Select Committee · Human Rights (Joint Committee)

Mental Health Bill

Status: Closed Opened: 19 Dec 2024 Closed: 13 May 2026 15 recommendations 14 conclusions 2 reports

The Mental Health Bill would introduce wide-ranging changes to the Mental Health Act 1983. This is the principal legislation governing the detention and compulsory treatment of people suffering from mental disorders in England and Wales. It would make changes to policies in multiple areas including the approach to autism and learning disabilities, grounds for detention, …

Clear

Reports

2 reports
Title HC No. Published Items Response
3rd Report - Mental Health Bill report: Easy Read Version HC 601 3 Jun 2025 0 Overdue
3rd Report - Legislative Scrutiny: Mental Health Bill HC 601 19 May 2025 29 Responded

Recommendations & Conclusions

5 items
22 Recommendation 3rd Report - Legislative Scrutiny: Ment… Accepted

The Government should carry out a review of the use of Community Treatment Orders, which...

The Government should carry out a review of the use of Community Treatment Orders, which a black person is seven times more likely to receive than a white person. (Recommendation, Paragraph 125) 56

Government response. The government is committed to monitoring and reviewing reformed Community Treatment Orders (CTOs) and is developing a long-term monitoring and evaluation strategy that will include consideration of changes to CTOs and related data.
Ministry of Justice
24 Conclusion 3rd Report - Legislative Scrutiny: Ment… Accepted

The Human Rights Act provides legal protection against, and redress for, human rights violations in...

The Human Rights Act provides legal protection against, and redress for, human rights violations in the UK. Recent case law has highlighted a gap in that human rights protection for mental health patients in state commissioned but privately provided care. (Conclusion, Paragraph 136)

Government response. The government agrees this issue should be remedied and has tabled an amendment at Commons Committee to ensure that private providers of state-commissioned mental health inpatient and aftercare are considered public authorities under Section 6 of the Human Rights Act.
Ministry of Justice
26 Conclusion 3rd Report - Legislative Scrutiny: Ment… Accepted

It is crucial that prisoners experiencing serious mental health crises are promptly moved to a...

It is crucial that prisoners experiencing serious mental health crises are promptly moved to a hospital environment where they can receive the treatment they need. Delays in such moves risk exposing individuals to inhuman or degrading treatment in breach of Article 3 ECHR. The Bill’s introduction of a statutory 28 …

Government response. The government agrees that monitoring transfer processes is crucial and has established a Mental Health and Justice Strategic Advisory Group to scrutinise data and identify solutions. They also commit to annual reporting on Bill implementation, including transfer timeliness.
Ministry of Justice
27 Recommendation 3rd Report - Legislative Scrutiny: Ment… Accepted

Monitoring compliance with this standard is important.

Monitoring compliance with this standard is important. Data on hospital transfers should be gathered centrally and made available to the public. (Recommendation, Paragraph 144)

Government response. The government agrees on the importance of monitoring hospital transfers and has established a Mental Health and Justice Strategic Advisory Group to scrutinise data, committing to include transfer timeliness data in annual reports when ready for publication.
Ministry of Justice
28 Conclusion 3rd Report - Legislative Scrutiny: Ment… Accepted

We can see that in narrow circumstances, where the need to ensure the safety of...

We can see that in narrow circumstances, where the need to ensure the safety of the public makes deprivation of liberty in the community the least restrictive option available, being able to impose conditions on the discharge of a restricted patient that amount to a deprivation of liberty may be …

Government response. The government agrees on the need for careful use of the power to impose conditions on restricted patient discharge and for effective safeguards, confirming that more safeguards are in place for this cohort, including more frequent and automatic Mental Health …
Ministry of Justice

Oral evidence sessions

1 session
Date Witnesses
29 Jan 2025 Alice Livermore · Mind, Andy Bell · Centre for Mental Health, Dr Lucy Series · Bristol University, Ulele Burnham · Doughty Street Chambers View ↗

Correspondence

3 letters
DateDirectionTitle
11 Sep 2025 Correspondence from the Committee to the Minister of State for the Department o…
12 Jun 2025 Correspondence from the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Patient Safe…
8 May 2025 Correspondence to the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care on the Ment…