Title: RecoveryFocused Mental Health Services: Reclaiming our lives
1Recovery-Focused Mental Health Services
Reclaiming our lives
- Rachel Perkins
- Director of Quality Assurance and User Experience
- South West London and St Georges Mental Health
NHS Trust
2Mental health problems a catastrophic and life
changing experience
- More than just unusual and sometimes frightening
experiences but all that goes along with being a
mental patient in our societies ... you become
other, one of them not one of us - Prejudice, discrimination and exclusion outside
services and within wherever you look you
basically you have two choices - Mainstream media mad axe murderer or poor
incompetent - Professional literature deficit, dysfunction,
risk, burden - Either way you are never going to amount to very
much ... and you are left feeling very alone and
very, very frightened.
3But it doesnt have to be this way ...
- Many, many people with mental health problems
have shown us that recovery is possible ... It is
possible to live a valued, satisfying and
contributing life with mental health problems - Statesmen like Parnell, Churchill, Kjell Bondevik
(Norwegian prime-minister until 2004) - Scientists like Einstein and Babbage
- Scholars, musicians, artists, writers
- Businessmen like Ted Turner who set up Cable
Network News - and many ordinary people living ordinary lives
made harder by prejudice and discrimination
4Mental health problemsThe province of expert
professionals
- Traditionally assumed that expert professionals
were the only ones who had the expertise to
determine what was good for patients. - Decisions at all levels should be left to the
experts - Decisions about what was wrong with people
- Decisions about peoples possibilities
- Decisions about individual treatment
- Decisions about all facets of service development
and delivery
5Over a century of service user resistance
- The history of protest by people labelled
insane stretches back to the second half of the
19th century and the The Alleged Lunatics Friend
Society - patients are first crushed and then discharged
to live a milksop existence in society. (John
Percival) - each patient should have a voice in his own
confinement and care.
6150 years later there have been changes ...
- It is now recognised that service users should
have a say in their own treatment and care and
the way in which services are run - People with mental health problems can expect
that services will involve service users in
planning and delivery of care. - (UK Department of Health Mental Health National
Service Framework 1999) - But we continue to think about
- the patient in our services
- needs defined in terms of what we have to offer
(inpatient care, assertive outreach, medication,
therapy ....) - choice limited to what professionals offer
7Another way ... the person in their lifeIdeas
about recovery
- Ideas about recovery were born not of learned
academics or expert professionals but of those
who had faced the challenge of mental health
problems - First found a voice as part of the USA Civil
Rights Movement in the work of people like Judi
Chamberlin, Patricia Deegan .... - Recovery is about
- regaining control over your life and destiny
- building a new sense of self, meaning and purpose
- rebuilding a meaningful, satisfying and
contributing life - growing within and beyond what has happened to
you
8Professionals do not hold the key to recovery
- Recovery is
- not the same as cure
- not a professional intervention ... an individual
journey - the lived or real life experience of people as
they accept and overcome the challenge of the
disability. They experience themselves as
recovering a new sense of self and of purpose
within and beyond the limits of the disability.
(Deegan 1988) - a deeply personal, unique process of changing
ones attitudes, values, feelings, goals, skills
and rolesThe development of new meaning and
purpose in ones life as one grows beyond the
catastrophic effects of mental illness
(Anthony 1993) - not a linear process or an end point but a
continuing journey
9What helps people in their journey of recovery?
- There is no formula for recovery Everyones
journey is different and uniquely personal ...
but those who have embarked on the journey
repeatedly tell us that three things are
important - HOPE
- CONTROL
- OPPORTUNITY
10Recovery is impossible without hope
- If you cant see the possibility of a decent
future for yourself what is the point in
trying? - Relationships are central to hope
- It is difficult to believe in yourself if
everyone around you thinks you will never amount
to very much - When you find it hard to believe in yourself you
need others to believe in you - Not just relationships with mental health
providers friends, family and peers ... - We must never forget the gift of hope that people
who share the experience of mental health
problems give each other - (Deegan, 1988)
11Recovery involves taking back control
- Getting back in the driving seat
- Taking back control over your life and how you
live it - Making sense of what has happened to you
- Becoming an expert in your own self-care
- Having control over the help you receive
- People often feel demeaned by needing help to do
ordinary everyday things ... but what is the
difference between Prince Charles and a
psychiatric patient?
12Recovery is impossible without opportunity
- You cannot rebuild your life if everywhere you
turn you are debarred from doing the things you
value - The opportunity to
- be a part of our communities not apart from
them - be a valued member of those communities
- access the opportunities that exist in those
communities - contribute to those communities always being on
the receiving end of help from others is a
devaluing and dispiriting place to be - There are many ways in which people can
contribute ... but whether we like it or not,
work has a central role in our society
13Employment the opportunity to contribute
- It links us to the communities in which we live
and enables us to contribute to those communities - It provides meaning and purpose in life
- It affords status and identity the 2nd question
What is your name? What do you do? - It provides social contacts
- It is good for our health
- It gives us the resources we need to do the other
things we value in life - Out of the blue your job has gone, with it any
financial security you may have had. At a
stroke, you have no purpose in life, and no
contact with other people. You find yourself
totally isolated from the rest of the world. No
one telephones you. Much less writes. No-one
seems to care if youre alive or dead . - (Bird, 2001)
14Most people with mental health problems want to
work few have the opportunity to do so
- 21 of adults with longer term mental health
problems are in employment (2007 Labour Force
Survey) - In comparison with people with other health
conditions, people with mental health problems
are twice as likely to lose their jobs following
the onset of problems (Burchardt, 2003) - Among people using secondary mental health
services the picture is even worse. In
Wandsworth - 1990 19.7 of longer term service users in
employment - 1999 8.1 of longer term service users in
employment
15But can they work?
- The research evidence
- Characteristics of individuals have little impact
on employment outcomes therefore there is no
justification for excluding people on the basis
of clinical history, employability, work
readiness - Segregated sheltered workshops and pre-vocational
skills training are not very good at helping
people with mental health problems to return to
employment - There is strong evidence that with the right kind
of help around 60 of people with serious mental
health problems can successfully get and keep
work
16Individual placement with support evidence based
supported employment
- Competitive employment real jobs
- Team approach
- Client choice
- Benefits counselling
- Rapid job search
- Job matching based on client preferences
- On-going supports
- (Becker IPS Fidelity Scale, 2008) (Bond, 2004)
17Competitive employment rates in 16 randomised
controlled trials of supported employment
18- European randomised controlled trial compared
traditional vocational service (non-integrated
train-place with IPS for people with
schizophrenia (Burns et al, 2007) - 55 gained in IPS employment vs. 28 in
traditional service - 13 drop-out in IPS vs. 45 in traditional
service - 20 readmitted in IPS vs. 31 in traditional
service - Employment associate with
- Employment is associated with improved
self-esteem, symptom control, quality esteem,
symptom control, quality of life ... no changes
with sustained sheltered employment (Bond, 2001) - 4 studies with 10-year follow year follow-ups ups
work outcomes improve over time (Test, 1989
Salyers 2004 Becker, 2006 Bush, 2008)
19Implementing Individual Placement with Support
in community mental health teams
- Recruiting Employment Specialists to work
within Teams and increasing the focus on
vocational issues in the care planning process - Employment Specialists help people
- to keep jobs they already have
- to decide what they want to do and apply for the
work they want - to access mainstream employment agencies
- in the transition to work
- They also
- ensure that mental health professionals attend to
work related issues in care plans - advise and assist other mental health workers in
providing ongoing support - support employers and advise them on adjustments
the person may need
20- Employment Specialists in 11 out of 23 South West
London Community Mental Health Teams - 1984 people received vocational support
- 1155 people successful in working/studying in
mainstream integrated settings - 645 people supported to get/keep open employment
- 293 people supported to get/keep mainstream
education/training - 217 people supported in mainstream voluntary work
21Number of people supported in employment,
mainstream education and voluntary work in a
borough where Individual Placement with Support
had been fully implemented in all community teams
Team OTs supported by 1 Employment Specialist
across 4 teams
0.5 Employment Specialists per CMHT
1 full-time Employment Specialist per CMHT
Open employment Mainstream education/training Main
stream work experience/voluntary work
22Number of people supported in employment,
mainstream education and voluntary work in a
borough Individual Placement with Support not
implemented
Team OTs supported by 0.5 Employment Specialist
across 4 teams
Open employment Mainstream education/training Main
stream work experience/voluntary work
23The importance of early intervention
- Research shows rapidly decreasing employment
rates following onset of serious mental health
problems. - For example, one study found that 52 of people
were in employment at first hospital admission
but only 25 at 2 month follow-up another found
only 13 in employment 12 months after first
admission - But with Individual Placement with Support in
the South West London team for people with first
episode psychosis this downward trend was
reversed
24Early Intervention for First Episode
Schizophrenia including Individual Placement
with Support with work and education
25Not just them out there employing people with
mental health problems in mental health services
- Why employ people with mental health problems in
mental health services? - Provides much needed employment opportunities
- Leading by example NHS is a major employer, not
just a service provider - People who have successfully lived with mental
health problems have expertise that is valuable
to others who are facing a similar challenge - Counteracts despair and pessimism offers images
of possibility to both service users and staff - Breaks down them and us divide
26South West London User Employment Programme
established 1995
- Designed to increase access to employment in
mental health services for people who have
themselves experienced mental health problems
employment in ordinary existing positions on the
same terms and conditions as everyone else
27Types of objections raised
- What about transference will they be
objective? - What about confidentiality? They will have
access to peoples psychiatric records - Mentally ill people will be taking our jobs
- Wont they be unreliable? Wont they be off
sick all the time? - Wont they be dangerous a risk to clients?
- What happens if they go mad at work?
- We wont be able to tell jokes in ward rounds
any more
28A supported employment programme
- Assistance in the recruitment process and
transition to work - Ongoing support to employees and managers
- Reasonable adjustments in the work setting
- Outcomes 1995 2008
- People with mental health problems supported in
191 posts within the Trust - diagnosis 41 depression, 27 schizophrenia, 17
bipolar disorder, 4 personality disorder (80 gt
1 psychiatric admission) - 66 in clinical positions, 27 administrative/mana
gerial, 7 support services - 22 in posts requiring professional mental health
qualification - At 1st January 2008 86 continued in employment
or professional training
29A Charter for the Employment of People who have
Experienced Mental Health Problems
- Designed to
- decrease employment discrimination against people
with mental health problems throughout the
organisation - recognise the important contribution that people
with mental health problems can make to the work
of the organisation - Personal experience of mental health problems
desirable on person specifications for all
posts - Advertisements encourage people with mental
health problems to apply - Confidential equal opportunities monitoring
includes mental health problems
30- Beware - if you come to work in South West London
you dont know whether your colleague (or your
boss) is one of them or one of us - Every year since 1999 at least 15 of recruits
have personal experience of mental health
problems - In 2006/7 17 had mental health problems
- In 2007/8 24 had mental health problems
- And the higher up you go the more of them you
find ...
312006/7
32Beyond employment do experts hold the key?
- In traditional services power, hierarchy, claims
to special knowledge about others etc. remain
and get in the way of people working together and
caring for themselves and each other - Mental health services and the professionals who
inhabit them can, albeit often unwittingly, serve
to perpetuate exclusion and marginalisation in a
kind of vicious cycle. - People with mental health problems encouraged to
believe that experts hold the key to all of our
problems - Our nearest and dearest believe we are unsafe in
their untrained hands. - And we all become less and less used to finding
our own solutions and , embracing distress and
human problems as a part of ordinary everyday
life (see Mary OHagan, 2007)
33Peer support in mainstream services
- Peer support groups/practices where people seek
to learn and grow as equals drawing on each other - Starting point is peoples own stories rather
than diagnosis What has happened to you?
rather than What is wrong with you? - Shared responsibility, shared journey
- META in Arizona 70 of staff peer support
workers
34Beyond choice ... issues of control
Handing over control to service users and
communities by fostering service user leadership,
integrating with other sectors and fostering
community development and inclusion People with
mental health problems, as well as communities,
need to start believing they hold most of the
solutions to human problems. (OHagan,
2007) And what of mental health professionals?
on tap not on top - carriers of
technologies that we may want to use at times,
just like architects, plumbers and hairdressers.
(OHagan, 2007)
35Beyond being realistic ...
- ... We must all keep daring to dream
- The value of dreams and ambitions lies not in
their realism but in their ability to motivate us
give us a reason to get up in the morning
36Workshop Locations(commencing at 11.30am)
- Disability Employment
- The Role of Supported Employment for People with
Mental Health Issues - Social Welfare Entitlements Benefits
- Meitheal Programme,
- County Wexford Partnership
- Park Suite 4th Floor
- Munster Suite
- 1st Floor
- Ulster Suite
- 1st Floor
- Brehon 1
- Main Conference
- Hall