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Reinventing Children: Communities, Culture and Mental Health Policy

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Title: Reinventing Children: Communities, Culture and Mental Health Policy


1
Re-inventing Children Communities, Culture and
Mental Health Policy
  • Begum Maitra
  • Consultant Child and Adolescent Psychiatrist
  • East London and the City Mental Health Trust

2
Culture in practice Clients
  • 2 year old Rokeya in Care proceedings (under the
    Children Act) for significant harm thought to be
    attributable to parental neglect
  • little evidence available of the impact of
    diverse cultural styles of child care and
    parent-child interaction
  • professional bias in observation, and
    attribution of meaning (the nature of cultural
    training)
  • little relationship between psychological and
    legal criteria
  • ME professional refers 5 year old Osman for
    disturbed behaviour (challenges authority,
    disrespect for women)
  • who judges appropriateness of cultural
    patterns ?

3
Culture in practice Clients
  • White mother (convert to Islam, S Asian dress,
    name and language) with 2 children of dual
    heritage judged more severely for parenting
    difficulties common to other single parents
  • the failure of notions of racism or ethnic
    identity to address hybrid, and often
    changeable, identities that are based on only
    partly conscious choices
  • British Asians who choose partners from their
    country of origin with the express intention to
    renew cultural ties and resources
  • social class and relationship hierarchies
    impact on cultural practice, child care
    expertise family, community relationships
    (C of O Br Asians other diasporic communities
    mainstream Br culture)

4
Culture in practice Professionals
  • ME staff in NHS mental health services
  • Hierarchical relationships (often white
    British seniors)
  • Pressure to accommodate to British norms of
    interpersonal behaviour
  • Training produces uneven mixed belief systems
    (expectations and behaviour)
  • What impact do these factors have on the
    identity of these professionals ?
  • Organisational policy on race
  • NHS - culture-blind stance the expectation
    that the patient will lead Social services -
    matching race in allocations (and placements)

5
The uneasy place of culture in mental health
  • Culture and mainstream (adult) psychiatry
  • Universals and culture-bound syndromes
  • Cultural psychiatry - a move from categories to
    contexts
  • Race and Organisations
  • The effects of racist mental health services -
    poor access, abusive and culturally irrelevant
  • The influence of systemic therapies on child
    mental health
  • Thinking in relational/interactional terms
  • UN Convention on the Rights of Children
  • Universal notion of the best interests of all
    children

6
Recent events Impact of Race/Culture on Mental
Health Policy
  • Race Relations (Amendments) Act 2000
  • Report on Ethnic Health Inequalities 2001
  • Children
  • High rates of smoking and alcohol use among
    Irish children
  • Low rates of dental care in all ME groups
  • Low rates of participation in sports/exercise in
    all ME girls

7
Recent events Impact of Race/Culture on M H
Policy (contd)
  • Inside Outside Improving Mental Health Services
    for Black and ME communities in England
    2003
  • 10 point Race Equality action plan (Chief Exec
    NHS) 2003
  • Report of the Social Exclusion Unit
    June 2004
  • Appt of NHS Equality and Human Rights Director
    Oct 2004
  • Celebrating our cultures
    Dec 2004
  • Guide to mental health promotion with BME
    communities

8
Recent events Impact of Race/Culture on M H
Policy (contd)
  • Delivering Race Equality (DRE) in Mental Health
    Care Jan 2005
  • Ensuring MH services are more responsive to BME
    patients
  • Better links between services and communities
    through
  • 500 new community development workers
    and the (expertise of) independent sector BME
    providers
  • Black and Minority Ethnic National Steering Group
  • National Institute for Mental Health in England
    (NIMHE) and Department of Health BME Mental
    Health Programmes

9
and Children ?
  • National Service Framework (NSF) for Children,
    Young People and Maternity Services 2004
  • Funding (total 1.5 million) March 2005
  • over 2 years for 5 projects aimed at developing
    culturally competent services for young BME
    people

10
Culture the Childrens NSF
  • Services for children and young people should be
    provided irrespective of their gender, race,
    religion, ability, culture or sexuality.
    (Rationale, 2.11)
  • Emphasises the importance of improving access to
    CAMHS to ensure greater equity
  • Specific arrangements may need to be made to
    provide appropriate mental health care for
    children and young people in families of
    refugees/asylum seekers

11
Culture the Childrens NSF(contd)
  • Concepts of mental illness and the understanding
    of the origins of childrens emotional and
    behavioural difficulties vary across cultures.
    Services need to be sensitive to these
    differences and ensure that staff are equipped
    with the knowledge to work effectively with the
    different groups represented within the community
    they serve. (Enhancing partnerships with BME
    groups, 5.3)
  • Ensure all staff working within CAMHS are
    sensitive to the particular needs of ch and yp
    from different BME groups
  • Training is available for staff to work
    effectively with families from specific BME
    groups within their community

12
Culture the Childrens NSF (contd)
  • Provide local directories of services for ME
    groups to enable BME ch, yp and their families to
    receive appropriate support
  • Recruit and train professionals from the ethnic
    minorities for whom services are being provided
  • Review the provision and training of interpreters
    to ensure that best practice is achieved
  • Planning commissioning services to be based on
    locally adjusted epidemiological information on
    the prevalence of MH problems to reflect the
    diversity of the population

13
Common Features
  • Ethnic monitoring
  • To provide data on ethnic patterns of service
    provision and service uptake
  • Improve access to services
  • Provide interpreting and translation
  • Provide information leaflets
  • Promote user feedback (on relevance and
    satisfaction)

14
Common Features (contd)
  • Increase cultural awareness / sensitivity /
    competence
  • Staff training on diversity issues
  • Recruit BME staff
  • Capacity building in ME communities
  • Engage communities through consultation, use
    of advocates
  • Address cultural needs - dietary needs,
    respect for religious belief
  • Modernising the professions for a new health and
    social care system
  • Evidence based practice
  • User/Patient involvement, service design,
    choice

15
The problem with (some) solutions
  • Response to Inside Outside Report -
    Transcultural Psychiatry Society (UK) in 2003
  • Vague recommendations the only new money is
    for old (and ineffective) solutions eg CDW. CDWs
    need to be at a senior level. Their training,
    supervision and accountability to be defined with
    the BME communities, not statutory authorities
  • MH Professional culture pervasive influence of
    narrow, culturally biased views of child
    development, long-term psychological goals,
    health and illness, culture
  • A new and jarring brand of (friendly) jargon
    Race
    Equality champions Facing up to
    difference (FUD) Challenge, consult, compare
    and compete
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