England’s Health Secretary, Wes Streeting, has initiated a comprehensive independent review to address the escalating demand for mental health, ADHD, and autism services across the nation. The move comes as the government grapples with mounting pressure on the healthcare system and a rising welfare expenditure.
Streeting has previously voiced concerns regarding potential ‘overdiagnosis’ of mental health conditions, an issue that authorities believe contributes to extended waiting times for individuals in urgent need of support. Millenium TV understands this review aims to provide an evidence-based understanding of the situation.
“We must examine this through a strictly clinical perspective to gain an evidence-based understanding,” Streeting stated, emphasizing that this approach is crucial to ensure timely access to accurate diagnoses and effective support for everyone.
The Department of Health and Social Care confirmed that the review will be accompanied by an additional £688 million in funding. This initiative coincides with ministerial efforts to address the increasing welfare bill. Earlier this year, the government faced significant opposition, including from over 100 Labour backbenchers, which led to a reversal of proposed cuts to disability benefits, including those for mental health conditions. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak recently pledged a renewed focus on welfare system reform, asserting that the current system has ‘trapped people in poverty’ and ‘wrote young people off as too ill to work’.
Clinical psychologist Professor Peter Fonagy will lead the new inquiry, with its findings anticipated for publication in Summer 2026. Professor Fonagy expressed the review’s objective, explaining the aim is “to test assumptions rigorously and listen closely to those most affected, so that our recommendations are both honest and genuinely useful.”
Recent analysis indicates a significant increase in benefit claimants; as of March this year, approximately four million working-age adults in England and Wales were claiming either disability or incapacity benefit, a rise from nearly three million in 2019. The Department of Health and Social Care highlighted that this heightened pressure on the NHS means “for too long, people with acute needs have faced long waits, had to navigate overstretched services, experienced inequalities in care and felt abandoned when support was needed most.”
Leading mental health charity Mind welcomed the government’s announcement and expressed its readiness to contribute to the review. Dr. Sarah Hughes, chief executive, remarked, “This is a huge opportunity to really understand what is driving increasing levels of mental illness, especially among our young people.” Dr. Lade Smith, President of the Royal College of Psychiatrists, urged the review to “rigorously identify gaps in care” while thoroughly examining the “many complex reasons” why individuals seek assistance. Similarly, the National Autistic Society underscored the urgency for action, noting that while the number of people seeking assessment is stabilizing, average waiting times are dramatically increasing.
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