Elisabet Ekpenyong, a lived experience advisor for LocalMotion Enfield, on how person-centred treatment could help improve NHS treatment
The mental health system is invaluable, the services provided are for the common good of communities across the United Kingdom.
However, there are gaps in the system and one of these is in the approach to provision of mental health services.
At the moment, the approach is based on defined pathways which service users have to follow otherwise they risk being discharged back to their GP, and effectively being denied any form of therapeutic care.
These defined pathways work, for some, not for all. For example, group therapy may be good but some people have difficulties speaking in a group. In the same way, cognitive behavioural therapy does not work for everyone, some find alternative therapies, such as art, to be better suited to their needs.
The result is reluctant, or no, engagement with therapy by service users.
There is a need to adopt a different approach to mental health service delivery. Person-centred care focuses on the needs of the individual. It ensures that people’s preferences, needs and values guide clinical decisions and provides care that is respectful of and responsive to them. It argues that “health and wellbeing outcomes need to be co-produced by individuals and members of the workforce working in partnership, with evidence suggesting that this provides better patient outcomes and costs less to health and care systems.”(https://www.hee.nhs.uk/our-work/person-centred-care).
This begs the question, if there is evidence of person-centred care providing better patient outcomes, why is it not at the heart of mental health care?
If a person-centred approach were applied to mental health treatment, then service users’ preferences would be taken onboard in designing their treatment and care package.
There is a need to be intentional in addressing mental health treatment. At the forefront of service delivery should be the good of the service user, looking at the service user’s values, preferences and needs.
There is no denying that this approach might make the initial on-boarding process longer, but the result will be engaged service users and better outcomes.
This article was first published in the print edition of the Enfield Dispatch in May 2026