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Mental Health and the Armed Forces, Part Two: The Provision of Care inquiry

Inquiry

We concluded that the vast majority of veterans leave the Services with no ill-effects and that the public perception that most veterans are 'mad, bad or sad' was not only a myth but harmful to veterans.

Government response published

The Defence Committee is examining the provision of mental health care in the UK to both serving personnel and veterans and their families. This inquiry forms Part Two of the Committee’s examination into Mental Health and the Armed Forces, having reported on the scale of mental health issues in Part One.

The Committee will address the following questions:

  • To what extent do serving and former armed forces personnel require specific mental health care for treatment to be most effective, either as a whole or for specific groups?
  • How far does Government provision for mental health services to serving and former armed forces personnel in the UK meet both these specific care requirements and the Armed Forces Covenant’s principle of priority care, including during transition?
  • To what extent are Armed Forces charities covering any gaps in Government mental health care provision?
  • Are veterans and their families aware of the mental health services available and how effective has initiatives such as the Veterans Gateway and 24hr helplines been in helping awareness and access?
  • Are GPs and other NHS medical practitioners sufficiently aware of the needs and entitlements of veterans and their families to provide appropriate advice and referrals?
  • Do veterans receive the mental health care and support they need quickly once they seek help?
  • How does the provision of care and the outcomes achieved for veterans differ across the UK?
  • How are the families of serving personnel and veterans with mental health issues supported?
  • To what extent are government departments, local authorities and charities across the UK aligned and working together effectively to provide mental health services to veterans?

Submissions by individual Armed Forces members and their families

The Committee is particularly keen to hear from both current and former servicemen and women and their families on their experiences, both good and bad, of seeking and receiving mental health care. However, please bear in mind that the Committee will not consider individual cases or matters currently before a court of law.

The Committee recognises that such submissions are likely to contain sensitive personal information and in order to ensure anonymity, the Committee will not publish submissions relating to individual experiences. Instead, the Committee will publish with the main report a detailed review of all such submissions received, which will draw out the key themes and present anonymised quotes as examples of what the Committee has seen. The Committee may also select anonymised examples to use in the report.

The Ministry of Defence is content for serving personnel and civil servants to submit written evidence to the inquiry on the understanding that:

  • It is in a personal capacity;
  • In line with long-standing principles as Crown Servants, submissions from those employed by the MoD should only comment on personal experiences and not matters of policy;
  • Those submitting evidence should also be careful not to reveal private information about other people in their submissions.

Reports, special reports and government responses

View all reports and responses
14th Report - Mental Health and the Armed Forces, Part Two: The Provision of Care
Inquiry Mental Health and the Armed Forces, Part Two: The Provision of Care inquiry
HC 1481
Report
Response to this report
18th Special Report - Mental Health and the Armed Forces, Part Two: The Provision of Care: Government Response to the Committee’s Fourteenth Report of Session 2017–19
HC 2213
Special Report
18th Special Report - Mental Health and the Armed Forces, Part Two: The Provision of Care: Government Response to the Committee’s Fourteenth Report of Session 2017–19
Inquiry Mental Health and the Armed Forces, Part Two: The Provision of Care inquiry
HC 2213
Special Report
14th Report - Mental Health and the Armed Forces, Part Two: The Provision of Care (Enhanced HTML)
Inquiry Mental Health and the Armed Forces, Part Two: The Provision of Care inquiry
HC 1481
Report

Oral evidence transcripts

View all oral evidence transcripts
18 December 2018
Inquiry Mental Health and the Armed Forces, Part Two: The Provision of Care inquiry
Witnesses Johnny Mercer MPRt Hon Tobias Ellwood MP, Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State and Minister for Defence People and Veterans, Lieutenant General Richard Nugee, Chief of Defence People, Ministry of Defence, Jackie Doyle-Price MP, Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Mental Health and Inequalities, Kate Davies, Director of Health and Justice, Armed Forces and Sexual Assault Services Commissioning, NHS England
Oral Evidence
27 November 2018
Inquiry Mental Health and the Armed Forces, Part Two: The Provision of Care inquiry
Witnesses Catherine Braddick-Hughes, Andy Price, Tim BoughtonSue Freeth, Chief Executive, Combat Stress, David Richmond CBE, former Chairman of the Contact Group, Tony Wright, Chief Executive, Forward Assist
Oral Evidence
13 November 2018
Inquiry Mental Health and the Armed Forces, Part Two: The Provision of Care inquiry
Witnesses Charlie Wallace, Scottish Veterans Commissioner, Mark Birkill, Therapist at Veterans' NHS Wales, Dr Oscar Daly, Psychiatrist at Combat Stress Northern Ireland, Dr Bethany Waterhouse-Bradley, Lecturer in Health and Social Care Policy at Ulster UniversityDr Jonathan Leach, Honorary Secretary, Royal College of General Practitioners, Dr Deirdre MacManus, Royal College of Psychiatrists, Dr Michael Grey, Reader in Rehabilitation Neuroscience, University of East Anglia
Oral Evidence
Department of Health & Social Care (POC0130)
Ministry of Defence (POC0129)
Combat Stress (POC0127)

Other publications

No other publications published.

Contact us

  • Email: defcom@parliament.uk
  • Phone: 020 7219 3113 (general enquiries) | 020 7219 2996 (media enquiries)
  • Address: Defence Committee, House of Commons, London SW1A 0AA