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Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission Bill - Submission to the Health Committee [2019] NZHRCSub 4 (11 December 2019)
Last Updated: 10 June 2020
1
Submission on the Mental Health
and Wellbeing Commission Bill
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11 December 2019
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Contact:
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John Hancock
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Senior Legal Adviser
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NZ Human Rights Commission
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Submission of the New Zealand Human Rights Commission to the
Health Committee on the Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission Bill
Introduction
- The
Human Rights Commission (“the Commission”) welcomes the opportunity
to make this brief submission to the Health Committee
(“the
Committee”) on the Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission Bill (“the
Bill”).
- The
Commission welcomes the Bill and its establishment of a Mental Health and
Wellbeing Commission (“the MHW Commission”).
The establishment of
the MHW Commission was a key recommendation of He Ara Oranga: Report of the
Government Inquiry into Mental Health and Addiction, published in November
2018.
- He
Ara Oranga considered that a MHW Commission was needed
to:
“...act as a watchdog and provide leadership and
oversight of mental health and wellbeing in New Zealand...[and] provide system
leadership and act as the institutional mechanism to hold decision-makers and
successive governments to account.”1
- This
objective is restated in the Bill’s Explanatory Note and, by and large,
the Bill provides the MHW Commission with a legislative
framework that will
support this objective.
Observations on the Bill and recommendations
Clause 7 - Designation as an
independent Crown entity
- The
Commission welcomes the designation of the MHW Commission’s status as an
independent Crown entity (ICE). This adopts the
position of He Ara Oranga
and subsequent recommendations made by the Commission in consultation phases
leading to the introduction of the Bill.2 The MHW Commission’s
designation as an ICE is necessary to provide it with sufficient systemic
independence to hold government
and other decision- makers to
account.
Clause 8 - Knowledge areas of MHWC board members
- The
Commission recommends that knowledge of human rights and, in particular, the UN
Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities
(UNCRPD) and UN
Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP), is added to the
matters which the Minister of
Health must have regard to when appointing MHW Commission board members under
clause 8(2).
- He
Ara Oranga reported widespread criticism of the detrimental impact of the
mental health system on the human rights of people subject to it.3
This included:
- The
exercise of compulsory treatment, seclusion and restraint practices undertaken
under the Mental Health (Compulsory Assessment
and Treatment) Act 1992 as
breaching fundamental human rights obligations, including those prescribed under
the UNCRPD and UNDRIP;
- The
role of incumbent legislation in embedding “archaic and risk averse”
clinical practice which leads to readily to “coercion
and control when
other options are available”.
- The
persistently higher rates of compulsion and seclusion of Māori and Pacific
peoples as indicative of unconscious bias and
institutional
racism.
- He
Ara Oranga went on to note that submitters called for:
“legislative reform that would guarantee human rights,
minimise the use of compulsion and seclusion...and require an approach
to mental
health and addiction that lifts the spirit and restores
dignity.”4
- While
reform of other areas of the mental health system is currently underway,
including reform of guidelines covering the MH(CAT)
legislation, the intrinsic
importance of human rights to a well-functioning, humane mental health system
cannot be understated.
- It
follows that it is vital that the board of the MHW Commission have knowledge,
experience and understanding of New Zealand’s
human rights framework and
its application to the mental health system.
11. The Commission recommends that clause 8(2) of the Bill is
amended to provide that, in appointing board members, the Minister must
have
regard to the need for members to collectively have knowledge, understanding,
and experience of New Zealand’s human rights
framework, including the
UNCRPD and UNDRIP.
3 He Ara Oranga,
chapter 2.12, p 61
4 Ibid at p 62
The role of the MHW Commission in addressing suicide prevention
- The
Bill omits to include suicide prevention as a specified area of focus or
function of the MHW Commission. Indeed, suicide prevention
is not mentioned
anywhere in the Bill’s text. This is a surprising omission given that New
Zealand’s suicide rate, already
one of the highest suicide rates in the
developed world, is increasing.5 Rates for Māori are
significantly disproportionate, have almost doubled since 2007/86 and
are indicative of pervasive structural discrimination and social
inequity.
- We
note that parallel work on suicide prevention is going on in the health sector.
The Ministry of Health has recently released the
Suicide Prevention Strategy
2019–2029 and the Suicide Prevention Action Plan 2019–2024 that
includes the establishment
of a Suicide Prevention Office, which is intended to
have some oversight functions.
- Notwithstanding
the need to avoid duplication, we consider that the inclusion of a suicide
prevention related function in clause 11
would strengthen the MHW
Commission’s oversight responsibilities in this area and ensure that
independent monitoring and reporting
of related Government policy and service
delivery takes place.
15. The Commission recommends that clause 11(1)(c) of the Bill
is amended to provide that it is a function of the MHW Commission to
“assess and report publicly on the effectiveness, efficiency, and adequacy
of approaches to mental health and wellbeing (including
mental health services,
addiction services and suicide prevention services).”
Seeking views/consultation –
clause 13 – inclusion of rainbow communities
- The
Commission welcomes clause 13 of the Bill which provides that the MHW Commission
must establish mechanisms to ensure effective
means of seeking the views of a
range of groups, including Māori, Pacific peoples, disabled people and
children and young people.
- However,
it is notable and very surprising that clause 13 does not expressly include
rainbow communities, despite rainbow communities
being described in the
Bill’s Explanatory Note as a group that experiences poorer mental health
and well-being outcomes, alongside
Māori, Pacific peoples and disabled
people.
5 Annual provisional suicide statistics for deaths
reported to the Coroner between 1 July 2007 and 30 June 2019; https://coronialservices.justice.govt.nz/assets/Documents/Publications/Provisional-Figures-August-
2019.pdf
6 Ibid, p 3 Table 4
- The
Commission accordingly endorses the recommendation made to the Committee by
OUTline in their submission on the Bill (made on behalf
of a range of
organisations, groups, community leaders, researchers and individuals who work
to support the wellbeing and mental
health of rainbow people and communities in
New Zealand) that clause 13(1) is amended to include rainbow communities within
the list
of groups prescribed by the clause. In their submission on the Bill,
OUTline also observe, among other things, that the Bill’s
regulatory
impact and departmental disclosure statements name rainbow communities as a
priority population.
- In
addition it is notable that, as an outcome of the recent review of New
Zealand’s human rights record by the UN Human Rights
Council under its
Universal Periodic Review (UPR) process, the New Zealand Government accepted a
recommendation to “continue efforts for the adoption of additional
measures to address the disparities registered by the SOGISC (Sexual
orientation, gender identity and sex characteristics) community with regard
to access to services in the entire health
system.”7
20. The Commission accordingly recommends that clause 13(1) of
the Bill is amended to expressly include rainbow communities.
Clause 13 – strengthen
participation rights
- The
Commission also considers that clause 13 can be further strengthened and brought
into greater alignment with human rights principles
by expanding the
consultation obligation of the MHW Commission to one in which they must seek
views and actively involve those groups in the exercise of their
functions.
- This
would reflect to a greater degree the principle of “active
involvement” under article 4.3 of the UNCRPD8, which
provides:
In the development and implementation of legislation and
policies to implement the present Convention, and in other decision-making
processes concerning issues relating to persons with disabilities, States
Parties shall closely consult with and actively involve
persons with
7 A/HRC/WG.6/32/L.1, Recommendation 6.101
(Uruguay).
8 See also Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities,
General Comment No 7 on the participation of persons with disabilities,
including children with disabilities, through their representative
organizations, in the implementation and monitoring of the Convention,
9
November 2018, CRPD/C/GC/7, paragraphs 15, 28, 48-49 and 61, available http://docstore.ohchr.org/
disabilities, including children with disabilities [including] through
their representative organizations.
- The
present clause currently provides that “the establishment of
mechanisms” is the primary duty of the MHW Commission
as regards
consultation. Inclusion of an obligation to actively involve the consulted
groups and take their views into account ensures
direct engagement and
participation. Of relevance is the requirement under clause 8 of the Bill that
the composition of the Board
include persons with personal experience of mental
distress and addiction. This provides the MHW Commission with top-down
institutional
capability to actively involve consumer groups in its
work.
24. The Commission recommends that clause 13(1) of the Bill is
amended to provide that, in addition to establishing consultation mechanisms,
the MHW Commission must actively involve those persons and take their views into
account in the exercise of their functions.
Inquiries/investigations and
information gathering
- The
Commission supports the inclusion of a broad power under clause 12 to publicly
report on any matters concerning the mental health
and wellbeing of people in
New Zealand. We note, however, that He Ara Oranga went further and
recommended that the MHW Commission have powers to initiate investigations and
inquiries at systemic levels.9
- The
Commission notes that inquiry/investigation functions are a common feature of
ICEs. We have inquiry powers under the Human Rights
Act 199310, and
other ICEs such as the Children’s Commissioner11 and the
Privacy Commissioner12 also hold similar systemic investigative or
inquiry functions.
- Such
functions provide ICEs with the ability to independently inquire into or
investigate matters of public importance that arise
at the systemic and (in some
cases) individual levels. While these powers are usually used sparingly, their
existence reinforces
the mandate of public watchdogs to hold government to
account.
- In
any event, broad reporting powers such as those currently provided under clause
12 should be complemented with information gathering
powers that enable a
properly
9 He Ara Oranga, p 201
10 Human Rights Act s 5(2)(h)
11 Children’s Commissioner Act 2003 s 12(1)(a), s
13(1)(a)
12 Privacy Act 1993, s 13(1)(m)
informed process. The Commission notes that the current information gathering
powers set out under clauses 14-16 are limited in their
application to the
government sector.
- Consideration
should therefore be given to expanding the scope of the Bill’s information
gathering provisions to enable the
MHW Commission to gather information from a
broad range of mental health and addition services, health and disability
services and
relevant social services (such as education, housing and justice
sector providers). This would enable the MHW Commission to obtain
important
practice-level, qualitative information. However, such a power should not cut
across Privacy Act rights and we acknowledge
the Bill’s intention in this
respect under clause 15(1)(a).
30. The Commission therefore recommends that the Committee
consider amending the Bill to provide the MHW Commission with:
- Systemic
inquiry and/or investigation powers, as recommended by He Ara
Oranga; and
- An
express duty to furnish a s 12 report to the Minister of Health and any other
Minister the Commission thinks fit; and
- Broader
information gathering functions that enable the MHW Commission to gather
practice-level, qualitative information.
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