Kidney Diseases: Mental Health Services

(asked on 16th January 2026) - View Source

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, what recent steps his Department have taken to ensure that renal treatment service providers (a) train, support and supervise all staff to identify patients’ psychosocial needs, (b) work in psychologically‑informed ways, and (c) provide low‑level support with rapid onward referral where more intensive intervention is required.


Answered by
Ashley Dalton Portrait
Ashley Dalton
Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department of Health and Social Care)
This question was answered on 26th January 2026

The Government has already taken significant steps to stabilise and improve mental health services within the National Health Service but there is much more to do. NHS Talking Therapies - Long Term Conditions services have been established across the country to support integrated pathways between Talking Therapies services and physical health pathways for people with long term conditions, including kidney disease.

As part of the 10-Year Health Plan, we are expanding NHS Talking Therapies so that 915,000 people complete a course of treatment by March 2029, with improved effectiveness and quality of services.

Mental health and psychosocial support for people living with kidney disease is a key priority within NHS England’s programme to improve renal care. The Renal Service Transformation Programme (RSTP), published in 2023, provides a national framework for raising standards across the renal pathway, including a strengthened focus on supporting the emotional and psychological needs of patients. Renal clinical networks are working with a stakeholders, i.e. professional societies and renal charities, to support implementation of the RSTP.

NHS England is revising the specialised renal service specification to ensure alignment with the RSTP and to support commissioning across the full renal pathway. Published renal service specifications already set expectations for providers to address the psychosocial needs of people with kidney disease. The revised specification reinforces this requirement and strengthens the overall direction for services to deliver holistic, person-centred care that recognises the importance of psychosocial support throughout the renal journey.

Reticulating Splines