$1M for mental health support

$1M for mental health support

The Gillard Government has allocated $1.1 million to tackle high levels of poor mental health and suicide risk in our community.

The National LGBTI Health Alliance will carry out the two-year MindOUT mental health and suicide prevention project following the funding announcement by Mental Health Minister Mark Butler.

“The LGBTI community reports higher levels of depression, anxiety and other mental health problems with evidence suggesting they are 3.5 to 14 times more likely to attempt suicide than the general community,” Butler said.

“The MindOUT project will help address these needs by building the capacity of the LGBTI community members and mainstream health services to respond more effectively.”

Recent statistics paint a sobering picture of the state of mental health among LGBTI Australians. According to the Alliance, at least 36.2 percent of trans people and 24.4 percent of gay, lesbian and bisexual people experience major depressive episodes, compared with 6.8 percent of the general population.

Gay or bisexual Australians are twice as likely as heterosexuals to experience anxiety disorders and more than three times as likely to experience affective disorders.

About half of the country’s trans population have attempted suicide at least once.

OPINION: Funding seems to be the hardest word

National LGBTI Health Alliance chair Paul Martin said although the Alliance still remains without core funding, the grant represents the largest federal government investment in LGBTI mental health.

“The funding is a recognition by the Australian Government that LGBTI health concerns are an important part of a health system which respects diversity and social inclusion,” he said.

Alliance CEO Warren Talbot told the Star Observer the Alliance would focus on specialist training for existing LGBTI health organisations to improve their mental health and suicide prevention initiatives and help mainstream mental health services better deal with the needs of LGBTI people.

“It’s a massive exercise in training and education,” he said. “What we need is confidence that if someone goes to their local community health centre, if someone goes to their local GP, then an LGBTI person will be treated properly.”

Talbot said training mental health staff will be “front and centre” of the MindOUT program, which will employ two full-time staff.

“I don’t think we’ll fix it in two years, but I think we’ll make some very important steps forward,” Talbot said.

“[We] believe that proper attention to mental health and suicide prevention needs of LGBTI people should be a permanent part of our health care system, it’s not something we worry about once or twice, it should be a permanent and ongoing part of Australia’s ongoing system.”

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4 responses to “$1M for mental health support”

  1. While any increase in mental health funding is to be welcome, $1 MILLION compared to the amount thrown at chaplaincy is a trivial and token amount.

    Successive federal governments have allocated nearly $400 MILLION in total to the National School Chaplaincy Program – with $220 MILLION of that chipped in by the Gillard government as a 2010 election promise.

    The Prime Minister ought to properly justify why the NSCP money was not instead spent on building bigger and better professional resources in mental health.

    Why does the government continue to fund the needless, divisive and controversial chaplaincy scheme, given that it discriminates in favour of religion in general and in favour of majority religious traditions in particular?

    Australians for Separation of Church & State
    http://www.facebook.com/groups/54429760859

  2. That’s awesome.
    Now can someone just convince the government that it costs nothing to stop actively discriminating against LGBTI people and the result will be a reduction in the medicare bill for LGBTI people and their families for the mental health issues that are caused by discrimination.
    I can say that in the last few years, the only discrimination that I have faced has been government sactioned.

  3. Our elders contemplating or acting on suicidal intent, and experiencing depression and anxiety at high levels MUST be an integral part of this project.
    http://www.suicidepreventionaust.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/index.html#feature
    ‘Dr Jo Harrison, a gerontologist with expertise in gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender and intersex (GLBTI) aged care, says older people with particular needs are especially at risk. ‘It is still definitely the case… that people continue to remain invisible and afraid. They therefore experience greater anxiety and depression and are at risk of suicide after lives of persecution and hiding their identities.’