Threads / Mental Health Bill Reform / More immediately, the Centre for Mental Health and other bo…
Committee Material Published 21 Jul 2023 ↗ View on Parliament

More immediately, the Centre for Mental Health and other bodies told us that, in the face of funding pressures and the need to reduce backlogs for physical health services, ICBs and ICPs could struggle to prioritise mental health services and support, and potentially even place some of the recent progress made in jeopardy.36 When questioned, NHSE assured us there is no doubt that “mental health services will remain an absolute priority” for the NHS, and that it has a number of mechanisms in p...

More immediately, the Centre for Mental Health and other bodies told us that, in the face of funding pressures and the need to reduce backlogs for physical health services, ICBs and ICPs could struggle to prioritise mental health services and support, and potentially even place some of the recent progress made in jeopardy.36 When questioned, NHSE assured us there is no doubt that “mental health services will remain an absolute priority” for the NHS, and that it has a number of mechanisms in place to ensure that this is the case for ICBs, for example, the mental health investment standard for improving the share of local funding for mental hea Type: conclusion | Number: 19 | Response status: accepted Government response: 3.1 The government agrees with the Committee’s recommendation Target implementation date: Summer 2024 3.2 The NHS Oversight Framework outlines NHS England’s approach to overseeing Integrated Care Boards (ICBs) and trusts, utilising 63 metrics, 6 of which relate to men