- HEALTH HOME
- NEWS
- POLICY
- PARLIAMENT
- Norman Lamb calls for more local accountability of primary care trusts
- PMQs: Clegg challenges Brown over mental health services
- Government funding for extra NHS staff is going to waste because of poor planning
- Bill would bring back regular size wine glasses and give consumers more choice
- Human Fertilisation and Embryology Bill
- View All
- FEATURE
- ISSUES
PARLIAMENTARY REPORT
Nick Clegg questions the
Government’s “half measures” on mental
health
Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg focused
on mental health services, accusing the Government of wasting money on drugs and
not doing enough to give people access to therapists. He accused the government
of taking "half measures" on mental health when some people waited three and
half years to see a therapist.
Mr. Clegg: The
NHS spends more than £300 million a year on anti-depressant drugs, which we
learned yesterday probably do not help many of the people taking them. Is it not
time the Prime Minister developed a mental health strategy that helps patients
rather than pouring millions of pounds into the pockets of the pharmaceutical
industry for drugs that do not even work?
Gordon Brown:
First of all, I say to the right hon. Gentleman: welcome back. I hope that this
time he can stay long enough to hear the answers.
The right hon.
Gentleman is absolutely right that we should do more so that people are not
dependent on the drugs that he is talking about. That is precisely why the
Secretary of State for Health is investing in providing more therapists to help
people. We have made a decision to employ 3,600 more, and I hope that the right
hon. Gentleman will support that.
Mr. Clegg: It is good
to be here. It is a shame that the Prime Minister seeks to defend clapped - out
19th century procedures in this House, which are preventing the British people
from?[Hon. Members: “Oh!”]
Mr. Speaker: Order. [Hon.
Members: “More!”] Order. I just say to the right hon. Gentleman that he should
be careful where he goes with this. [Interruption.] Order. Now, let the
right hon. Gentleman speak. The Speaker has given him some advice; I give hon.
Members advice all day. It is all right.
Mr. Clegg: Of
course I will be careful, Mr. Speaker. I was talking about procedures, not
people - procedures that prevent the British people from having a say in this
Chamber, which is what they want.
On the issue of mental health, has the
Prime Minister forgotten what his own expert, Lord Layard said? He said that we
need an additional 10,000 therapists, not the 3,000 that the Prime Minister is
talking about. Why is he taking half measures when we have the scandal of some
patients waiting up to three and a half years just to see a
therapist?
Gordon Brown: Lord Layard has said that he
supports the policy we are putting forward. That policy will receive the support
of £173 million, to invest in the psychological help that people can give. We
are looking at piloting some of Lord Layard’s proposals on how we can help
people get into work, so we are doing exactly what the right hon. Gentleman is
asking us to do.
As for the matter of the European vote, which the right
hon. Gentleman also raised, I just remind him that his party put that issue to a
vote only a few weeks ago, on 14 November 2007, when it said
that
“the Gracious Speech fails to
announce proposals for a referendum on the United Kingdom’s continued membership
of the European Union.” - [ Official Report, 14 November 2007; Vol. 467, c.
781.]
When they put their proposal to the vote, 464 voted against them,
and only 68 for them. That is the level of support for their proposal. “the
Gracious Speech fails to announce proposals for a referendum on the United
Kingdom’s continued membership of the European Union.”?[ Official Report, 14
November 2007; Vol. 467, c. 781.]
When they put their proposal to the vote,
464 voted against them, and only 68 for them. That is the level of support for
their proposal.
Click
here to read the Prime Minister's Questions in full
















