Seven mental health patients have killed themselves in England since 2012 after being told there were no hospital beds for them, the BBC has learned.An investigation of coroners' reports and NHS trust papers with the journal Community Care found another patient denied a bed later killed his mother.It comes as mental health beds are being cut in England - figures show more than 2100 have gone since 2011.The NHS England said spending on mental health was increasing in real terms.The investigation by BBC News and Community Care has also revealed an email that a chief executive of a mental health trust wrote to NHS England in frustration this summer after one of her senior officials came to tell her that: "Yet again there were no mental health beds in London in either the NHS or private sector."Wendy Wallace, head of Camden and Islington NHS Foundation Trust, bemoaned NHS England's lack of interest in the problem. She wrote: "I could not envisage a situation where all the acute beds in London were full and there was not even an investigation into the situation nor a plan of action."The investigation established that since 2012 seven people across England have taken their own lives having been told no beds were available. They were:Pauline Binch, 64, from NottinghamStephanie Daniels, 32, from ManchesterMichael Knight, 20, from NorfolkMandy Peck, 39, from EssexAnthony Quigley, 53, LondonTerence Mullin, 53, from LiverpoolAn unnamed man from SheffieldIn addition, Peter Holboll from London admitted the manslaughter of his mother, Tamara, having been told no beds were available.A ninth person, Amanda Vickers, 47, from Cumbria, died after being denied a bed in a crisis house, a facility used to treat patients outside hospitals.
The bait has been set. Now we wait for Psy.
Well at least they don't die waiting for care like veterans in the US...
Quote from: Mr Psychologist on November 28, 2014, 03:24:26 PMOn second thought, I'm not going to waste my time getting wound up by some irredeemable fool.Am I the only one here who debates for knowledge and not winning? I know this subject is 'touchy' for you but I don't see why you can't go back and fourth on the arguments. As long as you're being open about your arguments and positions and not trying to glue yourself to any one idea or side, you and everyone else reading through this may end up learning something.
On second thought, I'm not going to waste my time getting wound up by some irredeemable fool.
If anything I say pisses you off, just assume I'm playing devil's advocate. Meta can feel free to answer these as well since he likes economics and stuff.What's the main purpose for universal healthcare over private care? Is the reason economical or ethical? (Is it better because more people can receive care or is it better because more people receiving care helps the economy?)Does the NHS have death panels? Are they a good thing? Wouldn't you have to spend a lot of money to prevent the need to have death panels? I think we'd all like it if hospitals didn't have to prioritize patients over others, but how realistic is that really?Similar to the first question, is the reason for trying to prevent suicide merely ethical? And if it is just an ethic, wouldn't it just be better to not report these incidents so no one feels hurt or offended?
What's the main purpose for universal healthcare over private care? Is the reason economical or ethical? (Is it better because more people can receive care or is it better because more people receiving care helps the economy?)
Does the NHS have death panels? Are they a good thing? Wouldn't you have to spend a lot of money to prevent the need to have death panels? I think we'd all like it if hospitals didn't have to prioritize patients over others, but how realistic is that really?
Similar to the first question, is the reason for trying to prevent suicide merely ethical? And if it is just an ethic, wouldn't it just be better to not report these incidents so no one feels hurt or offended?
I wonder how many occupying hospital beds honestly didn't need to take a trip to the hospital. If you can't guarantee everybody equal medical access then the government doesn't need to nationalize healthcare
I wonder how many occupying hospital beds honestly didn't need to take a trip to the hospital.
If you can't guarantee everybody equal medical access then the government doesn't need to nationalize healthcare