Monthly Newsletter Sign-up
-
Upcoming Event
Town Hall Meeting - Tue 9 July, Griffin Centre, Civic, 10am…
Ask Andrew
Do you have a question or comment for Andrew Leigh?
Contact Us
Tel : 02 6247 4396
Fax : 02 6247 3457
Unit 8/1 Torrens St
Braddon ACT 2612

First Speech
AFR - Mental Health
Narrow Mental Health Focus, Australian Financial Review, 12 April 2011
An essential characteristic of great innovators is their single-minded focus. Imagine how much poorer the world would be if the Wright Brothers had been part-time trainspotters, if Bill Gates had spent half his childhood studying archaeology, or if Howard Florey had split his time equally between economics and medical research.
The great Oxford philosopher Isaiah Berlin once divided thinkers into hedgehogs, who know one big thing – and foxes, who know many little things. Using this metaphor, most scientific breakthroughs are performed by hedgehogs, whose unwavering focus on a single goal is what cracks the nut. By contrast, policymakers often need to be foxes, recognising that the world’s problems are complex, and that most challenges cannot be boiled down into a single idea.
In mental health policy today, considerable attention has been given to a pair of youth-focused approaches: headspace (for moderate mental ill-health) and EPPIC (for serious mental illness). Both strategies have shown promising results, with evaluations using matched treatment groups suggesting that headspace and EPPIC are effective.
While these results are impressive – and the work has been noted internationally – it is critical to keep the success of youth-based programs in perspective. The age range of 12 to 25 is undoubtedly an important one, but it is far from clear that this is the only point at which policymakers can intervene.
In lifecycle terms, most measures of mental illness peak are highest in the age range 35-44. According to the Australian Bureau of Statistics’ most recent National Survey of Mental Health and Wellbeing, this is the peak age range for affective disorders (such as depressive episodes) and anxiety disorders (such as post-traumatic stress disorder). The suicide rate also peaks in the age range 35-44. The average age of a suicide victim in Australia is 44, well above the eligibility age for headspace and EPPIC.
Like many physical health problems, mental disorders often have a long history – sometimes stretching back to adolescence. But it does not automatically follow that youth services will prevent problems from arising later in life. The Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists has noted that intervening prematurely could lead to patients being inappropriately labelled and medicated. As an analogy, we know that obesity and smoking can have their roots in the teenage years – yet it would be a mistake to think that either could be solved by a youth-only approach.
A whole-of-life approach to mental health requires a primary health care system that is better integrated, and in which doctors and nurses are trained to deal with mental disorders. It also involves investing in perinatal depression, direct suicide prevention, and crisis intervention (such as after the Victorian bushfires or the Queensland floods).
The other feature of the youth model is that it misses the potential for interventions before age 12. In one study, expert observations of toddlers correlated with suicide attempts in adulthood. Improving mental wellbeing at young ages requires high quality childcare, skilled teachers, and a system in which educators and medical workers are adept at managing minor problems and referring more serious issues.
Yet despite the evidence, Tony Abbott’s current mental health policy has just one approach: boost youth services. This is like having an education policy that focuses only on high schools, and dismisses the potential to improve skills through early childhood programs, apprenticeships or on-the-job training. And because Mr Abbott’s policy cuts back on other aspects of health care (such as electronic patient records), there is a risk that his plan would make the primary health care system even less adept at dealing with mental illness.
The good news in mental health is that the Australian suicide rate has steadily fallen over the past decade, and is now lower than at any time since the end of World War II. Funding has also increased, with federal mental health spending in 2010-14 nearly triple what it was in 2004-08.
But the bad news is that mental health still imposes a major burden on sufferers and their families. Australians with mental illnesses are overrepresented in our jail cells and on our park benches. Anyone who is passionate about reducing disadvantage – as I am – must be serious about addressing mental illness. And as any fox knows, you don’t solve a complex problem with simple solutions.
Andrew Leigh is the federal member for Fraser.
-
Community
-
Ageing Not a Problem 04 Dec 2012
-
AFR - Who Cares About Inequality 26 Sep 2012
-
Better Together 08 Aug 2012
-
National Volunteer Week 01 May 2012
-
Stimulus, Schools and Skating 13 Jan 2012
-
National Disability Insurance Scheme 13 Jan 2012
-
AFR - Labor Pains 29 Mar 2011
-
AFR - Smart Giving 21 Dec 2010
-
AFR - Too Many in the Lock-Up 09 Nov 2010
-
-
Economics
-
AFR - Equality & Superannuation 10 Oct 2012
-
Migration & Mining 09 Aug 2012
-
Dumb Luck - Smart Future 09 Jun 2012
-
Phobophobia 07 Jun 2012
-
The Pro-Growth Progressive 10 May 2012
-
The Art of Choosing 13 Apr 2012
-
Measuring Wellbeing 13 Jan 2012
-
A Mess, But No Messiah 28 Oct 2011
-
The Social Impact of the US Recession 28 Oct 2011
-
AFR - Apple Ruling Makes Sense 29 Aug 2011
-
AFR - Mine the Gap 25 Aug 2011
-
AFR-Second Thoughts on Sovereign Funds 29 Jun 2011
-
AFR - Break the Resource Curse 17 May 2011
-
AFR - CEO Pay 03 May 2011
-
AFR - Jobless in America 01 Feb 2011
-
AFR - Future Lies in Skilled Cities 07 Dec 2010
-
AFR - Debt Has Served Us Well 14 Sep 2010
-
AFR - Time to Make Our Luck 31 Aug 2010
-
-
Education
-
In Praise of Bookworms 20 Apr 2012
-
AFR - Students Vital to Growth 28 Sep 2010
-
AFR - Good Schools, Less Crime 20 Jul 2010
-
-
Environment
-
AFR - Household assistance doesn't undo carbon pricing 25 Aug 2011
-
AFR - Carbon Pricing 01 Mar 2011
-
-
Foreign Affairs
-
In Praise of Openness 29 May 2012
-
The Asian Century Beckons 25 Apr 2012
-
AFR - It’s Hard to Build a Road with Clean Hands 15 Mar 2011
-
AFR - Foreign Investment 23 Nov 2010
-
AFR - Make Trade, Not War 03 Aug 2010
-
-
Health
-
AFR - The Economics of a Smile 14 Jun 2011
-
AFR - Mental Health 12 Apr 2011
-
-
Other
-
Wonderous Times With Newborns 06 Nov 2012
-
QE Response: Government as Risk Manager 07 Sep 2012
-
Tall Poppies in the Land of the Fair Go 18 Jul 2012
-
Lessons Important For Us All 03 Jul 2012
-
Family, Friends and Fate 06 Jun 2012
-
Crimes and Punishment 24 May 2012
-
Living Longer, Living Better 02 May 2012
-
Randomised Policy Trials 13 Jan 2012
-
Superfast Broadband 13 Jan 2012
-
Nowcasting 28 Oct 2011
-
AFR - Take Control of Your Census 29 Aug 2011
-
QE Response: Trivial Pursuit 02 Nov 2010
-
Book - Disconnected 27 Oct 2010
-