This week, the Health Secretary, Wes Streeting, announced a clinical review into rising mental health, ADHD, and autism diagnosis. Streeting goes to great lengths to frame the review as strictly clinical and evidence-seeking, citing a lack of consensus between clinical mental health professionals on the drivers of mental illness.
But this framing misses the point. The crisis in mental health is not about overdiagnosis; it’s about the conditions that make people unwell.
The latest review embeds diagnosis – or over-diagnosis – as the key issue in mental health care, sidelining the well-documented reality of systemic failures in public health, welfare and care. Whilst tentatively supported by Mind, the Mental Health Foundation and the National Autistic Society, Streeting’s evidence-seeking narrative falls short of addressing the interconnected forces shaping mental distress.
As Streeting himself cites, between 1993 and 2023, mental health conditions increased by nearly 50%. During those same 30 years, I have sat at tables navigating mental health in multiple roles: as a mental health community care lead, an advocate, a student, a family member, and as a patient. From this vantage point, I am confident evidence is not the resource we are missing.
The review focuses public resources on rates of diagnosis. But diagnosis as the point of enquiry – in a time of record waiting lists and hollowed-out public services – obscures the reality of mental illness. The evidence we already hold consistently shows that mental distress tracks with poverty, precarity, housing instability, and the cumulative impacts of austerity. Decades of cuts to social care, shrinking welfare safety nets and the erosion of community infrastructure have left millions without the support that prevents crisis. In my own proximity to mental ill health, the roots and reflections of catastrophic systemic issues are unmistakable.
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