Monitoring the Mental Health Act in 2024/25

Published: 29 January 2026 Page last updated: 29 January 2026

Downloads

Quality and safety of care

Communication and rights

Involving patients in their care

One of the key themes that affected patients’ experience was their ability to have a say about their care. Many Mental Health Act (MHA) monitoring reports described staff who listened to patients’ concerns and involved them in decisions about their care. For example, some reports described how patients participated in community meetings and had regular one-to-one meetings with named staff – using these occasions to express their views about their care plans and the everyday activities on the ward.

Regular one-to-ones with staff with whom they had built a trusting relationship also gave patients the opportunity to discuss their proposed medication, as well as preferences with contact and involvement of family and carers.

However, in our monitoring we have seen instances where care plans lacked detail and did not consider the patient’s individual needs. For example, on one ward, our reviewers felt that care plans did not highlight how patients with specific, identified needs, such as autistic people, would be supported. In this case, the provider responded to our call for action by providing training on person-centred care planning for nurses and introducing a monthly care plan audit. The section in this report on Care for autistic people and people with a learning disability highlights some positive examples of patient-focused care planning.

During another MHA monitoring review, some patients reported that although they were given copies of their care plans, they had not been involved in reviewing them. In response, the service committed to the following actions:

  • the ward manager to undertake a review of all care plans
  • the ward manager to develop guidance for staff to ensure that care plans are produced collaboratively and when patients’ needs change
  • staff to document in electronic care records when a patient refuses a copy of their care plan, saying why and when they will be approached again to encourage collaboration
  • the ward manager to continue to carry out a dip sample approach to check on the impact of the above actions and repeat this monthly until assurance on care plan updates has improved.

Our MHA reviewers also noted how the use of peer support workers and family ambassadors on wards can have had a positive impact on the way people engage with services. These roles can support families, friends, and carers to get answers to their questions much more easily and can provide a direct link between the ward and the family.

The importance of communication was also a key theme in our Independent Care (Education) and Treatment Reviews (IC(E)TRs) into the care and treatment of autistic people and people with a learning disability who are in long-term segregation. We discussed the early findings from our IC(E)TRs in our latest State of Care report.

We highlighted instances where clinical teams lacked the knowledge and the expertise to work with autistic people and people with a learning disability, which could be a barrier to them moving out of long-term segregation. Shortfalls included knowing how to support people’s communication requirements and supporting them in trauma-informed and reassuring ways that reduced anxiety around change. By contrast, we also saw successful initiatives where independent stakeholders implemented a human rights-based approach and focused on staff building good relationships with people in long-term segregation to better understand their wishes and requirements.

We found evidence through our IC(E)TRs that the personalised adjustments that some people needed were not always assessed and integrated into care to support them to progress out of long-term segregation. For example, one review report notes that, “It had been long identified that the person needs a speech and language therapist assessment. However, the provider was not able to provide this due to funding”.

However, IC(E)TRs also highlighted that some staff were able to mitigate some of the harms caused by restrictions in long-term segregation by making personalised adjustments to support people’s changing requirements (for example, sensory requirements and preferences, and mealtime preferences).

Supporting patients to understand their rights

Our human rights approach to regulation states that people who use health and care services need to be empowered to understand their rights, and services that respect human rights are fundamental to good outcomes for people.

Our monitoring work continues to reveal that communication about people’s legal rights varies across services. Some services explained rights to people promptly, they documented discussions and reminded them regularly. However, at other services, people felt that their rights were poorly explained or they did not fully understand them. In some cases, patients were not given a new explanation when the legal section under which they were detained changed.

Services have told us how patients are referred to independent mental health advocates (IMHAs) to help them understand their legal rights. We heard positive examples where patients were automatically referred to this service if they did not have capacity to understand these rights and that information on advocacy had been made available in accessible formats. We also heard of advocates being introduced to all patients, always being notified about seclusion, and attending seclusion reviews to support patients’ views. However, in other services patients were unsure about how to access an IMHA or had not been told about the service.

Encouragingly, we have found that services often have good access to interpreters, who have been used to support various activities, such as ward rounds. Importantly, some services had used interpreters to ensure that patients understood their rights under section 132 of the Mental Health Act, where their first language was not English. However, this wasn’t always the case, with some wards either unaware of how to arrange interpreters or not using them often.

To support better communication, we noted the use of easy read formats or pictures to ensure that important information was accessible to all patients, such as information about rights, searches, medication and sexual safety. However, there were a few occasions where this had not been provided, creating barriers to communication.

De facto detention

Our MHA reviewers expressed their concerns that too many people, especially those on wards for older people, were deprived of their liberty without clear legal authorisation.

They explained that this can happen when a person is kept in hospital while not being formally detained under the Mental Health Act or having a Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards authorisation in place to provide an alternative authority to keep them detained. As discussed in our State of Care report, applications to authorise the deprivation of a person’s liberty have increased significantly over the last decade, often resulting in lengthy delays.

MHA reviewers said that this practice has become so common it is “almost normalised”. Where patients are deprived of their liberty without a legal authorisation in place, they have no legal framework to use to appeal the deprivation of their liberty or de-facto detention. They also have no right to support from an Independent Mental Health Advocate to help them understand their rights, or to support them in raising concerns about their situation.

Supporting needs and wellbeing

Feeling listened to by staff was one of the most prominent themes from analysis of people’s feedback to the 2024 Community Mental Health Survey who had experienced both inpatient and community mental health services. People who felt listened to said staff took the time to listen to them, gave them space to share their concerns, explain things to them, and ensure they understood the process, and what was happening with their care.

Through our MHA monitoring, we saw that personalised care was possible where staff had built a trusting therapeutic relationship and had a good understanding of the person, and the person felt listened to and involved in their care.

Our MHA reviewers observed interactions between staff and patients that were kind, warm, respectful and caring.

However, a participant in our focus groups held with people who use services and their families gave an example of a policy in one service that had a negative impact on patients’ health and wellbeing. Patients were not allowed access to extra food, such as fresh fruit and vegetables, but could only ‘buy in’ food from delivery companies. This meant that they were frequently eating fast food, and the participant noticed that their relative had gained weight as a result.

By comparison, our monitoring showed that on some wards, patients were encouraged to prepare their own hot meals in the kitchen, promoting self-sufficiency. We heard how, on a few wards, independent access to food and drink preparation gave patients a sense of confidence and the life skills needed to live independently.

Our MHA reviewers observed variation in how patients’ religious, cultural and spiritual needs were met. For example, several services provided access to chaplains and other religious leaders, multifaith spaces, and culturally appropriate food, including halal and kosher options. However, they also observed that some services did not provide a dedicated multifaith room or, if they did, it was ill-equipped or also used for other purposes, like storage or family visits. Lack of an appropriate space meant that some wards struggled to provide adequate chaplaincy services, as there were no quiet spaces to reflect and meet patients’ spiritual needs.

Several services arranged activities, events and initiatives that celebrated religion and culture, including visiting local churches and mosques, group sessions, visits from external organisations and activities to celebrate religious festivals. Some services had also created activities and initiatives to support people living with dementia.

It is important to understand the distinction between religious and cultural needs. Our reviewers have not always found patients’ cultural needs being met on the wards, especially regarding hair and skin care – for example, Black women not being given the right hair and skin care to meet their needs. However, patients have also told us about a ward that “had access to a barber who specialised in Afro-Caribbean hair”.

Restrictive practices

The Human rights framework for restraint asserts that “Restraint that amounts to inhuman or degrading treatment can never be justified”, but that this is “more likely… when it is used on groups who are at particular risk of harm or abuse, such as detainees, children and disabled people.”

In last year’s Monitoring the Mental Health Act report, we affirmed that although restrictive practices are appropriate in limited, legally justified and ethically sound circumstances in line with people’s human rights, our expectations are that everyone working in health and care has a role to play in reducing their use.

Through our MHA complaints function, we have received feedback about inappropriate use of restraint, where people told us of staff using excessive force on people, causing bruises, marks, and being left with feelings of “humiliation” and “degradation”. Although we have continued to find examples of services that have been able to reduce the use of restrictive interventions, national data shows an increase in the number of reported incidents.

Mental health inpatient settings report occurrences of restrictive practice through the Mental Health Services Data Set (MHSDS). The level of reporting has continued to increase in inpatient settings, which could in part reflect better reporting practices across providers, but analysis of this data suggests that more people were subject to restrictive interventions more often between 2023/24 and 2024/25, with the average number of restrictive interventions each month rising by 24% from 13,240 to 16,462. Also, the average number of people subject to restrictive interventions each month increased by 22% – from 2,929 to 3,563 (figure 2).

This is further supported when looking at the number of restrictive intervention types (such as physical, chemical, or mechanical – use of belts and other restraints, and seclusion). The average monthly number of restrictive intervention types has risen by 26% between 2023/24 and 2024/25.


Figure 2: Number of restrictive interventions per month, 2023/24 and 2024/25

Chart showing increases in the average number of people subject to restrictive interventions each month.

Source: NHS England’s Mental Health Services Dataset monthly statistics.


Many of the seclusion and segregation rooms we saw met the design requirements of the MHA Code of Practice, and patients were supported appropriately. For example, in one service independent advocates who covered 3 wards told us that when they saw patients in seclusion they were wearing their own clothes and had been given food and drink at regular intervals and on request.

However, some rooms were not meeting requirements. For example, in one room the mattresses were too thin and close to the ground, which could be particularly difficult for patients with impaired mobility. Some seclusion rooms were also in need of a clean and needed repair work to doorframes and paintwork.

On many wards, staff told us they rarely used the seclusion or segregation room or did not use them at all, and a few wards did not have any seclusion facilities. We heard how this was because they wanted to reduce the use of restrictive practices on the ward, with some wards telling us they used other de-escalation methods in the first instance, such as verbal de-escalation and low-stimulus quiet rooms.

Some services we visited were using bedrooms for seclusion, with one service’s policy stating that "a patient’s bedroom for the purpose of seclusion or other isolation should be based on clinical rationale and not due to a lack of suitable designated seclusion facilities".

Patients used our complaints process to tell us about occasions when they believed they had unfair restrictions placed on them. These usually involved leave (both escorted and unescorted) and visits from relatives and loved ones. Restrictions also included policies on personal possessions and everyday items. Patients sometimes felt these restrictions were enforced solely as a way to punish them for behaviour that staff considered unagreeable, rather than to guarantee the safety of the patients themselves. It is important that services are open about their rationale for restrictions wherever possible, to avoid such perceptions.

We saw through our monitoring that, on some wards, access to various rooms was restricted for all patients, including bedrooms, laundry rooms, kitchens, gardens, living spaces, and bathrooms. We mention in this report how this is partly due to low levels of staffing. Some patients said this had an impact on their recovery.

To reduce restrictive interventions, we have seen services using technology to keep people safe, while giving people who are detained some control over their lives.

In our last MHA monitoring report, we acknowledged that periodic observation by staff during the night, while often necessary, can disturb patients’ sleep and be experienced as severely intrusive. We noted that some services have adopted digital contactless patient monitoring technologies in part to lessen this disturbance. Such systems have had a controversial reception from some service user groups, and in 2025 we published guidance on our expectations in relation to practice around these.

Other services are rethinking whether the common practice of regular night-time checks for every patient is necessary or proportionate. The Sleepwell project, initiated by the Positive and Safe Care team at Cumbria, Northumberland, Tyne and Wear NHS Foundation Trust, used individualised risk-assessment to identify patients who could be allowed a ‘protected sleep period’ between midnight and 6am, where no checks were carried out. Although this was not suitable for all, for many patients this has been found to be safe and effective, with the added benefit of better sleep helping patients get the most out of their treatment in the daytime. We are pleased to note a number of services are now piloting this scheme with a view to adopting it.

Discharge

In our 2024/25 State of Care report, we highlighted from feedback that the increasing pressure on mental health services is leading to people being discharged from services before they were ready, increasing the risk of relapse or re-admission.

As discussed earlier, our MHA reviewers have raised concerns about a lack of beds in step-down wards, which leads to patients being discharged home inappropriately.

We have also seen through our monitoring that the availability of residential or nursing care homes can cause delays to discharge:

The inability to move into a step-down ward or a place in the community can have a negative impact on people. Delays can keep patients in a ward that is no longer appropriate for them, or where they experienced more restrictive conditions than they needed. One ward told us that some people were re-admitted following discharge because there were either no appropriate placements available or no placement would accept them.

More positively, we have seen through our monitoring where services have taken a joined-up approach to discharge planning:

Throughout our IC(E)TR reviews, discharge planning was viewed as an important part of supporting people to leave long-term segregation. Review reports often noted that there was no discharge plan in place and recommended that providers start to create a pathway for people to leave long-term segregation by working with other stakeholders, such as commissioners and local authorities, as well as with the person and those who represent their best interests. Reasons for discharge planning not happening included:

  • lack of staff skills and knowledge
  • lack of leadership within the clinical team
  • lack of understanding of the person’s requirements
  • disagreement between stakeholders.

Experts involved in the reviews thought this lack of leadership could lead to a culture of ‘stuckness’ where, although staff might want to support someone to leave, a team might become collectively uncertain about how to do this. In our reviews, we have seen independent stakeholders from external initiatives providing the necessary leadership and direction, often implementing a human rights-based approach and focusing on staff building a good relationship with people in long-term segregation to better understand their wants and requirements.