Mental health advocates are slamming the make-up of a Ministry of Health working group to advise the government on how
to respond to the Mental Health and Addiction inquiry.
Photo: RNZ / Richard Tindiller
The 21-member "leadership team" will respond to the recommendations from the inquiry, but advocates say the group is stacked with the vested interests
of district health boards and only has one member representing those with lived experience of mental distress.
Minister of Health David Clark was handed the report - initially due on 31 October - today. The report is 200 pages long
and has 40 recommendations. The public will see it at a later date while the government digests its findings.
The leadership team was announced in an email to stakeholders on 13 November from the Director of Mental Health, John
Crawshaw, and the chief executive at Lakes District Health Board, Ron Dunham. Mr Crawshaw and Mr Dunham are the
co-chairs of the group, which is named the Mental Health and Addiction Health Sector Leadership Group (HSLG).
The email referred to a meeting in late October where the group talked about the importance of "ensuring the programme
is responsive to Māori and amplifies the voice of lived experience".
But advocates are concerned that of the 21-member team there is only one representative for the voices of those with
lived experience of mental distress, and no representative for family members. The email said the group "will not be a
closed room" and would be wider than the 21 members, "though those people are the core membership of the HSLG".
The group would seek a broad range of voices and members will act as "connectors to channel perspectives, views and
feedback".
"They will link in through a range of forums and national, regional and local meetings to feed into the Ministry's
advice to the government."
The email also outlined a timeframe saying "early in the New Year we will be gathering feedback, collecting our thoughts
and formalising our response to the Inquiry findings".
"From there, we will begin development of the longer term plan to deliver on the direction agreed by cabinet to respond
to the recommendations of the Inquiry."
The group aims to "carry on the good work of the Inquiry".
"We must acknowledge our past, be grounded in the present, and be ready to transform", the email said.
It is unclear what the group's role is in relation to the Mental Health Commissioner or if the Mental Health Commission
will be re-established - an idea Labour floated on the campaign trail.
'Pretty appalled'
Former Mental Health Commissioner Mary O'Hagan said the mental health community was "pretty appalled" at the decision.
"It was very pre-emptive of the Ministry of Health to establish a leadership group before they know the flavour of the
recommendations [of the inquiry]."
Eleven of the members represent DHBs, two represent the Māori community, and one represents mental health and addiction
NGOs, she said.
"The group is dominated by DHBs and has just one person with lived experience on it. Why did the ministry set up a group
like this? Maybe they are worried that health will no longer be at the hub of the new system and are trying to retain
their power base.
"Maybe they are deeply out of touch with the mood for change. Maybe they don't understand that they can no longer just
inform and consult but need to engage people in participatory design."
Ms O'Hagan said we have gone backwards in our approach to mental health, citing a 1989 national policy group that she
was on which committed to having no less than two people with lived experience on it.
"If we were making progress the current group would be co-chaired by a person with lived experience and have several of
them on it. We are not going to take this any longer."
Ms O'Hagan, along with Changing Minds chief executive Taimi Allan, Tracey Cannon and Magdel Hammond, have founded a
group called the Wellbeing Coalition Aotearoa as a way to hold the government to account on the inquiry.
"The Ministry of Health newsletter announcing the group illustrates perfectly why they are unfit to lead the
implementation of the inquiry recommendations," Ms O'Hagan said.
Ms Allan highlighted the importance of a cross-sectoral and cross-ministerial response.
"The individuals who currently make up the group are well regarded and respected by us all in the Health Sector, [but]
we have enough evidence now to know that improving the mental health of all New Zealanders is not the sole
responsibility of our specialised sector, nor should it be.
"Our extended community have expressed to us significant concerns that the group's membership currently reflects the
status-quo of Mental Health Service provision."
Life Matters Trust chair Corinda Taylor, whose son died by suicide in 2013, said the setting up of the group was not a
fair process. She said people with lived experience and families bereaved by suicide or living with people with mental
distress should be represented.
"We know where the system has let us down. If you look at the group - they are all CEOS and managers and people quite
high up in their organisations ... they may well claim they have lived experience as well, as they so often do, but the
people that want to be part of that are going to be excluded.
"Unless we have a strong voice that have equal say or equal representation on that group, it's not a fair process."
The Ministry of Health was approached for comment on Monday.