A welcome focus on mental health with the ALP's $1 billion commitment
The Australian Labor Party’s announcement earlier this week of a $1 billion commitment to free mental health supports, while also boosting the mental health workforce, is a significant commitment to mental health in Australia.
If implemented, the comprehensive package outlined by the Prime Minister on Tuesday will increase access to free supports across the country, regardless of a person’s income or postcode.
It is a very welcome and much-needed step towards a better mental health system for all Australians, and an important step in creating the pathways to free mental health care and support that Mental Health Australia is calling for in our Federal Election platform.
Getting help early is crucial to preventing the longer-term impacts of mental ill-health. The focus on free mental health care for young people who have faced unprecedented challenges accessing the support they need, when they need it, is particularly heartening in the context of a doubling in rates of mental ill-health among young people in Australia over the past decade.
Importantly, this commitment also grows the pipeline of the mental health workforce, so that we can better respond to the community’s mental health needs, now and into the future.
This significant announcement comes at a time when voters want government to do more on mental health. It also follows the Coalition’s commitment to $400 million for youth mental health support in the recent Opposition Budget reply speech.
I am encouraged to see large bipartisan investments in mental health from the major parties so far in this campaign, and to see mental health take centre stage in the federal election. These announcements reflect real progress.
Of course, there is still more to be done. As we’ve outlined in our Vision Statement, we also need to overhaul the foundations of our system; match funding to the scale of the problem and community expectation; and embed an equitable, inclusive, human rights-based approach to care and support.
We are looking forward to advocating for these long-term transformational changes, while also working in close partnership with our members and next Australian Government, to ensure that the election commitments announced to date translate to real improvements in mental health across the country.
Carolyn Nikoloski
CEO, Mental Health Australia |