Mental Health Community Care in Great Britain: Idealism and Reality

Authors

Keywords:

Community, Mental health, Great Britain, Care

Abstract

This article looks at the evolution of mental health care in the community in Great Britain from the 1950s to the present day. One of the main aims of the 1959 Mental Health Act was to close the asylums and deinstitutionalise psychiatric patients. There was, however, no agreement on the way in which community care should be set up for the former asylum inmates. It rapidly became apparent that patients and their families saw community care as a more humane way of caring for the mentally unwell, whereas politicians saw it primarily as a means of cutting the cost of mental health care. The failure to ever develop an overall vision of what community care should be, together with the significant cuts in government funding for mental health which have taken place over the past twelve years, have resulted in a mental health care system in crisis.

Author Biography

Susan Barrett, Univ. Bordeaux Montaigne

Susan Barrett is a senior lecturer at Bordeaux Montaigne University. For a many years she has worked on the themes of memory, history and marginality in both South African and Australian fiction and has had numerous articles published in journals in France and English-speaking countries. More recently she has turned her attention to mental health policies in the United Kingdom and has a published a history of Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services in Great Britain in the Revue Française de Civilisation Britannique.

Downloads

Published

2022-07-13

How to Cite

Barrett, S. (2022). Mental Health Community Care in Great Britain: Idealism and Reality. Leaves, (14), 30–41. Retrieved from https://revues.u-bordeaux-montaigne.fr/leaves/article/view/381