The health secretary Wes Streeting recently announced that the government was launching an independent review into mental health, ADHD and autism services in the UK to improve support.
On the surface, this sounds like a worthy cause. Digging a little deeper in the briefings to the press, however, the review will focus in particular on the “overdiagnosis” of mental health conditions, which have become “overpathologised”, according to the health secretary.
It is likely no coincidence that this announcement came in the same week that the prime minister, Keir Starmer, called for a renewed push on welfare reform. Indeed, this is all part of the government’s efforts to cut welfare spending in the name of boosting employment and productivity.
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In part, this strategy hopes to tap into the misplaced, if intuitive, belief that benefits spending has increased as a result of rising mental health cases due to the Covid-19 pandemic – and a perceived increased sensitivity among younger generations.
But new analysis from The Disability Policy Centre, the UK’s only disability think-tank, shows that this severely misinterprets the data on mental health and benefits. Our new analysis of Department for Work and Pensions data shows that the definition of ‘mental health’ as used by the government differs quite significantly from the reality in the data.