
The Mental Health Bill has received Royal Assent, marking the most significant reform of mental health legislation in England and Wales in more than four decades.
The new Act gives legal force to long-promised changes aimed at strengthening patient rights, reducing inappropriate detention and modernising how decisions are made and reviewed under the Mental Health Act. It reflects years of consultation, parliamentary scrutiny and lived experience input, and signals an intention to move the system towards greater dignity, autonomy and fairness for people experiencing mental health crisis.
Key provisions include tighter detention criteria, expanded rights around Advance Choice Documents, the introduction of the nominated person framework, more frequent reviews of detention, and a renewed emphasis on care and treatment planning. Together, these reforms raise expectations of how mental health crisis care should operate, particularly at the point where health, social care and policing intersect.
However, the passage of the Bill into law is widely understood as the beginning rather than the end of reform. Turning legislative intent into consistent practice will depend on whether the wider mental health system has the capacity, resources and stability needed to deliver change in real-world settings.
Services are already operating under sustained pressure. Rising demand, workforce shortages and constrained funding continue to shape how mental health crisis care is experienced on the ground. In this context, the new statutory expectations introduced by the Act will require careful implementation to ensure that stronger rights and safeguards translate into safer, more responsive care rather than additional strain on frontline teams.
Patient safety sits at the centre of this challenge. The Act raises the bar for decision-making, review and accountability at moments of acute vulnerability. Meeting those expectations consistently will depend on clear clinical leadership, effective coordination between services and sufficient time and support for professionals to exercise judgement in line with the law.
Arden Tomison, CEO of Thalamos, said the granting of Royal Assent marked a significant moment for mental health services, but stressed that meaningful change would depend on what follows.
“This Act sets a clear direction of travel for mental health crisis care, rooted in dignity, rights and better decision-making,” he said. “However, legislation alone does not change experience. The real test now is whether the system is given the space, support and resources needed to make those protections real in everyday practice, particularly at points of crisis where the consequences of getting it wrong are profound.”
As implementation planning begins, attention is turning to how national ambition will be realised locally. Variation in workforce capacity, funding and service configuration across regions raises the risk that progress could be uneven without sustained oversight and shared learning.
The Mental Health Act has always been more than a legal framework. It shapes how society responds to people at their most vulnerable. With Royal Assent now secured, the success of this reform will be judged not by the words on the statute book, but by whether people experience safer, fairer and more humane care when they need it most.


