1 November 2023 00:01 Met Police launch ‘Right Care, Right Person’ to get mental health patients the right support The introduction of the new policy will mean officers continue to attend calls where there is an immediate risk to life – such as a person who may be at risk of taking their life, or threatening others harm

People experiencing a mental health crisis will get more appropriate support as ‘Right Care Right Person’ launches across London today, Wednesday, 1 November.

Currently, the Metropolitan Police Service is increasingly involved in responding to mental health crisis and other health-related issues diverting officers from their core role of preventing and solving crime, supporting victims and bringing offenders to justice. This is while patients who need medical help are attended to by officers instead of expert healthcare professionals.

In London, police officers spend an average of 14.2 hours in hospital with patients when they are sectioned under the Mental Health Act while they wait for a medical professional to take over care. In March 2023 alone, officers spent 10,000 hours working on sectioning patients and in 2021/22, the Met received more than 78,000 mental health-related calls and more than 204,000 concerns for welfare calls.

‘Right Care, Right Person’ is a national scheme between local police services and the NHS so mental health patients receive the right care when they call an emergency service. The Met has been working closely with key health partners including the NHS and social care teams across London to ensure that they have planned for these changes. All agree this is in the best interests of patients.

The introduction of the new policy will mean officers continue to attend calls where there is an immediate risk to life – such as a person who may be at risk of taking their life, or threatening others harm – but calls will be triaged by 999 and 101 call handlers so a caller’s needs are better assessed to ensure the right service responds.

This will mean officers will:

  • Not attend medical calls where a healthcare professional is more appropriate.
  • No longer attend welfare checks for people who have missed a planned health appointment, check whether they have taken their medication, or to check on a person when the health or social care agency is not working.
  • Will not look for people who have walked out of mental health facilities or left hospital unless there is a policing reason.
  • Always call for an ambulance to transport people who have been sectioned under the Mental Health Act instead of using a police van.

This will free up police officers to attend emergency calls where a crime has been, or is being, committed so they can catch suspects more quickly, gather evidence and better support victims. This will allow officers more time to focus on policing priorities for communities across London, such as knife crime, robbery and violence against women and girls.

Assistant Commissioner Matt Twist, who leads ‘Right Care, Right Person’ in the Met, said: “People suffering with mental health issues deserve the right response from trained medical professionals and should not feel like they are being criminalised in their time of crisis or need. Too often the police are called as the default response to what are healthcare issues. This leads to the criminalisation of patients, adverse outcomes and a reduction in our ability to deliver core policing responsibilities.

“Our officers are compassionate and work under extremely difficult circumstances, but they are not trained to deliver mental health care and it is important people get the support they need from those who have the right skills.

“By ensuring the right care is delivered by the right person and support services, we can reduce demand on the police and focus our efforts on tackling the crime that matters to people and making our communities safer. We have worked closely with our partners in the NHS, London Ambulance Service and local authorities to get ready for the implementation of this national approach.

“I want to reassure Londoners that the Met will always attend incidents where there is a threat to life, and also where crime is being committed or a risk of a breach of the peace. People should continue to seek support when they need it and ‘Right Care, Right Person’ will support you to get the right service.”

Extensive training has taken place across our command-and-control (MetCC) teams who deal with 999 and 101 calls. They will be assessing incoming calls and will decide whether to deploy police or not. MetCC officers will look to see if a crime has been committed, if someone needs medical support and/or a patient has walked out from a health facility. The police will no longer accept a duty of care from other agencies where core policing responsibilities are not engaged.

The model was pioneered by Humberside Police and has proven hugely successful in reducing demand across all services, with the force seeing seven per cent of officer time freed up.

As the Met builds A New Met for London, the ‘Right Care, Right Person’ model will mean officers and staff can deal more effectively with community crime fighting.