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Every suicide narrates our dismal failure to help

How many deaths would it take to get the system right?

Anil Thapliyal

New Zealand’s suicide statistics released last week provide sobering and alarming reading.

I cannot stop thinking about the 668 people who took their own lives in the past year and the families, friends and communities deeply affected.

Men accounted for the largest number of suicides at 475 (71%), while the number of women who committed suicide was 193 (29%). Of these, 20% were young people in the 10-24 age group and 21% were Maori.

Averting tragedies

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern rightly summed it up as a ‘tragedy,’ emphasising the need to improve access to care.

I agree with her that “we need to do more,” and if we must get it right then going by successful international trends, the Digital Mental Health or more commonly referred to as eMental Health has to play an integral part of holistic response to this crisis post mental health enquiry report.

Time and time again we continue to fix the same broken system by tweaking around the edges.  We need a paradigm shift in our thinking: where the mental health service user is genuinely at the centre of service design.

Crazy Mental Health services

Mental Health service users across New Zealand receive and consume information differently from the way we used to in the past.

We take small things for granted (Internet Banking, Google, Trade Me, Email, Texting and Social Media) that connect us to services, information, friends and families but our mental health services continue to stagnate.

There is no overarching cohesive innovation framework for New Zealand.

We have failed to deliver effective and efficient mental health services commensurate with the changing times.

Current deficiencies

Absence of an eMental Health Strategy in New Zealand has resulted in incoherent provision of mental health services. This is further exacerbated by the ineffective and cumbersome procurement processes strewn across the Ministry of Health, District Health Board and Primary Health landscape often duplicating services.

The state of Mental Health services also suffers from a lack of integration and interoperability between disparate services and IT vendor systems.

EMental Health

It is time that Primary and Secondary mental health have an embedded eMental Health component (e.g. build on the Ministry of Health’s existing investment in the National Telehealth Service).

Adequate investment in this area is long overdue.

Urgent next steps

We need to put a sense of urgency to expedite the next steps.

As a nation we can do far better by embracing newer ways and means of engaging with the mental health service users.

To that effect, it is important for New Zealand to consider establishing (a) A strategy for eMental Health (b) A Ministerial Advisory Group on eMental Health to examine the role of digital technology and (c) A dynamic eMental Health Programme of work at the Health Ministry.

Getting Help

If you are worried about your or someone’s mental health or that of your own, the best place to get help is your GP or local mental health provider.

However, if you or someone else is in danger or endangering others, please call 111.

If you need to talk to someone, call any of the following free helplines round-the-clock: (a) Depression Helpline: 0800-111757 (b) Lowdown Text 5626 (c) Call or text 1737

Anil Thapliyal is the eMental Health Lead and Adjunct Professor at the Centre for eHealth, Auckland University of Technology.  He is also President, eMental Health International Collaborative and a Member of the eMental Health Section of the World Psychiatric Association.

The above is a highly edited version. For full text, please visit www.indiannewslink.co.nz

(Picture of Anil Thapliyal by Lorenzo Thapliyal)

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