Try GOLD - Free
Mental health used to threaten liberty
The Light
|Issue 36: August 2023
Surveillance state disguised as suicide prevention
AT a meeting of Hampshire County Council's Health and Wellbeing Board in Winchester on June 15, the authority's proposed Mental Wellbeing Strategy and Suicide Prevention Action Plan was introduced in a report from Simon Bryant, Director of Public Health for the county.
The strategy has been developed collectively with partners of the multiagency Hampshire Improving Mental Wellbeing Board. It'emphasises a preventative approach to address the wide range of factors that influence mental health and wellbeing. The plan is to make 'suicide prevention... everybody's business!
Winchester housewife Teresa Skelton challenged the contents of the report, and the prospective strategy outlined in it, with a deputation during the meeting's public participation slot. She stated of the Action Plan that "it reads like a massive piece of administrative over-reach in the making". She continued: "The true scale of the mental health problems it claims to be addressing does not begin to justify the level of mass surveillance the report seems to be recommending.
"Page 41 of the document claims bizarrely that 'everyone is at risk of suicide. This does not sit very well with the statement further down the same page that suicide rates in England are declining, except among one group, under 25s - especially girls and women."
"If suicides are getting less", she asked, "why should official surveillance even vaguely need to be more, and what on earth is there to say we are all'at risk'?" Of the report's text, Mrs Skelton pointed out that it is "riddled with disturbing language, vague definitions, and unsubstantiated claims."
This story is from the Issue 36: August 2023 edition of The Light.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM The Light
The Light
Why do we trust the political class?
IT began, as most national embarrassments do, with good intentions and a graph. Gordon Brown, that high priest of responsible arithmetic, decided around the turn of the millennium that Britain owned too much shiny metal and not enough moral superiority.
4 mins
Issue 63, 2025
The Light
Dilemma of conflicting 'rights'
No community should violate the freedoms of a minority
4 mins
Issue 63, 2025
The Light
The ritual execution of Princess Diana
ON 31st August 1997, Princess Diana died in a car crash in Paris's Pont de l'Alma tunnel. Official accounts are contradictory and simple research points to a long-running conspiracy.
4 mins
Issue 63, 2025
The Light
Sugar industry's fluoride 'solution'
Researchers tasked with sweetening tooth decay problem
4 mins
Issue 63, 2025
The Light
Trump's colonial plan
U.S. takes Gaza, and Israel takes the West Bank
5 mins
Issue 63, 2025
The Light
All that glitters is not gold
Precious metal value boosted by economic turmoil
3 mins
Issue 63, 2025
The Light
End of the road is serfdom
Who controls the public mind? Economist warned of path to totalitarian oppression
4 mins
Issue 63, 2025
The Light
Pushback against vast data centres
Communities in U.S. rally to repel Big Tech planning bids
4 mins
Issue 63, 2025
The Light
Water: Much more than we think
Gel-like state could be key to health and consciousness
2 mins
Issue 63, 2025
The Light
Discover the formidable legal shields safeguarding your rights
The UK constitution isn't a single book; it's a living arsenal forged across centuries in charters, conventions, and court rulings.
2 mins
Issue 63, 2025
Translate
Change font size

