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- #301
I admire your restraint. There is a lot to be angry about with respect to this latest 'proposal'. In fact, there is everything to be angry about, right down to the 'this is all kindness and common sense' tone with which Sunk delivered the announcement yesterday.I've skipped from page 11 to put in my all round thoughts to here, actually I got a bit further but was a bit shocked by some responses & giving my thoughts individually will take hours but unfortunately it just looks like I've had a go at @Cornwallboy (sorry) because it would take ages to fit everyone after his post in.
Mental health issues are not always seen and quite often it's the people that you think are absolutely fine, are the ones that aren't. I'll find the advert that should've reminded all of us to ask people if they're ok, about the guy who stopped turning up to the matches and his seat neighbour finding out he'd topped himself and post it in a minute.
I'm only speaking for Brighton here, as it appears Worthing is a lot better but there is virtually no mental health services available. Even private practices have waiting lists unless you can afford £100+ an hour. £50 an hour is cheap. After at least 6 months of being on the NHS waiting list in Brighton (that's very generous), you'll be offered a course of 6-12 CBT sessions, that really is a one size fits all programme but is very good. If the 6-12 CBT sessions haven't worked for you, then you're on your own. I really want to go off on a tangent to say why CBT doesn't fit all, but I wont.
There is no medical assessment of mental health apart from tick box questionnaires, unless you actually spend a couple of sessions with a mental health professional. What exactly is the proposal (yes I know it's not going to happen, but I'm angry). There are no mental health practitioners to help the people on the waiting list. Most of those who have stayed on the waiting list aren't f**king around looking to take some time off of work to make themselves feel more s**t. Where are all these 'people' going to come from that are 'qualified' enough to say that someones mental health is 'bad' enough (I hate that term) not to work?
In simple terms there is no one else but someones GP to say that someone has a mental health condition when there is no one else available. People who are in severe MH crisis get turned away from Millview as they've not tried hard enough to kill themselves. As much as I'd like to say that's an exaggeration, it's true & those that have tried hard enough are still kicked out a few hours later.
I'm being led by the thread to assume that the current government are dog whistling to the few supporters they have left, to target people with MH issues as their 'sick note' culture people. I didn't listen to the interview and BBC news has combined it to any one who's claiming disability benefits.
However, for some, the key issue is that I was rude to a couple of oafs (sorry, fine upstanding old conservatives), yesterday.