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Four-fifths of UK mental health nurses say their workload is unmanageable

1 day ago
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Mental health patients in the UK are routinely coming to harm because of high caseloads, understaffing and overwhelming administrative work, according to a poll that found only a fifth of specialist nurses felt their workload was manageable.Prof Nicola Ranger, the general secretary of the Royal College of Nursing, said mental health nurses were caught in a “perfect storm” and unable to keep up with rising demand, with patients paying the price by missing out on crucial care.Half of the specialist nurses who responded to the RCN union’s UK-wide survey said mental health patients “frequently come to harm” because caseloads are too high, with a quarter feeling that time pressures lead to daily issues with patient deterioration, relapse or self-harm.Nearly two-thirds said their caseloads had risen “a lot” in the past three years, while excessive admin and a “tick box” culture were blamed for taking away valuable time for patient care.The poll also suggests that demand for services has grown more than twice as fast as the number of nurses in the field.

“With too few staff, overwhelming caseloads and excessive admin, community mental health nursing teams are caught in a perfect storm,” Ranger said.“It means that despite working exceptionally hard, they just cannot meet rising demand.“The result is vulnerable people with mental ill-health going without care and nursing staff feeling deeply distressed as patients deteriorate.”Between October 2022 and 2025, the number of people in England alone accessing community mental health services rose 38%, from 499,730 to 689,769, the RCN said.Over the same period, the nursing workforce rose 15%, from 20,171 to 23,280.

Only 12% of nurses who answered the poll said they had enough time to care for their patients.One respondent said vulnerable patients who reached out for help from her NHS trust would often wait weeks for a response and sometimes not be contacted at all.Echoing other respondents, another nurse told the RCN: “It is incredibly dangerous and I await the day I am called to a coroner’s court.”The warnings add to concerns raised by the Care Quality Commission, which reported in March that a third of people seeking mental health care wait at least three months for an appointment.Meanwhile, half of those who contacted crisis services for children and young people did not get the help they needed.

Ranger said growing the “crucial workforce” must become a government priority and called for “sustained and significant investment” in community mental health nursing.Investment in digital infrastructure is also required, the RCN said.Tom Pollard at the mental health charity Mind said the research exposed the “huge pressures” facing frontline mental health workers, adding: “It’s clear staff are trying to deliver high-quality mental health care, but growing demand, higher caseloads and administrative burden means this is increasingly a struggle.“People need timely, high-quality care, delivered by professionals who are not overstretched,” he said.“Without that, their safety may be at risk, and they will be less likely to recover.

Mental health services need to be better designed, staffed and funded.This starts with the UK government making timely and high-quality mental health care a higher priority.”A Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson said community mental health nurse numbers had increased by 26% since July 2024.They added: “There is much more to do, which is why we are investing a record £16.1bn in mental health services this year, reforming the Mental Health Act for the first time in decades, hiring thousands more mental health workers and upgrading mental health infrastructure to make it fit for the future.

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technologySee all
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Musk and Altman’s bitter feud over OpenAI to be laid bare in court

The bitter rivalry between two of the tech world’s most powerful men arrives in court this week, as Elon Musk’s lawsuit against Sam Altman and OpenAI heads to trial in Oakland, California. The case is set to feature some of the biggest names in Silicon Valley, and its outcome could affect the course of the AI boom.Musk’s suit, filed in 2024, focuses on the formative years of OpenAI when he, Altman and others co-founded the artificial intelligence company as a nonprofit with a grand purpose.“OpenAI is a non-profit artificial intelligence research company. Our goal is to advance digital intelligence in the way that is most likely to benefit humanity as a whole, unconstrained by a need to generate financial return,” reads the company’s mission statement, published in late 2015

2 days ago
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UK departments at odds over energy demands of AI datacentres

One vision of the UK’s future involves a decarbonised economy powered by clean, renewable energy. Another involves making the UK an AI superpower.The government departments responsible for these two visions do not appear to have agreed on their numbers.The Department of Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT) thinks AI datacentres will consume 6GW of electricity by 2030. The Department of Energy Security and Net Zero (DESNZ) appears to think they will use less than a tenth of that

2 days ago
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Cannes AI film festival raises eyebrows – and questions about future

In Cannes’ darkened screening rooms, the supposed future of cinema flickered into life this week and it was strange. The first edition of the World AI film festival (WAIFF) showcased visions of men with fish scales erupting from their necks and seaweed from their mouths, a heroine with a heart beating outside her body and so many massed armies of AI-generated tanned men sweeping across battlefields that David Lean would have blushed.Last week the Cannes film festival, entering its 76th year, banned the emerging technology from its Palme d’Or competition, insisting “AI imitates very well but it will never feel deep emotions”. But this week the Croisette was taken over by the upstart AI film movement and their big-tech backers amid increasing investment and attention from the Hollywood studios. A “nouvelle vague”, they said, is coming

2 days ago
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Facing AI and a tough job market, gen Z turns to entrepreneurship: ‘I have to prove myself’

When Ashley Terrell graduated from the University of Hawaii in 2024, she planned to find a job in marketing, maybe for a tech company. She had a bachelor’s degree in business administration and a college résumé that included a student marketing job for Red Bull. But after months of applying, her only offer was to work in the power tools section at Home Depot. “It was quite a shock,” she told the Guardian. “I searched for jobs every single day in that Home Depot bathroom

3 days ago
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TikTok and Visa launch debit card to speed payouts to UK creators

TikTok and Visa have launched a debit card for content creators in the UK which they say will allow people to quickly access their earnings from the platform.The creator card is designed for the growing numbers of people making money through TikTok Live, a livestreaming feature where creators receive virtual gifts from viewers that are later converted into cash.The two companies said the card, which links to a user’s creator account on TikTok, was designed to address cashflow issues faced by users who often wait days or weeks for payments to clear.Launched in 2020, TikTok Live is a section of the app where users can broadcast to viewers in real time. According to TikTok, more than 15 million people broadcasted via its platform in Europe in 2025

4 days ago
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Officials hugely underestimated impact of AI datacentres on UK carbon emissions

The UK government vastly underestimated the climate impact of artificial intelligence, it has emerged, after officials raised their estimate of carbon emissions from AI by a factor of more than 100.According to new data quietly published this week, energy use by AI datacentres in the UK could cause the emission of up to 123m tonnes of carbon dioxide (CO₂) – about as much as generated by 2.7 million people – over the next 10 years.That latest figure replaces a previous estimate – since deleted – that claimed emissions would reach a maximum of 0.142m tonnes of CO₂ in a single year

4 days ago
businessSee all
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Claire’s to close remaining UK stores on Tuesday with more than 1,000 job losses

about 16 hours ago
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Shell to buy Canadian shale producer ARC Resources for $16.4bn

about 16 hours ago
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Goldman raises oil price forecasts as Iran war deadlock continues; Shell buying Canada’s ARC in $13.6bn deal – as it happened

about 18 hours ago
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What’s going on with Spirit Airlines and could the White House bail them out?

about 23 hours ago
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G7 central banks poised to hold borrowing costs amid concerns over prolonged Iran war

1 day ago
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HSBC ‘reviewing’ private school perk for bankers in Hong Kong

1 day ago