MORE cash for specialist mental health services, additional funding for armed forces liaison officers and a new resettlement guide for people leaving the military, form part of a new £500,000 package of Welsh Government support for veterans.

The new funding includes:

  • an additional £235,000 annually to fund Veteran National Health Service Wales (VNHSW) from 2021/22 onwards;
  • £275,000 per annum to fund Armed Forces Liaison Officers across Wales until 2023;
  • £50,000 to train prosthetists in Wales in new technologies;
  • £120,000 to support military charities in tackling loneliness and social isolation;
  • £250,000 to support Armed Forces children

Government funding for the VNHSW, now £920,000 per year, is an increase of 35 per cent, in addition to creating new specialist veterans clinical lead posts within the service.

The extra annual funding for 2021/22 maintains the provision of therapy previously supported for the last three years by Help for Heroes across Wales.

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Minister for mental health, wellbeing and the Welsh language Eluned Morgan said: “The Veterans NHS Wales Service is the only national service of its kind in the UK for service related mental health conditions; it supports dedicated therapists in each health board to improve the mental health and wellbeing of veterans. Veterans can refer themselves and they will receive support from a therapist who has experience specifically in service-related mental health issues.

“We are committed to supporting this extremely valuable service which benefits veterans of all ages and backgrounds across Wales.”

Deputy minister for housing and local government Hannah Blythyn said: “In the past year we have delivered a new Veteran’s Railcard in Wales, and the Welsh Government has joined the ‘Great Place to Work for Veterans’ initiative;  providing guaranteed interviews for veterans who meet job specifications when applying to join the civil service.

“We know that veterans have an incredibly valuable range of skills that they can contribute to our workplaces and our communities. This package of funding and support is focused on helping them to thrive. However, during the pandemic we have seen the challenges of loneliness and isolation increase and I’m really pleased that Welsh Government funding has helped to address this for veterans across Wales.”

BLESMA, the military charity for limbless veterans, the VC Gallery in Haverfordwest, and the Bridgend Carers Centre are amongst the charities who have worked to tackle loneliness and isolation amongst veterans over the last year.

Before the pandemic, BLESMA hosted meals alongside digital training sessions; during the pandemic they transferred their book club to run online.

The Bridgend Carers Centre provided SIM cards and tablets to isolated veterans and supported them to get online. They also ran Tai Chi and meditation sessions.

The VC Gallery in Haverfordwest supported older veterans to gain digital skills and get online during the pandemic, kept in touch with regular phone calls, ran digital art clubs and provided food parcels and welfare checks to their most vulnerable members.

  • This article originally appeared on the Argus' sister site The National.