A chief constable has expressed deep concern that a patient with serious mental health problems had to sleep in the back of a police car in a hospital car park because there was no bed available for her.
Katie Simpkins, 23, from Corsham in Wiltshire, was detained under the Mental Health Act for her own safety but there was no hospital bed available in the whole of the county. Officers allowed Simpkins to sleep under a blanket in the back of their patrol car and watched over her until a bed became available.
She and her husband, Tristan Simpkins, 25, released a photograph of her in the back of the police car to try to raise awareness of the lack of beds available in such situations.
The chief constable of Wiltshire police, Mike Veale, said officers were often having to take responsibility for vulnerable people with mental health problems who ought to be in the care of health professionals.
He said that in the past week officers had persuaded a 17-year-old girl with schizophrenia to come down from the roof of a car park, only to be told there were no beds available for her anywhere in the county. He also said officers held a man in a cell for more than 48 hours because there was no mental health care facility available for him.
Veale said: “A police officer is not the appropriate person to be dealing with a vulnerable member of the public who has an illness and poses a real risk to their own health and wellbeing. My police officers and staff face difficult, stressful and sometimes dangerous situations every day. They are not trained to provide specialist care to people with complex problems. They don’t know the background of these people, their medical history or their personal details.
“These issues have always been here for the police, and not just in Wiltshire, but are becoming more acute as austerity bites and there is increased pressure on social care and healthcare services.”
Police had detained Simpkins under section 136 of the act early last Saturday when she suffered a mental health crisis. Her husband said police rang round but could not find a place for her in a mental health unit.
They took her into the custody suite at Melksham police station until later on Saturday afternoon, when officers were told a bed was available at Green Lane hospital in Devizes. However, when they got there at 5pm they were told it was not ready.
Hiç yorum yok:
Yorum Gönder