Health organisations united: Punishment is not the answer to mental health crises
25 Feb 2026
Media release

The Mental Health Foundation, Public Health Association of New Zealand, Platform Trust, and the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists are seriously concerned about the Crimes Amendment Bill 223-1 (2025).
Mental Health Foundation, Platform Trust, and the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists submitted independently to the Justice Committee, and together we share a message: punishment is not the answer. Prevention is.
"This Bill treats system failure as an individual crime. It penalises people experiencing mental health crises instead of addressing the real problem - responders being sent into situations that require specialist mental health expertise."
Evidence from Australian jurisdictions indicates that enhanced criminal penalties do not reduce incidences of violence against first responders.
Health-led approaches are more effective at reducing harm, including multidisciplinary co-response teams with mental health specialists attending crisis callouts, de-escalation training for first responders, and culturally safe crisis services.
What we're asking for:
Our organisations are united in calling for:
- Reject the assault on the first responders' provisions
- Invest in a nationally cohesive, networked crisis response system
- Mandate comprehensive mental health crisis training for all first responders and correction staff
- Fund kaupapa Māori crisis services and culturally safe responses
- Ensure adequate staffing so responders aren't working beyond capacity
- Resource community mental health services to prevent crises before they escalate
"We need age-appropriate spaces for youth and older people, detoxification services with mental health expertise, crisis respite alternatives to emergency departments, peer support workers embedded throughout services, and outreach teams that maintain connection with vulnerable people".
People may experience acute illness and engage in harmful behaviour during a crisis yet make a full recovery with appropriate treatment. Applying criminal penalties in such circumstances can trap people in the criminal justice system long after recovery and may impede rehabilitation when what is required is skilled crisis intervention and therapeutic care.
The Bill will also disproportionately harm Māori, who are over-represented in compulsory mental health treatment, police interactions with force, and the criminal justice system. It will compound existing inequities rather than address them.
"We agree that the safety of frontline responders is essential and that ensuring their health and safety not only protects their individual wellbeing but also maintains the reliability and effectiveness of the essential services our communities depend on.
“However, criminal law is the wrong tool. It responds after harm occurs. It does nothing to protect first responders in the moment. We urge the Justice Committee to reject these provisions and instead invest in evidence-based crisis response that protects everyone — first responders, tāngata whai ora, and whānau."
For media inquiries, please contact: Dishi Gahlowt on +61 437 315 911 or email media@ranzcp.org
The Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists is a membership organisation that prepares medical specialists in the field of psychiatry, supports and enhances clinical practice, advocates for people affected by mental illness and advises governments and other groups on mental health care. For information about our work, our members or our history, visit www.ranzcp.org.
In Australia: If you or someone you know needs help, contact Lifeline on 13 11 14 or www.lifeline.org.au or the Suicide Callback Service on 1300 659 467 or www.suicidecallbackservice.org.au.
In New Zealand: If you or someone you know needs help, contact Lifeline NZ on 0800 543 354 or www.lifeline.org.nz or the Suicide Crisis Helpline on 0508 828 865 or www.lifeline.org.nz/suicide-prevention.
More news & views
Psychiatrists in Aotearoa New Zealand have raised serious concerns about new move-on orders which gr...
In 2025, the program supported over 19 activities and connected with 800+ students and prevocational...
The RANZCP NSW Branch extends its deepest condolences to the family and loved ones of the man killed...