Press release from the British Medical Association.
The
British Medical Association have hit back at claims of abuse within
NHS mental health units.
Responding to
a report by the Joint Committee on Human Rights, which found that the human
rights of many patients with a learning disability or autism are
being breached in mental health hospitals, Dr
Andrew Molodynski, BMA mental health policy lead, said:
“Patients,
particularly those who are vulnerable, have the right to feel safe
when they use the NHS, but as this report shows, there are dark
corners of the health service that are breeding harsh and abusive
cultures - and it has to stop.
“The
NHS has committed to improving mental health services, but progress
is too slow, and we need urgent change. This includes making sure
that staff working in psychiatric facilities are properly trained,
patients are treated close to home, and that above all, their human
rights remain unthreatened.
“This
is not an example of the health service many of us recognise and it
is shameful that anyone in our care would ever be subject to such
barbaric and cruel behaviour. There is absolutely no place for this
in modern healthcare, and every effort must be made to ensure
improvements are made as a matter of urgency.”
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