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Act now: campaign for talking therapies

Do you ever fell someone is not listening?

55% of GPs believe that talking therapies are the most effective way to treat depression, yet 78% have prescribed drugs while believing an alternative would be preferable.

 

Often it is simply because the services aren't available. Waiting times of more than a year are common. 

 

Meanwhile the emotional and financial costs to individuals, families and society are enormous.

 

Today you can urge Gordon Brown to provide talking therapies for anyone who needs them.  Sign the online petition and make a donation now

 

You can also read how the lives of Barry and Angela were transformed by using talking therapies.

By signing the online petition you are urging the Secretary of State to:

 

We need to talk campaign

 

 - slash the huge waiting times for those who are prescribed therapy

 

 - to press Gordon Brown to release more funds for talking therapies in  his next spending review in September. 

 

 

 

Please act today and sign the petition so we can present all our supporters’ signatures for the government’s next spending review.

 

Every form signed, as part of our ‘We Need to Talk’ campaign, will help unlock precious funds for people who desperately need a listening ear.

 

We are jointly running the ‘We Need to Talk’ campaign with four other mental health charities, because we know that together we can make change happen. It’s time to make Gordon listen!

 

Sign the online petition 
Make a donation today: please believe in positive change and help to transform lives now

 

Your kindness and generosity will help us to provide access to the services people need to change their lives forever.

 

  • £25 can help pay for 125 booklets on mental health to be sent to GP surgeries

     
  • £50 can help fund an educational programme in schools to help young people understand self-harm and find alternative ways of dealing with pressures and problems

 

  • £200 can pay for 25 briefing packs for MPs - helping them to campaign to make psychological therapies accessable to more people

 

Make a donation now
Barry and Angela, both of whom faced depression benefitted from talking to a therapist about their fears, experiences and challenges
Photo of Barry

 

Barry’s story: learning to change the way you think

 

When Barry, 44, was diagnosed with bi-polar disorder, his GP prescribed anti-depressants – effective for some, but not all. Barry says they turned him ‘into a zombie’. 

 

It was only through talking with a cognitive behavioural therapist that he was eventually able to take control of his life. 

 

This form of therapy was the practical answer he was looking for. He says: ‘I just can’t describe how useful it was... years ago I had automatic negative thoughts.

 

Nowadays it’s automatic positive thoughts. My therapy has more or less reversed the equation.’ Thanks to Barry’s ongoing commitment to challenge his negative thoughts, he gained enough confidence to go to college – and won the student of the year award!

 

Angela

Angela’s story: being who you want to be

 

When Angela, 20, was at school, the stress of exams led to her self-harming. She says: ‘I used to cut the tops of my arms or the tops of my legs, so that no-one could see.’

 

When she finally told a friend, it was such a relief that someone else knew. That gave her the confidence to approach a teacher who arranged for Angela to see her GP.

 

She was recommended counselling – but for 6 months she had to keep ringing up, demanding to know why she hadn’t been seen. She says: ‘I wanted the help but because it was taking so long I was getting so depressed and just didn’t really know what to do.’

 

When she finally received counselling it changed her life. She says: ‘Being able to talk to my counsellor openly about cutting actually relieved a lot of the stress – so the self harming gradually got less and less.’ 

More information about talking therapies

 

Read We Need to Talk: a report which argues that evidence-based talking therapies such as cognitive behavioural therapy are as important for the nation’s health as any cancer drug or surgical procedure.

 

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Some names, details and photographs have been changed to protect the privacy of the individuals concerned.