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Alongside all forces across England and Wales, Cambridgeshire Constabulary have begun the process of implementing ‘Right Care, Right Person’ over the coming months.
Developed in close collaboration with health partners ‘Right Care, Right Person’ is a model designed to ensure that when there are concerns for a person’s welfare linked to mental health, medical or social care issues, the right person with the right skills, training and experience will respond.
In recent years, police officers have often been required to offer support to those who really require specialist medical or psychological care.
Under ‘Right Care, Right Person’, our officers will no longer be taking on this responsibility when it is not appropriate to do so.
Indeed, police intervention can sometimes have a detrimental effect on vulnerable patients who feel they are being criminalised because of their health or social care issues.
The care will now be provided by the agency that can best meet the individual’s needs.
Similar schemes have already been successfully adopted by forces in Humberside, Lincolnshire and Hampshire.
Assistant Chief Constable Vicki Evans said: “Protecting the vulnerable and keeping people safe is at the heart of everything we do. However, all too often, police officers are dealing with situations that could be better handled by other, more appropriate agencies.
“This includes people being in mental health crisis, who need the help and support of professionals and not the skills of a police officer. This type of demand is ever increasing with one in five calls we receive is mental health related.
“The Right Care, Right Person initiative is about giving people the right support when they need it, from the right agency. It is supported by central government including the Home Office and Department of Health and Social Care and the policy has been recognised by the College of Policing and the National Police Chief’s Council (NPCC) as good practice.
“Partners across Cambridgeshire and Peterborough are working together closely to plan implementation of this initiative and aim to introduce it towards the end of the year in a planned and phased approach.
“We want to ensure vulnerable people receive the necessary support, whilst at the same time freeing up police resources to tackle crime and deliver safer communities for the public.
“Policing will always have a role with people suffering mental ill health, but we cannot bridge the gap in service provision of other agencies. This is not a sustainable position or one which is good patients. Being dealt with by the police can have a detrimental impact on vulnerable people.”
Threshold for police intervention
The threshold for police intervention will be:
Chief Constable Andy Marsh, CEO at the College of Policing, said: “The public want police catching criminals and protecting them from harm. Attending mental health calls is not always appropriate and these changes will strike a better balance so that the public receives the service they want.
“Police are not trained mental health professionals and the new toolkit will triage incoming calls to police so that the public receives the best response. The toolkit is unique in policing and will offer support and guidance to call handlers when managing mental health, concerns for welfare and missing persons.
“This is a change for policing across England and Wales and the College of Policing will be supporting forces as they focus their efforts on keeping their neighbourhoods safe.”