New South Wales police have been urged to improve mandatory mental health training for officers and “explore” becoming the second responders to these types of emergencies after a string of fatalities involving vulnerable people.could cause further distress and had been harmful in a “significant number of cases”.“recent tragedies” involving police responses
Sign up for Guardian Australia’s free morning and afternoon email newsletters for your daily news roundup In response to criticism from the sector that the funding was not enough, the premier, Chris Minns, said he understood the concerns but the government was “doing everything we can”. Guardian Australia previously revealed that 52 people experiencing mental distress died in interactions with NSW policeDespite this, police cadets undergo just 18 hours of mental health training, with nothing further required after they become sworn officers.
“As a result, oftentimes people that are in a desperate situation either interact with NSW police or one of our emergency departments.” Police said last year that two senior officers had been sent to London to study the “Right Person, Right Care” model, which has health workers rather than police attend mental health call-outs if there is no crime being committed and no risk to life.that mental health calls have gone unanswered under the new model, which has put lives at risk because health social care services have not been given the resources to plug the gap.
Source: Healthcare Press (healthcarepress.net)
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