Why 'putting the lunatics in charge of the asylum' can work
#1
Posted 02 March 2012 - 12:23 PM
In the last few years, we have started to rediscover that people with personal experience of mental problems can help others recover and keep themselves well.
Across England, mental health services are employing "peer support workers", for whom lived experience of mental health problems is an essential requirement of their job. These "role models of recovery" are able to give hope to people with long-term mental health problems.
Why is this needed? When mental health services work well, they make a real contribution by providing medication, talking therapies and, where appropriate, support to get back into employment. They manage risk for the small proportion of people who pose a risk to others, and for the much larger proportion that are a risk to themselves and intervene to avert crises.
However, mental health services often fail to provide what is arguably the most important ingredient of all: hope. It may sound simple, but for someone who has just been diagnosed with schizophrenia, knowing that many people manage to recover can be what gives them, and their families, the strength to keep going.
Historically, the prevailing view of schizophrenia was that it was a degenerative illness and once diagnosed, you were faced with an inevitable decline. Anxious parents were told to give up hope of any kind of normal life for their once-promising son or daughter; that it was downhill from here on in. We now know this is absolutely not the case, but shifting these entrenched views within the mental health system is an ongoing challenge.
A member of Rethink Mental Illness, the charity I work in partnership with, recently told me how her brother, who has schizophrenia, has effectively been left to waste away in a care home. He sits in a chair all day, staring into space. No attempts are being made to improve his quality of life, no talking therapies, no hope. She feels as though he's been written off by the staff, who barely acknowledge her existence when she visits, let alone discuss ways in which his life might be improved.
This is what can happen when services focus purely on managing illness. Good services prioritise promoting hope for the future, improving links with the wider community and supporting recovery, while being sensitive to the idea that "recovery" is different for each individual.
Peer support workers are good at all of these things. They provide a living challenge to pessimistic expectations. They know from personal experience the value of getting on with life, rather than waiting to get "better". They bring expectations that a life worth living is available, even to people with the most severe mental illnesses.
It is for this reason that the Institute of Psychiatry and Rethink Mental Illness have joined together in a five-year project to promote recovery in mental health services.
http://www.guardian....support-workers

Yet inside there is this perpetual nagging doubt;
the feeling we are possessed by a 'subtle lack of togetherness'
My newspaper
#2
Posted 02 March 2012 - 01:32 PM
"The world is a dangerous place, not because of those who do evil, but because of those who look on and do nothing." - Einstein
#3
Posted 02 March 2012 - 04:28 PM
I had the rethink on drug recovery line pushed like brain washing years ago in a then nsf hoatel, lifes made me cynical
#4
Posted 02 March 2012 - 05:07 PM
ramboself, on 02 March 2012 - 04:28 PM, said:
I had the rethink on drug recovery line pushed like brain washing years ago in a then nsf hoatel, lifes made me cynical
Cynical and jaded is what happens if you live to our ages.
"The world is a dangerous place, not because of those who do evil, but because of those who look on and do nothing." - Einstein
#5
Posted 03 March 2012 - 03:43 AM
I'd rather they focused on doing that and reducing stigma in health services than creating tokenistic roles (which i'm sure do do a lot of good but they still make the mentaly ill 'other' which does not create much hope in me).
Many mental health professionals will talk about stigma being reduced, but they still hold onto the belief that a mentally ill person shouldn't be in a position of 'real' responsibility and would balk at the notion of colleagues and bosses with severe mental illness (and sadly so do many service users). Doctors are scared even to admit to depression - the 'common cold' of mental illness.
It is pathetic.
I'd have more faith in these initiatives if they introduced positive discrimination in selection of the 'severely mentally ill' for mental health professional courses and jobs. I believe positive discrimination would be fair as competing 'fairly' on the basis of how much we've done/achieved is indirect discrimination as many of us cannot hope to match the unblemished CV needed for many competitive jobs.
#6
Posted 03 March 2012 - 09:54 AM
toffee, on 03 March 2012 - 03:43 AM, said:
I'd rather they focused on doing that and reducing stigma in health services than creating tokenistic roles (which i'm sure do do a lot of good but they still make the mentaly ill 'other' which does not create much hope in me).
Many mental health professionals will talk about stigma being reduced, but they still hold onto the belief that a mentally ill person shouldn't be in a position of 'real' responsibility and would balk at the notion of colleagues and bosses with severe mental illness (and sadly so do many service users). Doctors are scared even to admit to depression - the 'common cold' of mental illness.
It is pathetic.
I'd have more faith in these initiatives if they introduced positive discrimination in selection of the 'severely mentally ill' for mental health professional courses and jobs. I believe positive discrimination would be fair as competing 'fairly' on the basis of how much we've done/achieved is indirect discrimination as many of us cannot hope to match the unblemished CV needed for many competitive jobs.
i dont think letting a surgeon who had spent some time as a patient in a mental hospital , a good idea to do heart surgery on me. ocourse there are mentally ill doctors but the wont say anything or there job has gone forever. Your in remission not curred, so your still ill, so they treat themself with fake scripts for meds. an the muddle through without killing to many of us , when they work through relaspe.
#7
Posted 05 March 2012 - 10:14 PM
#8
Posted 06 March 2012 - 07:10 AM
"The world is a dangerous place, not because of those who do evil, but because of those who look on and do nothing." - Einstein
#9
Posted 06 March 2012 - 09:27 AM
toffee, on 05 March 2012 - 10:14 PM, said:
this will never happen im afraid , unless you have forged documents.
#13
Posted 07 March 2012 - 12:11 PM
ramboself, on 07 March 2012 - 11:07 AM, said:
Having had the jab i'd be uncomfortable holding someone down
Yeah, there's no work for those fit and well, or those with a good work record and just lost jobs. That isn't gonna change tommorow and when it eventually does, no doubt on the war-spending of a military budget, we'll still be at the back of the bus like in the previous boom times.
"The world is a dangerous place, not because of those who do evil, but because of those who look on and do nothing." - Einstein
#15
Posted 09 March 2012 - 10:01 AM
#16
Posted 09 March 2012 - 10:04 AM
"The world is a dangerous place, not because of those who do evil, but because of those who look on and do nothing." - Einstein
#17
Posted 09 March 2012 - 06:16 PM
#18
Posted 09 March 2012 - 06:22 PM
manic666, on 09 March 2012 - 06:16 PM, said:
That's what it says in the Daily Mail but the system is pretty tight in practice. The object of this kind of propoganda is to distract attention from the bankers who are really breaking the system for a profit and half. If you think fifty quid is gonna sink the pound then you have to ask what sixty million will do, or six hundred million or six trillion? But that kind of mathematics escapes the press agenda, but the press are owned by billionaires. If you fall for the line that fiddling a few quid will sink the ship but ignore the billions behind the curtain - where are you?
"The world is a dangerous place, not because of those who do evil, but because of those who look on and do nothing." - Einstein
#19
Posted 09 March 2012 - 06:28 PM
Spartikus Rex, on 09 March 2012 - 06:22 PM, said:
dont bite the hand that feeds you, bite the hand,s off fake scroungers feeding off you.
#20
Posted 09 March 2012 - 06:42 PM
manic666, on 09 March 2012 - 06:28 PM, said:
I don't know? If I had a say half the human race would get their calling cards tommorow all on acount of them being dumbrucks. That's why I haven't got a opinion really. I can trump yours in a second. Good thing I'm not in charge of the show isn't it?
"The world is a dangerous place, not because of those who do evil, but because of those who look on and do nothing." - Einstein

Help




MultiQuote










