Jeremy Corbyn, new leader of Britain’s opposition Labour Party. (The%20Weekly%20Bull%20CC BY-SA 2.0)

The new leader of the British Labour Party, Jeremy Corbyn, has appointed a minister for mental health to his shadow Cabinet, the party has announced.

The new post, which has no counterpart in the Conservative government, will be filled by Luciana Berger, who will work directly on mental health issues and consider how they can best be addressed by Britain’s National Health Service (NHS).

“We have delivered a unifying, dynamic, inclusive new Shadow Cabinet which for the first time ever has a majority of women,” Corbyn said in a statement.

“I am delighted that we have established a … position for mental health which is a matter I have long been interested in.”

In a speech to Parliament in February, Corbyn described his attitude on mental health and why the subject is so important.

“All of us can go through depression; all of us can go through those experiences. Every single one of us in this Chamber knows people who have gone through it, and has visited people who have been in institutions and have fully recovered and gone back to work and continued their normal life,” he said.

“I dream of the day when this country becomes as accepting of these problems as some Scandinavian countries are, where one Prime Minister was given six months off in order to recover from depression, rather than being hounded out of office as would have happened on so many other occasions.”

The Independent reports:

The Government currently rolls responsibility for mental health into a junior care minister position. The new role will report to the Shadow Health Secretary at the Department of Health.

Mr Corbyn spent his first day as leader attending a fundraiser organised by his local NHS mental health trust. He was criticised in the press for attending the event in lieu of a planned appearing on BBC One’s The Andrew Marr Show.

Mr Corbyn said at the time that he believed access to “timely and appropriate” treatment was the biggest issue for mental healthcare, alongside the recognition of mental disabilities by the Department for Work and Pensions.

“I have had far too many anecdotal reports from constituents and others who go for a Department for Work and Pensions availability for work test,” he said.

“If they have a physical disability, it is usually fairly obvious and it can be quantified and, we hope, taken into account in how the interview and test are conducted. If somebody has a mental health condition, it is not so obvious and cannot be so easily quantified.

“There are far too many cases where the stress levels are unbelievable for people who have been forced into these tests.”

Mr Corbyn unveiled his full shadow cabinet today in an announcement.

Other notable offices include John McDonnell as Chancellor, Andy Burnham as Home Secretary, Hilary Benn as Foreign Secretary, Heidi Alexander as Health Secretary, and Angela Eagle as Business Secretary.

Read the full article here.

–Posted by Roisin Davis

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