Published Jan 20 2020

The state of our mental health: Addressing quality of care in mental health

The 2019 Royal Commission into Victoria’s Mental Health System provided “chilling and detailed documentation of the poor quality of care provided to people with serious mental illness in our state”, says Monash Pro Vice Chancellor and Professor of Psychiatry, David Copolov, AO.

Victoria’s Premier Daniel Andrews has promised to implement all of the Royal Commission’s recommendations. The commission received more than 3000 submissions - the final report is due in October 2020.

In the meantime, the State Government will set about introducing the recommendations, part of the interim report released late last year. These include administering a special levy, or tax, to fund improved mental health services in the state, adding 170 acute mental health beds for young people and adults, and expanding follow-up care for people who have attempted suicide.

The Royal Commission coincided with the Productivity Commission’s report into mental health, which is taking a national perspective. Together the close examination of mental health care being undertaken by the two overlapping commissions represents an historic opportunity to reform mental health services, Professor Copolov said.

He strongly endorsed the Royal Commission’s recommendations in its Interim Report.

The new state of mind

Victoria has seen “a dramatic increase in the emergency department presentations of people with mental illness”, he said.

Half of these patients must wait more than eight hours to be admitted only to be “discharged from hospital much too early, and that’s because, among other reasons, there just aren’t enough mental health beds”.

Professor Copolov said people are more open about mental disorders than they once were, which is obviously a very good thing. “But it may lead to the impression that there’s some sort of contagion, or major increase, whereas the data shows that although there might be some increase in depression and anxiety, especially in younger people, on the whole the figures don’t point to that”.

Head of the Monash Department of Psychiatry Professor Suresh Sundram also endorsed the Royal Commission’s interim recommendations.

The mentally ill are over-represented in courts and prisons, homeless shelters and among the Indigenous population, he says.

“We need to be able to provide much more holistic and comprehensive treatment programs.” (One of the interim recommendations is that a centre focused on culturally appropriate care for Aboriginal Victorians be established, to work closely with community-run organisations.)

Moving forward with care

Professor Sundram said that because mental illnesses are not as stigmatised as they once were, our society was now ready to “dedicate itself to achieving the sorts of advances that will ultimately lead to prevention and cure”.

While survival rates for cancer have improved greatly during the past 30 or 40 years, the most severe mental illnesses – including schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and major depression – have not received the same research focus as cancer and deserve to do so, Professor Sundram says.

He described these conditions as “chronic persistent lifelong disabling illnesses”.

“The interventions that we have for them are relatively limited,” he says. “All that links them is the fact they are illnesses which principally affect the brain and we don’t know what their underlying pathology is.”

These severe mental disorders affect about 3.5 per cent of the population. They also contribute to the high rate of suicide in Australia, with schizophrenia patients, for example, about eight to 12 times more likely to commit suicide than the general population.

“Half of those suicides occur within the first three years of diagnosis,” Professor Sundram says. “They realise all the potential that they’ve lost as a consequence of their illness … people think it’s better to be dead.”

Fortunately, the majority of Australians affected by mental illness do not suffer from these chronic illnesses, but from more treatment-responsive commonplace disorders such as mild or moderate anxiety or depression.

According to the Productivity Commission’s Draft Report and several other data sources, 20 per cent of Australians experience some form of mental ill-health each year. But much of “that 20 per cent involves people who have disorders that are not severe,” Professor Copolov says.

The good news is that most psychiatric treatments, including non-pharmacological ones, for such patients are very effective, he says.

“We may not cure people, but we can certainly help them … having or having had a psychiatric disorder is usually entirely compatible with leading a good, productive and enjoyable life.”


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About the Authors

  • David copolov, ao

    Professor of Psychiatry and Pro Vice-Chancellor

    David is the Pro Vice-Chancellor, Major Campuses and Student Engagement at Monash University. He is also Professor of Psychiatry at Monash and at the University of Melbourne. He is a long-standing opponent of the dehospitalisation of mental healthcare in Australia. Together with Professor Tarun Bastiampillai from Flinders University, he has been one of two principal authors and coordinators of major, Monash-funded submissions to the Royal Commission into Victoria’s Mental Health system and the Productivity Commission’s Inquiry into Mental Health, involving dozens of senior academic psychiatrists and directors of mental health services.

  • Chris langmead

    Professor (Research), Neuromedicines Discovery Centre (NDC), Monash Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences; Victorian Heart Institute (VHI)

    Chris has a strong interest in drug discovery, particularly in GPCRs as drug targets in neurodegenerative and psychiatric disorders, but also has interest in structure-function of GPCRs and analytical receptor pharmacology, with particular reference to allosteric interactions.

  • Sonja kassenboehmer

    Senior Research Fellow, Centre for Health Economics

    Dr Sonja Kassenboehmer is a Senior Research Fellow at the Centre for Health Economics at Monash University. Her research focuses on economic decision-making over the lifecycle and the role of financial stress, mental health, cognitive ability and non-cognitive skills.

  • Hannah kirk

    Senior Lecturer, Psychology, Turner Institute for Brain and Mental Health

    Dr Hannah Kirk is a Developmental Neuroscientist and NHMRC Early Career Research Fellow in the Turner Institute for Brain and Mental Health, at Monash University. She holds a Bachelor of Science in Psychology from Newcastle University (UK) and a PhD in Psychological Sciences from Monash University (Australia).

  • Andrea reupert

    Professor and Head of School, School of Educational Psychology and Counselling, Faculty of Education

    Andrea is a Professor at Monash University, Clayton and Director of Psychological Programs at the Krongold Clinic. She is the Editor in Chief of the journal Advances in Mental Health, Associate Editor for Australian Psychologist, and has served as guest editor for the Medical Journal of Australia and Child & Youth Services Review for special issues related to families where a parent has a mental illness.

  • Craig hassed oam

    Professor, Centre for Consciousness and Contemplative Studies

    Craig is coordinator of mindfulness programs at Monash University. He has been instrumental in introducing a variety of innovations into medical education and practice in Australia and overseas with an emphasis on the application of holistic, integrative and mind-body medicine in medical practice.

  • Kim cornish

    Sir John Monash Distinguished Professor, Psychology; Director, Turner Institute for Brain and Mental Health

    Kim is a developmental cognitive neuroscientist and head of the School of Psychological Sciences. She is the founding director of The Turner Institute for Brain and Mental Health at Monash University, and champions the need to connect research with real world applications.

  • Suresh sundram

    Professor, Head, Department of Psychiatry

    Suresh has been investigating the molecular pathology of schizophrenia and related psychotic disorders using pharmacological, neurochemical and neuropathological approaches. These inter-related methods have been applied to parse components of the disorder such as treatment resistance and suicide to better understand their neurobiological substrates.

  • Zen goh

    Lecturer, Department of Management

    Dr Goh is a lecturer in the Department of Management and has received her PhD from National University of Singapore. Her research broadly seeks to understand and foster employee well-being, and how work and non-work factors interact to contribute to creating a great life. Her current research focuses what and how individuals and organisations can do to promote employee thriving.

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