Health

Mental health patients left in dilapidated wards amid £677m repairs backlog

Dilapidated mental health facilities across the country are in need of £677m worth of repairs to fix sewerage issues, collapsing roofs and wards that deprive patients of their dignity, The Independent has been told.

An NHS analysis of the government’s flagship 40 new hospitals programme, seen by The Independent, shows ministers have failed in their promise of “parity” for mental health services as issues are not addressed.

NHS trust and psychiatry leaders warned that the out-of-date estate is putting patients at risk and urged the government to include six mental health hospitals within its next round of improvements.

It comes after health secretary Steve Barclay hinted the new hospitals’ programme could be scaled back after costs had become “inflated”.

Data analysis by The Royal College of Psychiatrists, shared with The Independent, found the cost of fixing “high and significant” risks alone within mental health and learning disability hospitals has sky-rocketed from £92 million in 2019-20 to £186 million in 2021-22 – far higher than the 16 per cent increase in costs seen in acute hospitals. These are risks which must be fixed to avoid “catastrophic” failure or fix safety problems which could result in serious injury.

Saffron Cordery, interim chief executive, NHS Providers, told The Independent: “A [overall] £677million maintenance backlog across mental health trusts is an unwelcome extra burden on overstretched services struggling with an all-time high 1.8million people in contact with them.”

“What is efficient about a mental health trust having to spend hundreds of thousands of pounds every year to repair outdated buildings? Mental health trusts need capital funding, allocated quickly, fairly and transparently, for more modern facilities so that patients receive care in the right environment.”

Have you been impacted by this story? rebecca.thomas@independent.co.uk

She said patients and staff were at risk because so many buildings aren’t fit for purpose and warned things would get worse until mental health trusts got the capital funding they “urgently” needed.

The analysis also found that 6,483 rooms – one-third of rooms on mental health wards nationally – do not have ensuite bathrooms.

Andy Bell, deputy chief for the Center for Mental Health, said outdated buildings undermined safe care for patients and failing to invest in improvements puts patients at risk.

Leaders at Bradford District Care Foundation Trust told The Independent that building problems in its region were forcing longer hospital stays for patients and driving up out-of-area placements.

Issues include sewerage problems, a lack of ensuite wards, male patient rooms overlooking female recreation areas, and ward temperature problems that have prompted 95 call-outs a year.

Dr Sarfaraz Shora, deputy medical director and consultant psychiatrist for the trust said patients were “distressed” about the ward environments adding: “We had sewage in the ward, and it was so distressing for the patients but also for the staff. We have 21 unwell patients who have to share the bathroom. In the current times, that is unheard of that somebody who’s so distressed and has to share a bathroom adds to their distress.”

“Just imagine if we had better estates, you know, it will help us with helping our patients to stay in the inpatients for the shortest possible time, in the best environment and help and aid them in their recovery and not sort of re-traumatise them by bringing them into these wards,” he said.

Mike Woodward, the trust’s director of finance, contracting and estates, said its Lynfield Mount Hospital, which was built in the 1950s was no longer “fit for purpose”, with water pouring through the ceiling and a maintenance backlog of £68m.

The trust first applied to the new hospital programme in 2020 and Mr Woodward said that time since the trust had “thrown money down the drain” on upkeep.

He said the new hospitals’ programme was the only opportunity to get the £90 million needed to rebuild Lynfield Mount and said the neglect of mental health hospitals showed the “structural discrimination” against the sector.

It comes despite the government pledging mental health would be a priority within its new hospital programme.

Xural.com

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