25/06/2013

Mental Health Issues are Everywhere: an early-summer media summary

There's a lot of mental health in the media at the moment. Which is probably good, from an awareness-raising, taboo-removing point of view, but we have to be careful to remain aware that the news will add spin, TV programmes are designed to make a good watch and no-one can understand someone's life, illness or condition from a one-hour long snapshot. But it is good that people are talking, and thinking, about mental health in society. So what's going on?

Firstly; BBC3's documentary series 'Don't Call Me Crazy' -
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p01b86w5
This programme  follows the young people at the McGuinness Unit Adolescent Inpatient ward. It is an 'open' hospital, meaning most of the patients are staying their voluntarily in order to receive specialist care from psychologists, psychiatrists and nurses away from the community in which they may feel vulnerable. However, some of the young people there have been 'Sectioned' - detained in the hospital against their will under the Mental Health Act in order to have further assessment or receive treatment. From what I saw of the fist episode this series may be a mixed blessing. On the one hand, it demonstrates a little bit more about real life with mental illnesses - demonstrating that they can be both invisible and devastating and increasing awareness about the diversity both within and between conditions. However, it does make these young people's lives open to ridicule and highlight the love of making others' lives into a simple spectacle.

Perhaps one of the best things about this particular unit though, is the ethos of young people and adolescents not as 'mini-adults' but as a separate subset that need different treatment, care and provision. The Invictus Trust, set up by the family of a teenage boy who took his life during treatment at an adult psychiatric centre in Cornwall, have been campaigning for a specialist unit for 13-25 year olds since his death. The unit, which will be the first of its kind in the country due to its covering of the transition between under and over 18 year olds, will have an ethos of helping young people to recover and return to the community. The expectation that over 18 year olds should be treated alongside adults, some of whom have been in psychiatric care for many years,  can be damaging for the suffering individuals. Have a look at the video from BBC Spotlight to find out more: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4vT3Td9cLao and visit the Invictus Trust's website: http://www.invictustrust.co.uk/.
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Secondly; the story of convicted murderer Ian Brady has recently hit the news as he claims he used method acting to be classed as 'insane' and so transferred from prison to a secure hospital. Now however, he wishes to be returned to prison. Staff at the hospital claim he is mentally ill - a paranoid schizophrenic who has been attempting to kill himself via a hunger strike since 1999. Staff have been allowed to force-feed him under the Mental Health Act. However, Brady's legal team claim he has a personality disorder but is not mentally ill and so should be returned to prison. This case demonstrates the incredible complexity in psychiatry and mental health diagnosis in the legal sphere, especially when regarding such brutal crimes.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-23042109
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Thirdly; the BBC publishes yet another article on the subject of 'what actually is mental illness?' http://www.bbc.co.uk/science/0/22028518 - it is very important these issues stay at the forefront of our attention- but I'm beginning to wonder if new approaches are needed to really change the status quo...
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And finally; Amy Winehouse's brother has spoken out about Amy's battle with the eating disorder bulimia (http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2013/jun/23/amy-winehouse-bulimia-killed-her-says-brother) - claiming it had weakened her body enough to make her highly susceptible to the negative effects of substance misuse. The Amy Winehouse Foundation is therefore supporting one of very few eating disorder charities - Beat - allowing it to set up an online forum to support those affected further. http://www.b-eat.co.uk/about-beat/media-centre/press-releases/amy-winehouse-foundation-supports-beat/
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Overall - it is good that mental health issues are everywhere this summer, but it is terrible that they have to be, and it is as important as always to ensure we are thinking, talking and acting in the right way.

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