures that could be better resolved by the Ministry of Social Development.

Some crisis response initiatives are already in development. This month, Doocey announced the Government intends to embed peer support workers with first-hand experience of mental illness in EDs at four hospitals to comfort people in distress, at a cost of about $2 million a year. If successful, peer support workers will be introduced at other hospitals.

Police ministerial briefings acknowledged there are 鈥渟ubstantial financial and resourcing risks鈥 to transitioning to a new crisis-response system. Moving from a police-led response to a health-led response without adequate resourcing for those health services would, one document said, 鈥渟imply shift the demand from Police to those services鈥 and increase the number of people in crisis.

Some clinicians worry this is what will happen in the coming months. They say the existing patchwork of services for people in crisis is so disjointed, underfunded and understaffed it would take many years and hundreds of millions of dollars of additional Government investment to create a coherent national system capable of meeting the rising tide of distress.

Karla Bergquist, director of specialist mental health services at Health NZ, acknowledged mental health services are under pressure but said 鈥渨hen a person needs acute mental health care, they are always prioritised and seen urgently鈥.

Whakarongorau said it is examining how its phone lines will be impacted by a change of approach by the police. It acknowledged its staff鈥檚 concerns about the welfare checks and said it is working to understand them and ensure that those clinicians 鈥渇eel supported through any changes in approach or workload鈥.

Alex Spence is an investigative reporter and feature writer focusing on social issues. He joined the Herald in 2020 after 17 years in London where he worked for The Times, Politico, and BuzzFeed 九一星空无限. He can be reached at听[email protected]听or by text or secure Signal messaging on 0272358834.

Where to get help

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For more information and support, talk to your local doctor, hauora, community mental health team or counselling service. The Mental Health Foundation has more helplines and service contacts on its website.

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