Patients with mental health can deal with new plans for conversation therapies using the NHS app.
Health Secretary Wes Streeting said that the government had “digital front doors for patients for patients in the country”.
The government also confirmed that 85 new emergency departments for mental health are being built throughout England.
It happens that new figures indicate that diseases such as anxiety and depression are on the rise in England.
Last month, the plans for the establishment of committed emergency rooms for patients with mental health were announced.
The 85 units are financed by 120 million GBP that are secured in the expenditure check, said the Ministry of Health and Social Care.
24 hours a day, seven days a week, are opened by specialist nurses and doctors.
Patients who need help can be received or transferred by your family doctor.
Elsewhere, patients will offer better access to mental health via the NHS app, including the opportunity to arrange for themselves for speaking therapies without seeking their family doctor.
The measures are part of the government’s 10-year plan and, according to the department, could also pave the way for the virtual support of AI-controlled virtual support.
Mr. Streeting said: “Not getting the right support for your mental health is not only weak, but can also meet a painful pause button in your life.
“The patients have faced too long in the crisis of access to mental health services, and this government is determined to change this by our plan for the reconstruction of the NHS.
“That is why we set digital front doors for psychological health services for patients in the country and use the technology for 24-hour supply. And we create more opportunities for support, not only through the NHS app, but also through care in your community.
“We are already halfway into our goal of recruiting 8,500 additional mental health personnel, and through our upcoming 10 -year health plan we will bring more people back to work.”
The latest psychiatric morbidity survey for adults Psychiatric morbidity indicated that more than one fifth person aged 16 to 74 had reported so -called “frequent mental illness”.
This includes generalized anxiety disorders, depressive episodes, phobias, obsessive -compulsive disorders (OCD) and panic disorder.
These problems were most common in young people, with more than a quarter of the 16 to 24 year olds having one of these conditions compared to 17.5% in 2007.