Experts believe one in six people across the UK will have a mental health crisis this week that could lead to them developing a serious disorder.

It is a shocking figure, and one that explains why the NHS has in recent years focused on redressing the balance between mental health and physical health funding.

In east London, the primary providers of mental healthcare are the North East London Foundation Trust – but there are a vast wealth of other organisations and individuals out there working to support those people working to improve their own mental health.

The latest available data from Public Health England, from April this year, indicates east London actually suffers from common mental health disorders less than most of the capital.

Data compiled by each borough’s clinical commissioning group indicates that 16.4pc of Londoners suffer from more common disorders such as obsessive compulsive disorder, anxiety, depression, or panic attacks.

But here in east London, that percentage can drop as low as 14.3pc in both Havering and Redbridge, and never surpasses the 15.7pc mark set by Barking and Dagenham.

So how exactly are east London’s mental healthcare professionals managing to keep ahead of the curve?

Firstly, there has been a rise in independent enterprises recognising the importance of mental health and doing their best to help.

One such individual is Nisha Zala, from Collier Row, an award-winning life coach who had to beat her own personal demons before helping others vanquish theirs.

As a teenager, Nisha was a self-harmer battling depression and anxiety alongside a whole host of other self-esteem issues as a result of being bullied at school.

But, after years of hard work and discipline, she was able to turn her life around, and in 2014 was officially certified as a life coach by the Association of Professional Coaches, Trainers and Consultants.

And the 36-year-old is clear on the steps people can take to improve their mental health.

“The first thing you have to do is really learn how to love yourself,” she said.

“It’s important to remember if you’re struggling that you do have a place in this world – then you can start to value yourself for who you are.

“After that, it’s about finding the strength that everyone has inside them to face up to what’s causing the problems in the first place.

“The most important thing to remember is that you don’t ever have to go through anything alone – whoever you are, there are people out there who want to help you.”

And local NHS services have also been learning to adapt to the new challenges posed by increasing mental health diagnoses.

At Bart’s Health, the hospital trust serving Newham, Tower Hamlets and western Redbridge, young people diagnosed with mental health issues have been brought in to help train hospital staff to better support patients going through mental health crises.

The trust, which operates Newham, Whipps Cross and Royal London hospitals, ran a survey which found one in five staff members constantly encountered young people with mental health conditions.

And so Bart’s Health developed a new training framework, the first within the NHS, that saw nurses and healthcare assistants take part in one-day sessions led by people diagnosed with mental health conditions to help them get better at addressing mental health issues.

Grace Jeremy, 24, is a young adviser with Common Room – one of the mental health organisations that helped put together the training plan alongside Healthy Teen Minds, to help hospital patients who might feel ashamed at attending A&E and unworthy of a doctor’s time.

She added: “People in a mental health crisis attending A&E want exactly what anyone attending A&E would want; appropriate care, to be involved in decisions, empathy, understanding and a non-judgmental approach.

“From what I have seen and heard in the sessions staff really care and want to support people better, and I am thrilled to be helping to make this happen.”