Mental health patients forced to travel miles for care

lack of beds is forcing mental health patients in England to seek treatment in other NHS facilities up to hundreds of miles away, BBC research has found.
The number of patients travelling to seek emergency treatment has more than doubled in two years - from 1,301 people in 2011-12 to 3,024 in 2013-14.
Earlier this year one patient was admitted to a deaf unit as no beds were available anywhere in the country.
Health minister Norman Lamb said out-of-area treatment was a "last resort".
The care and support minister added that it was "unacceptable" if patients had to travel "hundreds of miles" for treatment and said he was determined to drive up standards of care in the NHS.
Leading charities have called the situation scandalous and a disgrace.
The number of patients travelling to seek emergency treatment has more than doubled in two years - from 1,301 people in 2011-12 to 3,024 in 2013-14.
Earlier this year one patient was admitted to a deaf unit as no beds were available anywhere in the country.
Health minister Norman Lamb said out-of-area treatment was a "last resort".
The care and support minister added that it was "unacceptable" if patients had to travel "hundreds of miles" for treatment and said he was determined to drive up standards of care in the NHS.
Leading charities have called the situation scandalous and a disgrace.