Prince William urges men to talk more about mental health during poignant visit
The Prince of Wales has marked Mental Health Awareness Week with a visit to a new menâs suicide prevention centre in Birmingham where he urged people to talk more about the issue of suicide
Prince William has opened a menâs suicide prevention centre in Birmingham to mark mental health awareness week. The Prince of Wales has toured a new centre run by Jamesâ Place, a charity which provides free therapy for men in suicidal crisis.
Today, he met both staff and men whose lives have been saved by the charity at its other locations. As he entered the new facility, William was greeted by a host of staff members, where he joked about how many of them were all in one small room. He also spoke about his beloved Aston Villa, who he passionately cheered on to victory on Friday.
During the visit, William also met other fellow partners of the network, including Papyrus, MindOUT, and The National Suicide Prevention Alliance (NSPA) to share key learnings from across the network.
The Prince of Wales has urged people to talk more about suicide, and praised the work of those in the facility. âThe team here are fantastic,â William said. âI hope we can get more of you around the UK, because it is in need of it sadly.
âWe need to talk more about suicide, talk more about preventing it and talk about getting it to young men and women earlier, so we donât have to have these centres in the very long run. That is the aim.â
After their meeting, Marcus Davies, a former service-user and a trustee at the charity, who is from The Wirral in Merseyside, said: â(William) was surprisingly normal, actually.
“I think when we sat down and got into the conversation, he was surprisingly normal, very relaxed, very open and interested in what we had to say.â
Another former service-user, Ben Brand, who travelled from Bedford for the princeâs visit, said: âWe were very nervous to begin with, but once he got in the room and sat down, it relaxed very quickly.
“It was like just talking to anybody, really. You wouldnât think you were speaking to the prince, the future King. It was just speaking to another man, just having a chat.â
Mr Davies said the princeâs visit could help inform more men in crisis about the charity, as he said: âI think for that publicity, his reach and the audience that he can reach through his status and who he is, I think thatâs just critical to getting that message far and wide.
âI had never heard of Jamesâs Place prior to my GP referring me. Itâs so important that men know that it is there and available as a service to help those that need it. The more far and wide that message can be delivered, the better â and he has the scope to be able to do that.â
To commemorate the visit, William unveiled a plaque to mark the official opening of the centre, and was then thanked by Jamesâ mother, Clare Milford Haven, for his ongoing support to the charity.
Milford Haven then presented a Jamesâ Place hoodie to the prince and her other son, Harry Wentworth-Stanley, for the ultra-endurance triathlon he is undertaking to fundraise for a fifth clinic. William joked: âI think mine might be a little bit cleaner than yours by the end of your [challenge].â
Jamesâ Place was founded in memory of James Wentworth-Stanley, a Newcastle University student, who took his own life in 2006 at age 21, with this year marking 20 years since his death.
Since 2018, the charityâs three existing centres have saved over 5,100 menâs lives. The charity solely supports men, who account for over 75 per cent of suicides in the UK. The Birmingham venue is the fourth of the charityâs centres, following successful programmes in Liverpool, London and Newcastle.
Opening their London centre in 2022, William said at the time, âThe one takeaway for me is the idea that there is a solution.
âI think men sometimes get so lost in the detail, they forget the bigger picture and being able to have that bit of support that can move them forward and there is hope and a brighter future.â
Earlier this year, William also met Allan Brownrigg, director of clinical services at Jamesâ Place, and former client Nathan, to discuss menâs mental health on an episode of BBC Radio 1âs Life Hacks.
During the conversation, William described his mental health “deteriorating” while volunteering as an air ambulance pilot. He went on to explain that more “male role models” speaking candidly about their experiences with mental health would help other men feel as though they could open up.
Jamesâ Place hopes to open a fifth centre by 2027, which will allow them to treat up to 2,000 men per year. Currently, men can self-refer or be referred by a healthcare professional to Jamesâ Place.
They typically receive six to eight face-to-face sessions with a trained therapist in a setting that is designed to feel calm, rather than clinical.
In October, Jamesâ Place became one of five founding partners of the new National Suicide Prevention Network (NSPN), established by The Royal Foundation of The Prince and Princess of Wales.
Through the network, funding from The Royal Foundation is supporting Jamesâ Place to pilot two new satellite services over 12 months in the North East and North West of England, expanding access to free, life-saving therapy in community-based settings.
For mental health support, contact the Samaritans on 116 123, email them at [email protected] or visit samaritans.org to find your nearest branch.


