Dunne Launches Five-Year Mental Health And Addiction Plan
Hon Peter
Dunne
Associate Minister of
Health
Friday, 14 December 2012
Media Release
Dunne Launches Five-Year Mental Health
And Addiction Plan
Associate Health Minister Peter Dunne said today signalled the launch of Rising to the Challenge, a new national five-year plan for mental health and addiction.
“There has been considerable change in mental health, and in the last 20 years mental health funding has risen more than four-fold to $1.2 billion in the 2010/11 year,” Mr Dunne said.
“And among this, services have grown significantly particularly in community care where three quarters of mental health funding is now invested.
Rising to the Challenge is really a foundation document that sets out both the challenges facing mental health services and the priorities for action until 2017.
Key themes underpinning the plan include:
• doing better within existing
funding and working more cohesively across the government
and non-government sectors so services from many agencies
are better centred around those using the services and staff
time in service delivery is maximised.
• more people are treated closer to
home in primary care with support from specialist hospital
and community based services and easier movement between
different services as people's needs change. Fewer delays in
accessing services and better coordination between them will
improve the experience of people using services and aid
their recovery.
• a greater emphasis on youth
mental health and intervening earlier to prevent more
serious problems later in life. Additional funding has
already been allocated to the improving youth mental health
- $61.9m over four years – and for forensic services –
$33m over four years.
• improving services and
outcomes for people with high needs, for Maori and for other
population groups who generally experience poorer outcomes
(eg, Pacific peoples, refugees and people with
disabilities).
• service providers working
alongside and in partnership with individuals using the
services and their families and whānau.
“The plan is aimed high and deliberately
so,” Mr Dunne said.
“Its goal is to treat greater numbers of people, and to make services more effective in order to better support people’s recovery.
“Over time, we expect individuals to be able to access services to manage their own condition or get timely access to services provided by a responsive and capable workforce, increasingly located in primary care,” he said.
Mr Dunne said that as individuals’ mental health needs change, they will be able to move between services without lengthy delays. Services will be better coordinated and smoothly integrated.
The report can be found at www.health.govt.nz/publication/rising-challenge-mental-health-and-addiction-service-development-plan-2012-2017
ENDS