A Tauranga resident who battled anxiety and depression for “years” says he could only get help after he reached his “very lowest”.
Cal Shimmin, 28, was one of about 15 people who attended a public meeting about mental health organised by the National Party at the Matua Bowling Club yesterday.
It was hosted by the party’s mental health and suicide prevention spokesman, Matt Doocey, and Tauranga MP Sam Uffindell.
At the meeting, Doocey said there needed to be “local solutions for local needs” for mental health issues and a 111 emergency line where people could call and have a trained crisis mental health professional dispatched.
He also said it was time for New Zealand to establish its first mental health and suicide prevention minister.
“A lot of the time I’d go to the GP and we could discuss the issues but there wasn’t really a solution.”
Shimmin said he did not feel “functional” in the way he wanted to be.
His mental health had “stood in the way” of being able to work, but his family had been willing to help and house him.
Shimmin said having a dedicated minister for mental health would be “a step”.
“It’s quite easy to feel voiceless when you have [a] mental illness. I think that’s obviously a big step to focus so specifically on the matter.”
His mother, Sue Shimmin, said having a new minister would be good as she had experienced difficulty accessing help for her son.
“We’re all feeling helpless but there’s just no one to talk to because you’ve got to do this whole, ‘make an appointment, come in and see us’.
“You need a 111 for that [mental health].”
Doocey said the National Party believed there was a need for a dedicated position because the Health Minister role could be ”too focused on the physical health system at the expense of the mental health system”.
“And what we think now is actually we should separate those roles so there’s a dedicated mental health minister that focuses daily on the system and how to address the issues.”
He said Government health reforms had “some rationality” around physical treatment but mental health issues needed “local solutions”.
“How you respond to mental health issues and middle-aged dairy farmers where I live in North Canterbury could be potentially quite different than young Māori in South Auckland.
Doocey said if someone had a physical health crisis and called 111, they would get a health response. But if someone called for a mental health crisis, they would get a criminal justice response.
“So what I think we need to do is have co-response teams where we send out trained crisis mental health professionals.”
Such professionals also needed to be in dispatch centres to assess the calls, he said.
Tauranga MP Sam Uffindell said the mental health facilities in Tauranga were “not where they should be”.
“They need to be upgraded, they need to be upsized and unfortunately, there was funding that was set aside for that - that has been delayed which is really upsetting for our community, for our city.”
On May 29, Te Whatu Ora said in a media release that a plan to replace Tauranga Hospital’s acute mental health inpatient unit, for which funding was announced in 2019, was on hold until the future of the Tauranga Hospital site is known.
“We acknowledge the decision not to build a replacement facility now may be disappointing to the community, but it is worth remembering the current facility is relatively new, having been purpose-built in 2001.”
A smaller upgrade, increasing the number of beds at the existing facility by three, was expected to be done by late 2025.
In response to Doocey and Uffindell’s comments, Minister of Health Dr Ayesha Verrall told the Bay of Plenty Times the Government had created a mental health system “from the ground up” since 2017, and more than 2.8 million New Zealanders were now covered by primary providers.
Verrall said one reason for increased demand for acute services was that before the Government’s investment in mental health and addiction, there was not enough support to stop “small issues becoming big problems”.
“Now, for the first time, there are real services to help prevent more people from falling through the cracks.”
Verrall said the Government had put mental health support at doctors, schools, universities, online, on the phone and through smart apps so more people were receiving help.
Budget 2022 invested $18.7 million over four years in child and adolescent specialist mental health and addiction services, increasing the capacity to see around 1300 more children and young people per year by the end of the rollout, Verrall said.
The Budget 2019 suicide prevention investment had supported several initiatives including establishing Māori and Pacific Suicide Prevention Community Funds and establishing Aoake te Rā - a free national service for people bereaved by suicide which offers online and face-to-face services.