Police aren’t properly trained for mental health crises—but they’re often the first responders
In an emergency, police are often the first called to the scene. But they are rarely equipped to deal with complex mental health crises.
Following recent
parliamentary inquiries
and
royal commissions
there has been
a push
—led by researchers, advocates and some senior police officials—for a shift to a health-led and paramedic-first response.
South Australia is
one of a number of states
trialing a program based on a “co-responder” model. This means trained specialists accompany police to some mental health call-outs in the community.
So, how do co-responder programs work? And are they effective? Here’s what the evidence says.
The current situation
Mental health legislation in all states and
territories
gives police
the power
to use
“reasonable force” to transport people who “appear to have a mental illness” to hospital to prevent harm.
In
most cases
, this involves police taking people experiencing mental health crises to hospital emergency departments, without help from mental health clinicians or paramedics.
Overburdened emergency departments have
long wait times
for mental health and are often
inadequate at responding
to people experiencing distress.
Those who need mental health support may not need a hospital stay.
One study
found only 1 in 5 (23%) of those taken to emergency by police—usually after expressing intention to self-harm—were admitted.
The strain on police resources is also significant. For example, in New South Wales, police now respond to triple zero calls about mental health crises in the community
every nine minutes
(in Victoria it’s
every 10
).
Criminalizing mental health
The mere presence of police alone
can escalate
already heightened emotional situations.
Police frequently
lack training
in mental health, with combative
police culture
and the
militarization of police training
presenting significant problems.
Police often acknowledge they are
ill-equipped
to intervene in a mental health crisis.
Yet, about
1 in 10 people
who access mental health services have previously interacted with police.
These encounters can be risky and even deadly.
People who experience mental health issues are
over-represented
in incidents of police use of force and
fatal shootings
.
Police involvement can also lead to the
criminalization
of people with mental health issues and disability, as they are more likely to be issued with
charges and fines or be arrested
.
Yet the
main reason
police take people to hospital is for self-harm or suicidal distress, and most are not deemed to be of risk to others.
What do people with mental health issues want instead?
In
our research
, conducted in 2021–2022, we interviewed 20 people across Australia who’d had police intervene when they had a mental health crisis.
Those we spoke to often had multiple experiences of police call-outs over their lifetime.
They told us excessive use of force by police had traumatizing and long-term effects. Many were subject to pepper spray, tasers, police dogs, batons, handcuffs and restraints, despite not being accused of committing criminal offenses.
For example, Alex said, “I was having an anxiety attack, and they pepper sprayed me. I had bruises all over my hands from the handcuffs they put on really roughly, even though I wasn’t under arrest. Then they took me to hospital.”
In our study, people with mental health issues said they would prefer an ambulance-led response wherever possible, without police attending at all.
They also wanted to be linked to therapeutic and community-based services, including
mental health peer support
, housing, disability support and family violence services.
What are co-responder programs?
Co-responder programs aim to de-escalate mental health incidents, reduce the number of emergency department presentations and link people experiencing mental health crises with services.
These programs, such as the one
being trialed
in South Australia, mean mental health clinicians (for example, social workers, counselors or psychologists) attend some mental health incidents alongside police.
Peer-reviewed research
shows these kinds of responses can be effective when compared to traditional police-led interventions.
An
evaluation of a co-response program in Victoria
found the mental health response was quicker and higher quality than when police attended alone.
The success of programs in
the United States
and
Canada
shows many mental health crises can be safely managed without police involvement,
for example
by addressing issues such as homelessness and addiction with health workers, and reducing the number of arrests.
Limited by a lack of resources
While the evidence shows co-responder schemes are
valued by people with lived experience
, they are often limited by under-resourcing.
Co-responder programs are not universally available. Often, they do not operate
after usual business hours
or across regions.
There is also a
lack of long-term evaluations
of these programs. This means what we understand about their implementation, design and effectiveness over time can be
mixed
.
More broadly, the mental health sector is facing significant and ongoing
labor shortages
across Australia, posing another resourcing challenge.
How can responses to mental health crises be improved?
Last year, the
final report
from the Royal Commission into Victoria’s Mental Health System recommended paramedics should act as first responders in mental health crises wherever possible, instead of police, diverting triple zero calls to Ambulance Victoria.
However that reform has
been delayed
, with no indication of when it may be implemented.
A 2023 NSW
parliamentary inquiry
also remarked on the need to explore reducing police involvement.
Co-responder and ambulance-first models offer an improvement.
But our research suggests people with lived experience of mental health issues want more than ambulances replacing the police as crisis responders.
They need a mental health system that supports them and provides what they needed, when they need it: compassionate, timely and non-coercive responses.
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
Provided by The Conversation
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