Monday 11 May marks the beginning of Mental Health Awareness Week this year, and the theme is ‘Action.’ While raising awareness remains essential, ‘taking action’ is vital to lasting change and better health all year round.
We’re partnering with Impact on Urban Health to improve the experiences and health of people from Black communities in south east London Boroughs of Lambeth.
At the heart of this partnership is a new way of working to build trust in the health service by reshaping Black people’s experience of maternal and mental health care.
People from Black and other racially minoritised communities in London experience significant inequalities when it comes to their health – for a combination of social, economic and environmental reasons.
Alongside this is a growing distrust and apathy towards the healthcare system.
The reasons expressed for this distrust are diverse and include experiencing discriminatory practices in healthcare settings, being misdiagnosed, being prescribed the wrong medication and having traumatic experiences.
In 2022, a report commissioned by the Black Equity Organisation found that nearly two thirds of Black respondents had ‘experienced prejudice from doctors and other staff in healthcare settings’, with the proportion being even higher – at 75% – among respondents aged 18 to 34.
Community-led research commissioned by Centric explored this further – and highlighted the disparities experienced by Black people when accessing maternal and mental health care.
Whilst women overall are having healthier and safer pregnancies and childbirth, Black women in the UK are more than twice as likely to die in childbirth as white women.
Traumatic experiences during childbirth and reports of inadequate pain relief are also significantly higher for women from Black backgrounds.
These experiences can have a compounding impact on how people from Black backgrounds access healthcare services and treatments.
The 2018 Race Disparity Audit reported that Black men are more than ten times as likely to have experienced a psychotic disorder within the past year as White men. However, Black adults are the least likely to receive treatment for a mental health condition – whether medication, counselling or therapy – and are the most likely to have been detained under the Mental Health Act.
Distrust in the mental health service in Black communities is reinforced through experiences of greater rates of enforced admission to psychiatric wards and harsher treatment during their detention.
Our partnership with Impact on Urban Health aims to tackle health inequalities caused by systemic racism and rebuild trust in the healthcare system for Black communities. We are doing this by sharing power and working with communities to co-create new models of care. We are bringing together local residents and health stakeholders to rethink, design, and develop innovative solutions that better meet their needs.
Throughout our partnership we’ll keep these principles:
Scoping phase:
Community-led research explored the issues Black communities face when accessing health services. This informed the development of the Black Maternal Health and Black Mental Health programmes. In 2024, we tested delivery and governance models with partners and appointed a learning partner to embed equity, co-production, and continuous learning.
Planning phase:
In early 2025, we appointed a project lead to connect partners and embed the work across south east London. We developed a governance framework to amplify community voices and launched a Black Maternal Health Expert Reference Group (ERG) to guide strategy and decision-making.
Design phase:
A workshop with over 80 participants, including Black mothers, community leaders, healthcare workers, academics, and policymakers, focused on Black women’s experiences in maternal healthcare. It identified systemic issues and explored fifteen key areas for action. Read the report here.
Maternal Health funding launch:
In November 2025 we launched a £1.5 million fund for community groups in south east London to improve care for Black mothers and babies. Grants will support projects across different stages of the maternity and neonatal journey including pre-conception, pregnancy, birth, post-birth and early specialist care. identified in the community-led design phase.
2026 will be an exciting year for the partnership. We will start awarding grants and begin the delivery phase of the Black Maternal Health programme. The Black Mental Health programme will also launch, starting with a workshop to explore solutions and centre the voices of people with lived experience, leading into a grant-making process later in the year.
By bringing stakeholders together to share power and understand each other better, we aim to move closer to health equity and build trust where it is weak or missing.
Monday 11 May marks the beginning of Mental Health Awareness Week this year, and the theme is ‘Action.’ While raising awareness remains essential, ‘taking action’ is vital to lasting change and better health all year round.
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4th and 25th May 2026