Communities Mental Health and Wellbeing Fund for Adults Year 3 – Monitoring and Reporting Summary - Updated 2025

Communities Mental Health and Wellbeing

Fund for Adults

Year 3 - Monitoring and Reporting Summary

June 2025

This report was originally published in September 2024. It has been updated to

include data from Voluntary Action Angus which was not included in the

original report.


Section A - Reach of Funded Projects

It is important to note that a strength of the Fund is the diverse range of projects it has supported. To help illustrate this, a wide selection of projects being funded through Year 3 of the Fund are listed at Annex A (which are grouped by target group, priority theme or other themes) and Annex B (which provides an example for each region). A full list of Communities Mental Health and Wellbeing Fund projects funded in Years 1 and 2 can be found here. A list of funded projects for Year 3 will also be published in due course.

What was asked.

TSIs were asked to provide project level data in terms of the number of awards, size and coverage of the funded organisations, size of grants and type of initiative as well as their focus on priority groups and themes.

1. Number of grants

The total number of applications received across Scotland was 2,585. The level of applications was similar to Years 1 and 2.

Of those applications, 1,430 awards were made to community projects, resulting in funding for 1,379 organisations. Some organisations gained funding for more than one project.

2. Type and range of projects

In reviewing the range of funded projects, it is clear that a diverse range of projects are being supported. The most common types of projects being funded are:

Arts and Craft (110) 7.69%

Education and Training (52) 3.64%

Equipment, Maintenance and Training (27) 1.89%

Financial Inclusion/Cost of Living (77) 5.38%

Other (13) 0.91%

Peer Support and Befriending (227) 15.87%

Social (434) 30.35%

Sport or Physical Activity (203) 14.20%

Counselling or Therapeutic (287) 20.07%

It should be noted that projects were to select one of the above categories best fitted to the project although many will relate to more than one of these categories.

Projects involving equipment were often for small amounts of money and highlight how a small item such as a laptop or a video editing licence can make such a huge difference to the survival of these initiatives and impacts of the beneficiaries.

3. Funding of new and existing projects

Of the project data returned, 35 9% were new projects, 45.4% were existing projects (previous Fund grantees), 12.1% were existing projects (not previously funded by the Fund), data was not available for 6.6% of projects

4. Size of grants awarded

Overall, most grants (57%) were for £10,000 or less. 33% were for grants between £10,000 to £20,000, 9.7% were for between £20,000 to £50,000, with only five grants (0.3%) over £50,000.

5. Size of organisations funded

TSIs were asked to list the size of organisation that had been funded, the awards were allocated as follows:

  • 421 awards (29.44%) went to small organisations (with an annual turnover under £25,000)
  • 725 awards (50.69%) went to medium sized organisations (with an annual turnover between £25,000 and £1 million)
  • 102 (7.13%) went to large organisations (with an annual turnover over £1 million)
  • 182 projects were marked as “N/A” 12.74%

The majority of grants (80.13%) were therefore allocated to either small or medium sized organisations, which is encouraging given the ethos of the Fund.

6. Geographical coverage of funded organisations

The number of projects by TSI area is given in the table below.

TSI

Number of Projects

Percentage of overall projects

Aberdeen

55

3.85

Aberdeenshire

67

4.69

Angus

16

1.12

Argyll & Bute

47

3.29

City Of Edinburgh

107

7.48

Clackmannanshire

24

1.68

Dumfries & Galloway

30

2.10

Dundee

46

3.22

East Ayrshire

36

2.52

East Dunbartonshire

51

3.57

East Lothian

29

2.03

East Renfrewshire

32

2.24

Eilean Siar (western Isles)

20

1.40

Falkirk

36

2.52

Fife

70

4.90

Glasgow City

202

14.13

Highland

70

4.90

Inverclyde

19

1.33

Midlothian

29

2.03

Moray

27

1.89

North Lanarkshire

34

2.38

Orkney

18

1.26

Perth & Kinross

26

1.82

Renfrewshire

60

4.20

Scottish Borders

21

1.47

Shetland

18

1.26

South Ayrshire

28

1.96

South Lanarkshire

77

5.38

Stirling

35

2.45

North Ayrshire

38

2.66

West Dunbartonshire

25

1.75

West Lothian

37

2.59

Total

1430

100.00

16 TSIs used the option to allocate up to 1% of the main fund for capacity building for a total of £69,198.74.

7. Project focus on target groups

TSIs were asked to report whether projects were primarily aimed at the general population, open to all but with a focus on particular target groups or aimed directly at particular target groups. Analysis shows:

  • 25% were aimed at general population
  • 50% were open to all but with a focus on particular target groups
  • 25% were aimed directly at particular target groups

TSIs were also asked to note up to three target groups that their projects were seeking to reach. The results are outlined in the table below. This shows that the most commonly targeted groups were:

  • People facing socio-economic disadvantage, 554
  • Families with a disabled member, 548
  • People with a long term health condition or disability, 537
  • Lone Parents, 511
  • Older People, 427

The groups less commonly targeted were:

  • People who have experienced bereavement or loss, 196
  • People from a minority ethnic background, 194
  • Refugees and those with no recourse to public funds, 103
  • Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender and Intersex (LGBTQI+) communities, 98

192 “other” entries were also recorded. Of these the most commonly supported group mentioned was unpaid carers (43).

It should be noted that the lowest numbers are consistent with groups that are often the least represented in health support, as well as the groups that can face the most health inequalities and stigma.

Table: Outlining the target group focus of the projects in Year 3

Target group

Number of projects supported

People facing socio economic disadvantage

554

Families with a disabled family member

548

People with a long term health condition or disability

537

Lone parents

511

Older people aged 50 and above

427

People experiencing severe and multiple disadvantage

401

Families with 3 children

386

People with diagnosed mental illness

363

Minority ethnic families

316

Mothers aged less than 25

314

Families where the youngest children are under 1 year old

312

People affected by psychological trauma including adverse childhood experiences

280

Women

258

People disadvantaged by geographical location particularly remote and rural areas

227

People who have experienced bereavement or loss

196

Other

192

People from a minority ethnic background

194

Other

192

Refugees and those with no recourse to public funds

103

Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgender and Intersex LGBTI communities

98

8. Project focus on Fund’s key priorities

The Fund supports a wide range of grassroots community projects including those based around peer support, physical activity, arts and crafts activities, social interaction and befriending, with a strong emphasis on the key themes of prevention and early intervention, suicide prevention, addressing social isolation and tackling poverty.

Overall, there is very strong coverage across the fund priorities, with social isolation and loneliness, and tackling poverty and inequality the most prominent. Suicide prevention continues to be a focus for some but is less commonly cited.

  • Social isolation and loneliness was a strong theme, with 1,240 projects including a focus on this.
  • Tackling poverty and inequality (an increased focus in Year 3 to in response to the cost of living crisis) was the focus of 715 projects, and a shared theme of many others.
  • Suicide prevention is the least common theme to be adopted with 360 having this as a sole focus although many included this as a shared theme.

9. Contribution to Child Poverty Plan

The Fund Guidance highlighted the importance of considering the six priority at risk family types (most at risk of poverty) identified in the Best Start, Bright Futures: Tackling Child Poverty Delivery Plan 2022 to 2026. TSIs were asked to consider whether projects being funded are helping to support some of the six priority at risk families.

Analysis of returns shows that 857 projects (59%) were supporting people from at least one of six priority at risk families. Of these 280 (33%) projects focused on one target group and 577 (67%) on more than one group. 145 projects (17%) reported supporting all six groups.

As the majority of projects declared support for multiple priorities the numbers below will not add to the total of projects.

  • Of the overall number of projects:
    • 548 projects (38%) were supporting families with a disabled family member,
    • 511 projects (35%) were supporting lone parents,
    • 386 projects (27%) were supporting families with 3+ children,
    • 316 projects (22%) were supporting minority ethnic families,
    • 314 projects (23%) were supporting mothers aged less than 25,
    • 312 projects (23%) were supporting families where the youngest children are under 1 year old.

10. Administration and Capacity Grant

A grant of £734,000 was provided to support administration costs and the capacity building efforts of Third Sector Interfaces.

This was distributed across Third Sector Interfaces, each receiving approx. 5% of their Fund grant amount as an Administration and Capacity Building Grant. TSIs were also offered the flexibility to draw on up to 1% of their main fund allocation to resource some specific capacity building support to projects focused on improving mental health and wellbeing, such as supporting training needs.

16 of 32 TSIs used the option to allocate up to 1% of the main fund for capacity building for a total of £69,198.74.

TSI

Used 1% of main fund for capacity building

Amount of main fund used for capacity building

Aberdeen

Yes

£5669.16

Aberdeenshire

Yes

£6351.14

Angus

No

0

Argyll & Bute

No

City Of Edinburgh

Yes

£2257.46

Clackmannanshire

Yes

Combined with Stirling

Dumfries & Galloway

Yes

£4446.64

Dundee

No

0

East Ayrshire

Yes

£1380.23

East Dunbartonshire

No

0

East Lothian

Yes

£2,836.84

East Renfrewshire

No

0

Eilean Siar (western Isles)

No

0

Falkirk

No

0

Fife

No

0

Glasgow City

No

0

Highland

Yes

£7066.64

Inverclyde

No

0

Midlothian

Yes

£2464.54

Moray

Yes

£2586.17

North Lanarkshire

Yes

£9561.76

Orkney

Yes

£ 2500.00

Perth & Kinross

Yes

£4179.00

Renfrewshire

No

0

Scottish Borders

No

0

Shetland

No

0

South Ayrshire

Yes

£3367.8

South Lanarkshire

Yes

£8817.68

Stirling

Yes

£ 3846.88

North Ayrshire

No

0

West Dunbartonshire

No

0

West Lothian

Yes

£4703.64

Total

16

£69,198.74

Contact

Email: Joseph.Ewesor@gov.scot

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