Tuesday, July 24, 2007

Mental Health Act

I have been informed the new, not so improved, MH Act got Royal Assent on 19 July. Like the Queen has the foggiest idea what is in it.

More from that story somewhere else as it is another load of bureaucratic fascism to confuse and ensnare us.

Anyone interested contact MIND. They have, supposedly, been on the case.

Monday, July 23, 2007

Birmingham And Solihull Mental Health Trust - Does It Need Art Therapy Films Online Like This ? We Think So




Mental Health User-artists need inspiration sometimes alongside whatever they can dream up themselves and UserWatch thought we would throw something in of beauty to create a few smiles and sighs.... We brought Vinny here for a look at you lot too





Monday, July 16, 2007

Birmingham And Solihull Mental Health Trust Pill Wards Blues Song







Donated to UserWatch by an Artist who claimed they were walking their inner ward, the " Pill Ward Blues" of Birmingham And Solhull Mental Health Trust reaches the usual abused parts that mental health treatments do not reach...

Music therapy on the fringes of the local mental health services is alive and well though, and clearly pumping some blue blood of truth back into and at the system and its services . Yep we agree they are something to be nailed and wailed at ... Are we grinning ? Who us ?

UserWatch recommends that Service Users join the growing band of Users on an interactive site owned by NING.com .



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Friday, July 13, 2007

Dance Therapy By Oz Dancers And Singers



This sound-track is from Australia and was recorded at a public event by Dolly Fury who is also known as Lipstickgallery on Flickr.com one of the biggest photo-artist sites in the world .

UserWatch thinks its just great and pure G.B.T smile Therapy.

G.B.T. = Grin Behavioural therapy

Birmingham And Solihull Mental Health Trust could learn from this !



Dolly grew up with some aboriginal kids in Australia in a children's home ....

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Saturday, July 07, 2007

Birmingham And Solihull Arts All Over The Place






This terrific painting by Deborah who helped facilitate some arts for the 80+ group through Age concern was shown at Carrs Lane Church on Saturday 30th June 2007 and depicts a feeling for the viewer of birth and a heave of energy . Her painting was shown with many other exhibits as a result of Service Users taking advantage of the Birmingham And Solihull Mental Health Trust's initiative to get some User-arts out into the community .. UserWatch supports User-Arts and wishes everyone to get the best out of their efforts . See Also North Birmingham Community Arts and Rosie Riggall's efforts with Marian Hayes on the BBC site that reported their initiative in Erdington at the St Barnabus Church



In another part of the Church User showed off their constructions




Irene Sargeant did a picture of the "Dancing Nurse"
And we at UserWatch really love simple images.



Gareth Jones did this expressive piece of a young woman



Here is expressive piece done in ceramic



Smaller pictures and another exhibit



A face in charcoal



Face in charcoal




This picture above shows a mixed image depiction of the city centre.



Picture By Gill Bevis


(More Later)

Thursday, July 05, 2007

Minutes Of A Meeting Re: LINks Proposals



UserWatch has been sent this report below (we'll archive such reports here for future ref) which show the development away from Patient & Public Involvement Forums towards LINks (Local Involvement Networks) to be implemented probably in 2008 . Our View is that LINks will more than likely favour third sector providers locally and other NHS internalised health Groups that have been developed by NIMHE and local mental health Trusts. This potential "partnership" arrangement will muffle democracy and its rawer edge of independence .

We think that the Dept of Health have known this and have made their feelings clear to politicians who wanted to nobble what they read as opposition to their Top Down roll outs .... At Birmingham And Solihull Mental Health Trust there is a pattern to of too much control over User's Voices but there is some dissent and better thinking being employed - we only hope the future will see more independence but we feel there will be real resistance in the Trust to this .. Pity really the logical step is for User Organisations to grow up and away from the body of the "parent" - how else will independent vision survive in Birmingham ?



Local Government and Public Involvement in Health Bill


Report on Meeting with Meredith Vivian on June 22nd 2007 - Final

Attendance

Department of Health: Meredith Vivian and Clare Allcock


National Association of Patients’ Forums:
Michael English and Malcolm Alexander


2) Transition


We opened the meeting by making the case for an effective transition from Forum to LINks and emphasized the loss to the NHS and patients of monitoring by Forums, the risks to patient safety and the disaffection of Forum members.


Meredith suggested that it was not a matter of great importance if there was a gap between the closure of Patients’ Forums and the beginning of LINks, as Forums were so variable across and between different areas. He said he was not convinced that the gap is significant or that continuity was essential in the context of the proportionate use of resources, i.e. that the cost of ensuring that there was no gap was disproportionate bearing in mind the damage of a short gap.


We discussed the differences between the impact on communities as a whole and the impact on those more closely involved with Patients’ Forums.


We emphasized the critical importance of valuing Forum members as volunteers who contribute their labour at no cost and who expect to be valued and listened to by the statutory services and the DH. We explained our view that the monitoring of services by PF members and eventually LINks was essential for patient safety. We also emphasized the need to harness the skills and experience of volunteer and the importance of not causing disaffection.


MV said that at the moment there is an absolute gap in terms of social care and said he thought it was important to push ahead as soon as possible to ensure that both health and social care are monitored by LINks.


We did not dissent from this view but emphasized the need for effective continuity between the two systems with every effort taken to support members of PFs to join LINks and to continue the work of PFs into the new system. We said that it was rudely arrogant of the DH not to demonstrate and value the work of volunteers and the community in a more positive way. MV apologised if this was the impression given.


MV said that he recognised the ‘gap’ as an issue for Forum members and the DH had learnt from the 2003 experience when CHCs were closed i.e. that the learning was that ensuring that there was no gap meant that Forums were forced into existence without being given the time needed to grow into their role.


He added that enthusiasm for the new arrangements was essential if they were to work. He felt that the development of LINks needed active encouragement. Clare Allcock added that flexibility was the key issue to the success of LINks and that many local authorities and many other stakeholders were showing enthusiasm for the early development of LINks.


3) Transitional Arrangements


We discussed practical arrangements for the proposed transition. We suggested abolition should be delayed until the new arrangements were functional and that a group of CPPIH staff could be allocated to support PFs and attached to either the DH or the NCI.


MV responded that the cost of paying to remove the gap was too great. We responded that keeping the gap was of no benefit to PFs, LINks or the NHS. We proposed that there should be incentives, provided by the DH to encourage PF members to remain within the PI system.


Clare said that Local Authorities will have a legal duty to establish LINks and that the DH is encouraging LAs to set up LINks and involve Forum members during the development of the contract. They are also encouraging OSCs to work with Forum members to bring them into the new system. She added they were trusting the LAs to get on with the job.


We said that we would work through LAs and the LGA to encourage them to support abolition of PFs at a time that would effect the most beneficial transition.


4) Visits


We emphasized that successful visiting required the development of good local relationships with providers and PCTs, regular contact to understand how organisations worked and the means of communicating effectively with patients/residents and staff.


MV did not dissent from this view but said the DH was bound by cross-government policies which were designed to achieve coordination between the 50 and 60 different bodies that monitored health and social care. He said there was a ‘gate-keeper’ role for Regulators and that the need for coordinated monitoring was a cross-Government policy.


We then suggested that the recommendations of the Bristol Inquiry which called for closer integration of patients and the public with the monitoring of health care at a local level did not appear to have had a major influence on the Bill in relation to LINks. MV reiterated that the approach to coordination with regulators was a cross-Government policy and it would appear that we need to raise this issue with other parts of government and through the political process.


Michael suggested that monitoring under the LINks system would lead to a two tier system of membership in which some members would have visiting rights (including CRB checks and training) and some would not. MV confirmed that this would be the case.


MV said that if LINks members wished to visit they would need to write to the Regulator who would be required to respond within 20 working days. If the LINks received no response within that time the visit could, nevertheless, go ahead. We suggested that in effect a LINks member operating within the legislation may have fewer rights of access than a member of the public who is not a LINks member. We suggested that phoning up the Chief Executive of a Trust and arranging a visit would be the usual practical way of arranging a visit. Clare Allcock pointed out that if this happened, the statutory powers would not be operationalised. It became clear that in areas where LINks were very active that the Regulator could be very actively engaged in the relationship between LINks and the Trust.


5) Monitoring and the right to view


MV acknowledged our criticism of the wording of the legislation and the fact that it is written in a way that looks prescriptive. He said that there is no reason why LINks could not talk to patients and staff whilst visiting for the purpose of viewing. We agreed to prepare detailed arguments on this point.


6) LINks access to primary care and private services

contracted by PCTs and NHS Trusts


MV confirmed that under section 225(7) (e) primary care service providers (including GPs) would be included amongst those organisations which would be required to provide access to LINks members for the purposes of ‘entering and viewing and observing the carrying on activities’.


With respect to private healthcare services contracted by the NHS, access for LINks for the purpose of ‘entering and viewing and observing the carrying on activities’, would be through the contractual route, by which PCTs and NHS Trusts would be directed to allow a LINk to enter and view and observe etc. We do not have a copy of the wording of this ‘direction’ but we will pursue this. [Malcolm, I think you do have the patients forums directions don’t you?]


7) Mental Health and Children’s Services


We clarified that LINks would have access to NHS services for mental health and children except that there would be no automatic rights of access when there is a tenancy agreement or where care is provided in a person’s own home or in residential care. In such cases the consent of the resident would be required.


Note: we need to clarify arrangements where a person is on a Section of the Mental Health Act or where they are not able to give consent.


We said that LINks had no power to enter premises as providers would be under a duty to allow a LINk to enter rather than the LINk itself having the power.


MV said that the arrangement for LINks was the same as currently exists for Patients Forums.




8) The National Centre for Involvement


It was confirmed that the current priorities of the NCI are to build the capacity of NHS organisations and their staff for high quality PPI and to develop and disseminate practical resources to NHS staff that aid PPI.


MV confirmed, however, that the NCI would also have a programme of work to support the development and effective operation of LINks.

9) Public consultation (current Section 11 of the H&SC Act) – Section 232


We argued that Section 232 of the Bill would result in the public having fewer rights to be consulted. MV denied that this was the case and said that by adding the word “significant” to 232(2)(1B)(c) of the Bill that this would have no major impact on the involvement of the public in the planning and provision of services, as the threshold would not be affected. As an example he said that if a GP surgery changed surgery times from 9am to 12 noon, to new hours of 2pm to 5pm, this was not a significant change in services and therefore consultation would not be required.


We argued that the Government had proposed this amendment to Section 11 in response to the successful Appeal in the case of the North Eastern Derbyshire PCT (Cresswell/Langwith Practice), to prevent changes to the management of GPs practices being subject to patient and public consultation. MV replied that his concern was with PPI and that any more general or political consequences of the proposed change to the legislation, would need to be discussed elsewhere. He added that the change in ownership of a GP practice was in his view a minor change and would not need to be subject consultation.


10) Publicity about LINks


MV accepted our invitation to respond to issues raised by the community and Forum members about the development of LINks in publicity put out nationally by the National Association.


At the end of the meeting we offered Meredith the opportunity to present the policy of the DH and respond to issues raised by Forums in a newsletter we planned to produce. He agreed.


End

Monday, July 02, 2007

Birmingham And Solihull Mental Health International Social Inclusion Of Runner Up Poem From Melbourne Oz



The Runner Up For The International KangerCog Poem Award


Goes To :


RUTH (The Texty Whirlwindslinger Oz Kid)


Ruth first came to UserWatch's attention when a kind of energy was felt thrumming through the digital bush and a bounding somewhere or other was apparent, which made our keyboards leap a little .....

We too had watched the hallucinated UK mental health services film "No-Cure-assic Park" and we held onto our dithering tea cups and occasional jumping four XXXX's...This was powerful country we were entering....We shivered ...And its good to shiver one in a while ..


By skillful tracking we found she had come across our dried out UK spoor and wicked skin hangings of Mental Health Staff ... By a bit of spirit play and cave like voyeurism we watched her take back some mad UserWatch tapestry to an Oz dancing ground to re-stitch someone up.

This was brilliant and primitive and then we found a picture of her which was slinky dreamscapes all over ..We checked her out and discovered she was a thinker YES and slinker rolled into one .. It was a WOW day and the bones clinked messages of approval . We also found she has a heart ... Like we at Userwatch she's angry with the systems that do not validate and see people's real pain and stories and leave us to remake the movie's of our half lost truths..

She bunged us an electron scroll our way with these words on below and we knew once again Kangercogs live and DNA and digital humans are out there in metaphorlands and the spirit of some integrity remains on its long walkabout.... Yeah ... Well done Ruth .. Your heart is its own reward...








CBT Song (with apologies to Eric Idle)


By RUTH




Fuck you very much for CBT
Fuck you very much for reminding me
That the way I feel has no relation to what's real
And that no one really cares what happened to me

So fuck you very much for CBT
For trivialising and reducing me
To an emotional bureaucrat in my crisis management hat
I shouldn't say shouldn't, and even ought at that

I should make my bed and comb my hair in my railroad flat
So fuck you all so very much.



Also See Eric Idle & John Cleese Film On Ruth's Blog


HERE


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