Advertisement
We need your help now
Support from readers like you keeps The Journal open.
You are visiting us because we have something you value. Independent, unbiased news that tells the truth. Advertising revenue goes some way to support our mission, but this year it has not been enough.
If you’ve seen value in our reporting, please contribute what you can, so we can continue to produce accurate and meaningful journalism. For everyone who needs it.
One-off amount
I already contribute
Sign in. It’s quick, free and it’s up to you.
An account is an optional way to support the work we do. Find out more.
Investigates
Investigates
Money Diaries
Daft.ie Property Magazine
Allianz Home Magazine
The 42 Sports Magazine
TG4 Entertainment Magazine
The Journal TV
Climate Crisis
Cost of Living
Road Safety
Newsletters
Temperature Check
Inside the Newsroom
The Journal Investigates
The Explainer
A deep dive into one big news story
Sport meets news, current affairs, society & pop culture
have your say
Or create a free account to join the discussion
Advertisement
More Stories
Just six centres were found to be fully compliant with the regulations nationwide.
Mental Health Services
Mental Health Commission finds ‘concerning’ attitude towards rules in HSE inpatient centres
The MHC said that there are serious concerns for the HSE around mental health inpatient centres it operates.
6.01am, 27 Jun 2025
Share options
THE MENTAL HEALTH Commission (MHC) has said that it has identified “concerning attitudes towards compliance” in a number of HSE-run mental health centres which are persistently out of step with the rules of safe care.
It comes against the backdrop of the standards of compliances improving overall in centres across the country that offer mental health services.
The MHC has also said in its annual report for 2024 that there has been a “sustained decline” in the use of restrictive practices in centres.
Just six centres nationwide achieved 100% compliance with the regulations.
31 Enforcement actions had to be taken over incidents, events and serious concerns that arose in 20 centres which failed to meet regulations in response to the inspector’s report.
The findings found the worst failings in a small number of HSE operated facilities.
Inspector of Mental Health Services Jim Lucey said that these enforcement actions show that the MHC has strengthened its commitment to “regulatory vigilance” but that they also highlight issues that need to be addressed by HSE leadership.
“Closer attention by the HSE to underperforming approved centres would transform the national picture,” he said.
Individual care planning, staffing levels, and the state of mental health facility buildings were identified as areas where the most centres were failing to meet the regulations.
Advertisement
A HSE spokesperson said that it welcomes the MHC report, and acknowledged that a number of HSE centres have “recurring or increasing levels of non-compliance” that are “disproportionately” impacting the health service’s “overall rating”.
They added that the HSE will continue to invest in mental health services.
There were also positive findings noted in the MHC report, including a reduction in the admission of children to adult mental health centres.
Just five of these admissions occurred in 2024, which is the lowest annual number recorded to date.
Lucey praised the decline in the use of coercive and restrictive practices and said that the finding indicates “one of the most notable human rights advances in mental health care in Ireland in recent times”.
Restrictive and coercive practices refers to patients being physically restricted and secluded for challenging behaviour, which mental health professionals are now trying to avoid in favour of other methods.
The report notes similar levels of compliance with the rules across approved centres to 2023, but it notes that “there was a marked difference in levels of compliance achieved across the HSE’s Community Healthcare Organisations.
“Overall average compliance across all adult centres within a HSE CHO was just under 81% in 2024,” it states.
CHO 6 (Wicklow, Dun Laoghaire, Dublin South East) had the worst average rate of compliance at 64.65%.
Eight of the non-compliances found in the Acute Mental Health Unit in Cork University Hospital were deemed to be of a critical risk level, compared with six of the non -compliances in the centre in Tallaght Hospital, and four in the Midland Regional Hospital in Portlaoise.
Readers like you are keeping these stories free for everyone…
A mix of advertising and supporting contributions helps keep paywalls away from valuable information like this article.
Over 5,000 readers like you have already stepped up and support us with a monthly payment or a once-off donation.
Support The Journal
Eimer McAuley
Viewcomments
Send Tip or Correction
Embed this post
To embed this post, copy the code below on your site
Email “Mental Health Commission finds ‘concerning’ attitude towards rules in HSE inpatient centres”.
Recipient’s Email
Feedback on “Mental Health Commission finds ‘concerning’ attitude towards rules in HSE inpatient centres”.
Your Feedback
Your Email (optional)
Report a Comment
Please select the reason for reporting this comment.
Please give full details of the problem with the comment…
This is YOUR comments community. Stay civil, stay constructive, stay on topic.
Please familiarise yourself with our comments policy
before taking part.
Leave a Comment
Submit a report
Please help us understand how this comment violates our community guidelines.
Damaging the good reputation of someone, slander, or libel.
Racism or Hate speech
An attack on an individual or group based on religion, race, gender, or beliefs.
Trolling or Off-topic
An attempt to derail the discussion.
Inappropriate language
Profanity, obscenity, vulgarity, or slurs.
Advertising, phishing, scamming, bots, or repetitive posts.
Please provide additional information
Thank you for the feedback
Your feedback has been sent to our team for review.
Leave a commentcancel
Newly created accounts can only comment using The Journal app.
This is to add an extra layer of security to account creation.
Download and sign into the app to continue.
Access to the comments facility has been disabled for this user
View our policy
⚠️ Duplicate comment
Post Comment
have your say
Or create a free account to join the discussion
Mental Health Services
News in 60 seconds
world microbiome day
Balancing your gut flora: ‘The advice is lots of fibre and lots of variety’
Nuclear Programme
Iran says there is ‘no plan’ to restart nuclear negotiations with United States
10 mins ago
Glastonbury
Varadkar on Kneecap row: Terrorism is bombs and guns, not music
Deportation
‘I want to continue the life I’d started to build’: Community rallies behind student facing deportation
Eoghan Dalton
coming up Reit
‘Big increase in returns’ for major landlord forecast after rental market reforms
Long-Covid pay scheme for healthcare workers to be extended to end of the year
Anna Wintour steps down as US Vogue editor after nearly 40 years
Assault on garda
Man arrested after Garda in his 20s stabbed at scene of burglary in Blanchardstown
closed doors meeting
JP McManus has ‘highly emotional’ meeting with Limerick Council over Rugby Expo ‘gift’ snub
Accession Talks
EU summit: Viktor Orbán insists 95% of Hungarians don’t want Ukraine in the bloc
Netanyahu thanks Trump for weighing in on his ‘witch hunt’ corruption trial
more from us
Investigates
Daft.ie Property Magazine
Allianz Home Magazine
The 42 Sports Magazine
TG4 Entertainment Magazine
Money Diaries
The Journal TV
Journal Media
Advertise With Us
About FactCheck
Our Network
FactCheck Knowledge Bank
Terms & Legal Notices
Terms of Use
Cookies & Privacy
Advertising
Competition
more from us
TV Listings
GAA Fixtures
The Video Review
Journal Media
Advertise With Us
Our Network
The Journal
FactCheck Knowledge Bank
Terms & Legal Notices
Terms of Use
Cookies & Privacy
Advertising
Competition
© 2025 Journal Media Ltd
Terms of Use
Cookies & Privacy
Advertising
Competition
Switch to Desktop
Switch to Mobile
The Journal supports the work of the Press Council of Ireland and the Office of the Press Ombudsman, and our staff operate within the Code of Practice. You can obtain a copy of the Code, or contact the Council, at https://www.presscouncil.ie, PH: (01) 6489130, Lo-Call 1800 208 080 or email: mailto:info@presscouncil.ie
Report an error, omission or problem:
Your Email (optional)
Create Email Alert
Create an email alert based on the current article
Email Address
One email every morning
As soon as new articles come online