 I'm Andy Bell, I work at Centre for Mental Health and we're an independent mental health charity that seeks to ensure that people have better mental health, fairer chances in life and reduced inequalities. Brilliant, and I asked you to record this video with me because you are doing an exciting piece of work that my network might be able to contribute to. So what's the work? Thank you, it's a very exciting piece of work and we've just begun it a short while ago. So it's a commission for equality in mental health. So it's all about understanding why there are inequalities, why some groups of people are more likely to have poor mental health, what are the determinants of that, what lies behind those inequalities, those injustices that we all know about. Why is it that the same groups of people often have poorer access to help and that's help of all sorts, not just official services, and then why is it that the outcomes are sometimes worse. Really importantly, what can we do to help, what can we do to make a difference, what can we change nationally at community levels, at local levels, that will help to build a system that puts equality right at its heart. So what are you looking for, how can we help with this piece of work? So what we're really looking for at this point is evidence. We want to hear from people and organisations who are either experiencing inequalities personally or working from a local community to national policy to make a change. So trying out new ways of reducing inequalities of making sure that people have a better chance of good mental health, better support more quickly and better outcomes from support. So we're really interested to find out what are you doing, what's going on out there, what don't we know about, what could we share and what might be part of a system that's designed to really bring about equality within mental health so that we really begin to learn from what's going on that's really good and positive and interesting and innovative and put that into the mainstream. And what often happens when I share these kind of calls for evidence with colleagues is that everyone thinks it's for someone else and not for them and that maybe this piece of work they've been doing has had a big impact on someone locally or people locally but that you wouldn't be interested in this for a national piece of work. I mean, where does the line get drawn? What do you want to hear about? There is no line. If you want to hear about something that might be on a very individual level, it might be something based in a community, it could be an informal group, it may be a charity, it may be a local council. It doesn't matter what it is, it matters that if it's helping to reduce mental health inequalities, we want to know about it, we want to understand it and know why it works and how it works. So we're really interested in if you've got something that you've written down, if you've made a video, if you want to kind of send us some information directly, have a look at the Centre for Mental Health website. There's a call for evidence for the Commission for Equality on there. Share what you've got, tell us what you're up to and it will be useful. We will log it down as part of our evidence review. We're getting lots and lots of stuff and we want more but everything that's sent to us will read, will digest and will put as part of the picture. Is this going to take up loads of time for someone to submit their evidence to you? Well, I hope it's going to be really simple. All you need to do is go to our call for evidence or have a look on Twitter at mhquality, which is the Twitter feed, so anything that you can send to us either by email or through that Twitter account, we will look at it, we will read it. If it's something you've already written, that's absolutely fine. Just send it over to us, we're all in favour of recycling. So let's make sure that if you've got stuff you want to share with us, you feel you have the opportunity, you don't feel it's not important, you don't feel that you have to write a treatise of 8,000 words, but tell us what we need to know. Brilliant. Anything else I've forgotten to ask you? I think that's wonderful and we're looking forward to seeing what's out there and what people are up to. So, thank you. Brilliant and I'll put all the links in the description below the video as well and I'll share this out as widely as possible. So thanks ever so much Andy. Thank you very much. Thank you. Okay, bye.