Skyrocketing energy bills will create a ‘huge mental health crisis’ this winter, NHS leaders warn

Exclusive: Demand for mental health services has already soared in the last year

Kate Devlin,Rebecca Thomas
Wednesday 24 August 2022 13:33 EDT
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'Catastrophic winter' ahead for households as bills soar, energy boss warns

Soaring energy and food bills will create a “huge mental health crisis” this winter putting further strain on services and risking “people’s life chances”, NHS leaders have warned.

As household bills dramatically increase, Saffron Cordery, the interim chief executive of NHS Providers which represents NHS trusts across England, said there was a direct link between deprivation and a surge in demand for care.

The need for mental health services has already skyrocketed over the last year with referrals for adults hitting a monthly record of 425,000 in March and 1.2 million adults also waiting for community mental health care.

Ms Cordery told The Independent: “We are going to see huge mental health crises emerging from the cost of living challenges that we’re facing, because we know the direct link between deprivation, worklessness, potential homelessness, child poverty and the increase in demand for mental health services.”

“We saw it a few years ago with the changes to universal credit which brought about quite far-reaching challenges,” she added.

The result will be “pressure on the whole system” that will impact “people’s life chances and outcomes”.

Consumers have been warned by a leading energy firm that they face potentially “catastrophic” months ahead, with millions struggling to feed their families and heat their homes.

Half of UK households could be in fuel poverty in January unless the government does more to help, the energy giant EDF estimates, and another huge rise in the energy price cap will be announced this week, following predictions inflation could hit 18 per cent.

Sean Duggan, chief executive for the NHS Confederation’s mental health network, said the cost of living crisis was already creating demand for services “and will get worse, we’re definitely hearing that from [mental health trusts].”

And mental health charity Mind told The Independent it has seen a 30 per cent rise in the last year in calls to its helpline from people with financial difficulties.

Olly Parker, head of external affairs at YoungMinds, said: “We are now seeing the first signs of the cost of living crisis having an impact on children and young people’s mental health. Young adults are clearly worried about their finances and children are starting to take note of the worrying conversations around the kitchen table.”

He added: “What’s even more concerning is that things are expected to get a lot worse.”

Mental health services, like those for physical health, are already under pressure after the Covid pandemic, Ms Cordery added, in part because those who present themselves for treatment tend to be more unwell than in previous years. This also means ambulances, already in short supply, are more likely to be called.

She said: “If you talk to any trust chief executive, but particularly an ambulance service chief executive or hospital chief executive, they will tell you that this is the most pressurised they’ve seen it in their careers. It really is bad.”

This week The Independent revealed that the number of people waiting for community mental health care has risen to 1.2 million, with the NHS missing several targets.

Lancashire Care Foundation Trust, which covers some of the most deprived populations in the country, said in its July board papers it had seen a 20 per cent increase in demand for services. It said a surge in demand for adult services, which began in early 2022, has continued during the summer.

For children’s mental health services demand has been 15 per cent higher in the first six months of the year compared to 2021, according to its data.

In a 2018 survey carried out by NHS Providers, nine in 10 leaders of mental health trusts said changes to universal credit and other benefits had led to increased demand for services.

Rosena Allin-Khan, shadow mental health minister, also warned of the link between deprivation and mental illness. “Mental health services are already under immense strain, with waiting lists growing, some children waiting years for treatment, and people forced to wait days in A&E departments in crisis because no mental health beds are available,” she added.

“The Conservatives’ cost of living crisis is yet another strain on mental health services.”

A government spokesperson said ministers had announced £37bn of targeted support to help people through the winter.

She added: “We are expanding and transforming mental health services which will see over £2.3bn of additional funding a year by 2024 – helping an extra 2 million people across England to get help.”

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