There is an alarming trend in suicide rates. In 2024, the registered deaths from suicide in England and Wales reached the highest level since 1999, according to the Office for National Statistics. In the north east, though it no longer has the highest suicide rate in the country, there was still a 15% increase in people taking their own lives in 2023.
In response to this growing healthcare crisis, Everyturn Mental Health, a non-profit organisation based in Newcastle upon Tyne, has expanded its crisis services to meet the urgent mental health needs of the region. Through innovation and partnerships, the organisation is taking a transformative approach, by tackling the social and practical issues that are pushing people into mental health crisis.
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Expanding support across a region
Everyturn Mental Health has an expansive set of services that provide support to people in mental health distress, including in-person, digital, and telephone support.
To bring immediate practical and social support to people in distress, we have opened our first safe haven on an Ashington high street in Northumberland. Based in a building called ‘The Bothy’, the safe haven provides drop-in mental health support between 2pm and 10pm every day. It also connects people to services to help with issues like finances, housing, work or relationship difficulties.
This safe haven is the first of its kind in the region, putting mental health support on the high street and offering help, 365 days a year, to ensure no one struggles alone.
Pasha Tanriverdi, head of development at Everyturn explains: “The most recent ONS suicide rate data reflects the greater numbers of people needing our services. This year alone, we’ve supported over 4,600 people through our crisis services. For 50% of those people, financial pressures were the cause of their distress.