Chapter 5 Concluding comments
5.1
Amongst the general population up to a third of people have or will
experience a period of mental unwellness in their lifetimes. This is reflected
in the proportion of people on the disability support pension who have a mental
illness (which is approximately 30 per cent). It is of great concern that these
numbers appear to be on the rise. There are also people on other types of benefit
who have undiagnosed mental health conditions. Co-morbidities like drug and
alcohol addictions or homelessness can also mask mental illness.
5.2
This is not the first report to note the entrenched stigma surrounding
people with a mental illness. Nonetheless, the Committee was struck by how
pervasive stigma remains in schools, workplaces and the community as a whole.
It is for this reason that this report’s leading recommendation is that the
Commonwealth Government coordinate a comprehensive and multifaceted national
education campaign to target stigma and reduce discrimination against people
with a mental illness in Australian schools, workplaces and communities. Organisations
like Beyond Blue and Black Dog have done much already to raise awareness about
depression and anxiety disorders. However, there is a need to complement this
work with a targeted focus on the less well-understood mental illnesses such as
psychosis.
5.3
High profile national anti-discrimination campaigns in other countries,
including New Zealand, the United Kingdom and Scotland, have succeeded in
raising awareness, countering stereotypes and changing attitudes about people
with a mental illness. Engaging employer associations and employers is a core
component of these international campaigns and is something to be emulated
here.
5.4
The Committee believes that it is very important to start this work
young, in schools. All the evidence points to the benefits of prevention and
early intervention. In chapter two the Committee recognises this and recommends
an extension of the Commonwealth Government’s Kidsmatter Australian Primary
Schools Mental Health Initiative, into high schools. Adolescence and early
adulthood is often when mental illness first presents and it is a critical time
to provide support. The expansion of the Early Psychosis Prevention and
Intervention Centre (EPPIC) model as exemplified by Orygen Youth Health,
Headspace and many other community organisations are examples of helping a
range of young people to finish school and go onto further education or find
work.
5.5
Ways to better assist students with mental illness needs to infiltrate
into the country’s universities and vocational and educational training
institutions too. The Committee notes the good work done by student services
and the increasing workload placed on disability liaison officers, in
particular, with increased numbers of students having a mental illness. The
educational institutions that are having the most traction in respect of
helping students with a mental illness are the ones where university leaders
acknowledge the issues, dedicate resources towards and support teaching and
other relevant staff to assist students with mental ill health, rather than leaving
these matters to student services. Encouraging and facilitating peer support
groups on campuses is also extremely valuable.
5.6
Over and over, the Committee was told that people with a mental illness
want to work, that it is part of their recovery. Work contributes to one’s
identity, sense of worth, purpose and stake in society. While social
enterprises and schemes like supported wage systems have their place and
certainly help some people enter into employment, the goal should be for people
with mental illnesses to engage with the open employment market. Chapter three
outlines a range of supports that exist to help job seekers and employers alike
in this regard. Key to the success of any of these tools is an attitude of
flexibility and a desire to make things work. Commonwealth initiatives like
JobAccess, the Employment Assistance Fund and Jobs in Jeopardy appear to be
underutilised and need to be promoted more widely, especially amongst
employers, for greater take-up.
5.7
The Committee heard much from the supply side of the equation but less
from employers. Employers who participated in the inquiry provided some
outstanding model workplace strategies for employing and retaining employees
with a mental health condition as well as looking after the mental health and
wellbeing of all their employees. The Committee recognises that it may not
have heard the full range of employer experience because employers may not have
had a positive or direct experience. Working with employers to promote the
business case for employing someone with a mental illness is something that
needs to happen, in both the public and private sectors.
5.8
The Commonwealth Public Service as a major employer in this country should
be amongst those taking a lead role in exemplifying best practice.
5.9
The complexity of the Centrelink benefits system for Disability Support
Pension recipients and its interaction with the employment services – both
generalist and specialist (disability employment services) was repeatedly
referred to and is considered in chapter four.
5.10
Contributing to this complexity is the plethora of welfare reforms in
recent years, some of which have been introduced in stages and others that are
still being transitioned in. There is a high degree of assessment and
categorisation of people in the current system, with multiple players. These
assessment processes need to be streamlined so that they are compatible and
consistent across the services. A communications strategy that places consumers
and the people who work with them at its heart is integral to ensuring that
clients’ employment and other services needs are met. The system and attendant
processes should encourage and engage rather than discourage and disengage job
seekers. On that note, participation requirements need to be sufficiently
flexible for people to venture into employment, without fear of losing benefit
entitlements and knowing that there is a safety net there for them should any
particular job not work out.
5.11
Employment service providers that specialise in serving clients with a
mental illness need to be recognised for the qualitative results they produce
as well as quantitative ones. The quality of the job or educational opportunity
matters. The aim should not be to get people into any job or training course
for the sake of it. Disability Employment Service providers should be required
to demonstrate their expertise in helping people with a mental illness find
meaningful employment or educational and training opportunities, and this should
be recognised in the Disability Performance Service Framework and star-rating
system.
5.12
One of the main messages to come out of the inquiry is the importance of
fostering case coordination and leveraging collaborative partnerships between government
and other service providers, both formally and informally. The Committee was impressed
by the breadth of strengths-building approaches being employed, especially the
Individual Support and Placement (ISP) model that aims to get people into
competitive employment as quickly as possible, with individualised support
available to the employee and employer alike, and the range of ways to bring
employment services into clinical health services (sometimes, but not
necessarily always co-located).
5.13
State governments, especially Queensland, are conducting some very
interesting pilots in this area. However, there could be further research into
identifying why they work so well, and, importantly, how they might be successfully
scaled up across states and territories and the country as a whole. To this
end, the Committee has recommended that the Commonwealth Government, in
partnership with the states and territories, explore ways through the Council
of Australian Governments (COAG) to support Individual Support and Placement
and other service models that integrate employment services and clinical health
services.
5.14
Clearly, having a third of people on the DSP with a mental illness not
working is a huge economic impost. There are workforce shortages in parts of
the country that need to be filled. There are economic benefits to greater
inclusivity. And, it must be said this applies not just to people with a mental
illness. In the current climate and into the future, workplaces need to be
more, not less, flexible, adaptive and innovative in their approach to
retaining healthy and vital workforces.
5.15
There is a lot of untapped human potential. The United Kingdom national
campaign to end the stigma and discrimination experienced by people with a
mental illness aims to ‘start a conversation and empower people to feel
confident talking about the issue.’
5.16
It is the Committee’s hope that this inquiry contributes to a national
conversation here in Australia. That discussion needs to involve all: the
public, private and community sectors; educational institutions; and employers
-together with individuals with mental illnesses, their families and carers.
The statistics are such that even if we ourselves do not experience a mental
illness, we will certainly know someone close who does. It is in everyone’s
interest to help job seekers with a mental illness secure sustainable
employment. Many voices in this report show that there are effective ways to
achieve this goal.
Amanda
Rishworth MP
Chair