MANCHESTER’S MENTAL HEALTH CRISIS

We urge members of the public, professionals, service users, relatives/carers, and advocates to sign our open letter below to support our demands.

CHARM has sent this open letter to Cllr Basil Curley and Mayor Andy Burnham 

You can add your signature here.

See pdf version here

CHARM Open Letter Mental Health Service Crisis in Manchester

 


 

Community for Holistic, Accessible, Rights Based Mental Health  (CHARM), 41 Old Birley Street, Hulme, Manchester, M15 5RE charm.mentalhealth@gmail.com

14th August 2025

 

FAO: Manchester City Health Scrutiny Committee and the Mayor of Greater Manchester

Dear Cllr Basil Curley and Mayor Andy Burnham 

We have a mental health scandal on our doorstep—and people are dying.

We call for:

  • A halt to GMMH’s restructuring plans in order to consult service users, families and other stakeholders
  • A statutory inquiry into the deaths and financial crisis in Manchester’s mental health services

The provider of our mental health services, Greater Manchester Mental Health Trust (GMMH) is in crisis. Its leadership has failed Manchester.

People with mental health problems in Manchester are dying at twice the rate of everywhere else in England. [1]

Others are recipients of neglect and harm, ending up in hospital, in police custody, or involved in tragic and avoidable incidents. 

Our city’s most vulnerable residents—those living with serious mental illness—are being abandoned, and failed by the very services meant to protect and support them. These are not isolated mistakes. It is a systemic collapse that is already having devastating consequences for individuals, families, and communities.

Preventable deaths are being hidden, silenced, or glossed over.

GM Integrated Care Partnership have received the largest number of Coroner’s Prevention of Future Death warnings out of any region in the UK. [2]

GMMH and Pennine Care have also both individually received the highest number of PFDs for health trusts.

In Greater Manchester, the proportion of healthcare spend on mental health services remains much lower than the national average, despite higher need. 

The service is unsafe.

In 2023 a £97 million annual underinvestment in Greater Manchester mental health services was identified with Manchester. Nothing has been done. (3)

Since GMMH took over the management of services in Manchester in 2017, there has been a rapid deterioration in service provision with a more centralised, less responsive organisation making services remote to the communities they serve.

GMMH have not fought for the rights of vulnerable people in our city to receive a properly funded service. This has been left to frontline workers. The Early Intervention Team in Manchester led a successful industrial action which brought over 1 million pounds of investment to the service. Why couldn’t GMMH senior managers do this for all mental health services?

Thousands of people in urgent need of secondary community mental health care are receiving no care at all. Union investigations show that only 12.5% of people referred to Manchester’s CMHT are assessed and only 8% are offered a service.  Some are placed on a list euphemistically called the “Waiting Well Hub”, with no allocated worker, no regular support, and no clinical plan. Others have been discharged altogether — tens of thousands in recent years — regardless of their ongoing risks and needs. 

This is not a functioning system—it is abandonment with a paper trail.

Those lucky enough to be accepted into services often find that there is no one to provide the care they were promised. Community Mental Health Teams (CMHTs) are overwhelmed. 78% of people under GMMH care do not have a key worker. The vast majority receive no meaningful support between crises. 

Because of this staff have left in droves. Those who stay are overwhelmed and fearful. 

And all of this is happening under the leadership of a Trust and commissioning system that continues to deny the scale of the problem, evade scrutiny, and recycle the same ineffective solutions that caused this crisis in the first place. 

Whistleblowers are being silenced for trying to expose unsafe practices. The lack of trust in GMMH has led Manchester City Council to take social workers back under their own management.[4]

A Broken Structure Can’t Be Repaired With More of the Same

We have been informed that there are 29 ‘consultations’ taking place at the same time across GMMH. This includes a proposed restructure of the Trust without consultation, which will divide the organisation of the trust along service rather than city wide care groups.  Services will be managed across the city region rather than locally and are likely to be less accessible for the public. Services have also been inappropriately fitted together for example with rehabilitation services that should be open, community-based and recovery focused, lumped with forensic services that tends to be focused on risk and coercive practices.

The restructure will further dismantle, downgrade, and relocate services out of reach — without consultation, without clinical consensus, and without care for those left behind. These changes are being pushed through without proper evidence or accountability. Skilled staff are being replaced with unqualified staff, which threatens to dismantle what little effective support remains.

The restructure contradicts the stated aims of new GMMH Care Strategy which asserts a  ‘community-first’ approach that will support those with the greatest level of need. 

The proposed restructure draws resources away from inner city Manchester and under-served areas and redirects resources elsewhere in the city region, further exacerbating inequality especially for central Manchester.

What is this restructure for?  Is it an attempt to cover up the real issues in Central Manchester? Critical data on Central Manchester’s diverse community needs will be compromised.

GMMH – not fit for purpose

GMMH has had no strategic plan to address the specific needs of central Manchester. Manchester has some of the poorest wards in the UK with large ethnic minority communities, refugee communities and a vast transient student population. It has unique needs. Yet Manchester, receives less support and fewer services per capita than other areas in the city region, we are bearing the brunt of failed reforms. 

Central Manchester has the highest population density and the greatest mental health need, but has no local crisis provision and disintegrating community teams. People from diverse inner-city communities have been deprived of local services in the name of efficiency. Services have become increasingly inaccessible, unsafe and inequitable.

It is clear that GMMH is no longer fit to lead mental health care in Manchester. The city’s distinct needs, scale, and diversity require focused, locally based leadership that is clinically informed, transparent, and accountable to local communities. We need leadership that cares about the city of Manchester and will fight for the lives of vulnerable people, not for the reputations of those in power. 

As citizens of Manchester it is our responsibility to stop the deaths and the suffering of the most vulnerable members of our community. 

We would welcome a meeting with yourselves to discuss our concerns and to find a way forward.

We look forward to your early reply

Yours sincerely 

Angela Young,  Anandi Ramamurthy and Paul Baker

for Communities for Holistic Accessible Rights based Mental Health (CHARM)

[1] https://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/news/health/people-severe-mental-illness-twice-30847278

(2) https://charmmentalhealth.org/6508-2/

[3] https://charmmentalhealth.org/prevention-of-future-deaths-charm-finds-a-clear-growth-in-the-numbers-of-people-dying-for-avoidable-reasons-in-greater-manchester/

[4] https://manchestermill.co.uk/a-murder-of-crows-how-a-blog-post-deepened-the-conflict-inside-greater-manchester-mental-health-trust/

Groups:

GM Socialist Health Association

GM Keep our NHS Public

Individuals living, working or studying in Manchester:

Paul Baker CHARM

Anandi Ramamurthy CHARM, UCU

Alison Harris, Alison Harris Psychology

Lisa Crowther

Florence Hill, Unison

Karen Reissmann, GMMH UNISON retired members officer

Kev Allsop, President, Greater Manchester Association Of Trade Union Councils

Sophie Heath, Manchester Metropolitan University

Ose Mark

Andrew Maufe

Danusia Good

Mel Martin

Catherine Fuller

Prof Hel Spandler, University of Central Lancashire

Rachel Hill, KCL

Emma, CHARM

Hannah Cox, CHARM, MIND, GMMH
Geoff Brown, Greater Manchester Unite Community Branch

Janet Taylor

Jessica Pons, MBACP, ISPS UK trustee, CHARM member

Ann-Marie Steele, CHARM

Janice Hanson, CHARM

Sarah Roe

John Mulligan, Unite the Union – GMMH branch

Simon Morton

Kristina Dimitrova

Angela Mugan, CHARM

Tony Baldwinson

Annabel Marsh, Community Works

Raymond Graves, CHARM, ISPS

Susan Shaw

George Kalampalikis, GMMH Unison

Andrew Robert John Burns, CHARM

Rachel Tulley, CHARM

Vivien Walsh, Retired Professor

Becky Lupton, Bereaved parent whose daughter died as a result of neglect by GMMH

Elizabeth Tonge

Helen Gleaves

Daria Furholt , GMMH long term service user
Alex Bower, Service User / Resident
Leo Wood, Registered nurse (mental health)
Martin McMulken, Unite the union, Bolton Pensioners Association
Joan Hutt, UNISON UCU
Martin Bove
Vivien Walsh, Professor (retired) at University of Manchester
David Chisholm , Unison
Geoffrey Andrew, Retired Transport Worker RMT, GMUCB
Connor O’Driscoll, Founder of That’s Mental (thatsmental.org)
Mike Connaughton
Penny Applegate, Diocese of Manchester Bishop’s visitor, Salford Unemployed Community Resource Centre Volunteer
Hennah Bashi
Edward Garner, Trade Union
Charlotte Cabrie
Emma Gerrard, Lifted Carers
Shannon Fitzgerald
Susan Shaw
Heraa Aftab
Catarina Carvalho
Rita Horgan, Soteria Network UK
Nina Fedorski, CARERS MANCHESTER

 

 

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