UK's etiketine sahip kayıtlar gösteriliyor. Tüm kayıtları göster
UK's etiketine sahip kayıtlar gösteriliyor. Tüm kayıtları göster

6 Nisan 2017 Perşembe

UK"s first double hand transplant patient delights in writing letter to thank surgeon

The first person in the UK to have a double hand transplant has said writing a letter to thank his surgeon has been one the highlights of his first nine months since the operation, as well as being able to clap for his favourite rugby league team.


Chris King, 57, described how he has got his life back since the surgery last July, when he became the second person to have a hand transplant at the UK’s specialist centre for the operation at Leeds General Infirmary (LGI) and the first to have both hands replaced.


King,from Rossington near Doncaster, said he can now do a range of tasks, including writing, making tea and gardening as he progresses even faster than his surgeon anticipated. He said he was improving every week and his next aims are to tie his shoelaces and button up his shirt – he said he had already cracked undoing them.


Looking at his hands, King said: “They are my boys, they really are.


“It’s been going fantastically. I can make a fist, I can hold a pen, I can do more or less the same functions as I could with my original hands. There are still limitations but I’m getting back to the full Chris again.”



King has his hands examined by Prof Simon Kay, the surgeon who performed the transplant.


King has his hands examined by Prof Simon Kay, the surgeon who performed the transplant. Photograph: Danny Lawson/PA

King has also discovered he is now ambidextrous. “When I picked a pen up first time was with my right hand,” he said. “The next time I picked it up it was left. I might be able to write with both hands now.” He said: “I think it will be the icing on the cake when I can do my laces, and I don’t think that’s far off.”


King lost both his hands, except the thumbs, in an accident involving a metal-pressing machine at his workplace in Doncaster four years ago.


Consultant plastic surgeon Prof Simon Kay, who carried out the operation and two other hand transplants, believes the operation could become as routine as a kidney transplant.


Kay said he was amazed to receive a handwritten Christmas card and thank you letter from King.


Mark Cahill, 55, was the first hand transplant patient in 2012 at LGI, and a third man, who has not been named, became Kay’s third successful transplant patient earlier this year when he was given two new hands and a new forearm.


Two female patients are scheduled for surgery at the LGI as soon as donors become available.


Kay said: “The programme is now well-established. It’s now become mature. We understand the indications, the process. We now have three transplant patients completed and another two to go.”


“We would like hand transplantation to be as routine and unremarkable as kidney transplantation,” he said.



King with a cup of tea


King with a cup of tea. He lost both his hands in an industrial accident four years ago. Photograph: Danny Lawson/PA

Last year, NHS England awarded Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust the contract to become the UK’s specialist centre for hand transplants.


Referring to King, Kay said: “He’s proved to be, as he proved right at the beginning, a very robust, resilient patient, very enthusiastic about his hands, and I think he’s absolutely delighted.”


“When you bear in mind he will go on improving for another two years, he’s really remarkable – a real vindication for the surgery he’s had.”


“He’s doing more, sooner than we expected. He’s well ahead of our expectations.”


Cahill, a former pub landlord from Greetland, near Halifax, West Yorkshire, has since gained almost complete use of his transplanted hand. He reportedly used it to save his wife’s life last year after she had a heart attack.


Kay urged people to consider the need for future donors. Donating a hands is not yet an option on the organ donor card, but it can be discussed with potential donors if the opportunity arises, a spokeswoman for the NHS’s organ donor register said.



UK"s first double hand transplant patient delights in writing letter to thank surgeon

10 Mart 2017 Cuma

MPs to discuss reform of UK"s Victorian-era abortion law

In years to come, it may be regarded as one of the last battles for women’s autonomy. Under an obscure Victorian law, passed when women did not even have the vote, the decision to terminate an unplanned pregnancy using pills in the privacy of a home is punishable by life in prison – for the woman and any doctor who helps her.


Now MPs are to discuss for the first time de-criminalising women who attempt to bring about their own abortion.


In modern-day Britain, most abortions take place before 12 weeks with the aid of pills. Yet if a woman orders those pills online and takes them without the consent of two doctors, she can be jailed. So can a doctor who gives them to her to take at home instead of in the clinic.


Diana Johnson, MP for Hull North, will introduce a ten-minute-rule bill in the House of Commons on Monday calling for the scrapping of section 58 and 59 of the Offences Against the Person Act 1861, which make abortion a criminal offence.


“Women buying the pills on the internet to bring about a miscarriage are committing a criminal act which is punishable by life imprisonment,” she said. “Parliament should consider whether that is appropriate.”


Over 200 law professors and legal experts have signed a letter to the Guardian in support of Johnson’s bill. “Abortion is currently an offence in English law by virtue of an archaic and punitive statute passed at the midpoint of the reign of Queen Victoria,” they write. The penalty of life imprisonment “is the harshest penalty for abortion imposed anywhere in Europe”.


The 1861 criminal law also fails to acknowledge any difference between late abortion and an early abortion before 12 weeks when the foetus is not viable.


“Many countries in Europe recognise that a woman has the right to end an early pregnancy,” they write. “In our view, the onus is now on those who wish to retain the threat of prosecuting women to explain why this offers a justifiable part of our response to the problem of unwanted pregnancy.”


Professor Sally Sheldon from Kent University, who coordinated the letter, said the law was wrong in principle. “Why do we want to keep the framework and the criminal prohibition? I don’t hear people saying it is a good idea to be able to send women to prison for life for having an abortion outside of medical control.”


The Victorian law underlies the 1967 Act introduced by Liberal MP David Steel to end the deaths of women after backstreet abortions. It made exceptions to the 1861 criminal offence where two doctors certified it was in the interests of a woman’s health to have an abortion, which must take place on registered medical premises.


That was seen as liberal at the time, but is restrictive today, say critics, when early abortion, before 12 weeks, can be accomplished by taking two types of pill, up to two days apart. Women who suffer a partial miscarriage are given the same pills to take home to complete the process. Women having an abortion must take them in front of a doctor.


“Women will take the [second dose of] pills and try to rush home before the miscarriage begins,” said Sheldon. “If the woman has got a long journey, it is horrible for her.”


New research by Dr Ellie Lee, director of the Centre for Parenting Culture Studies at Kent University, and colleagues into the concerns of 14 doctors who provide abortion shows that some feel the law prevents them doing a safe and professional job. “It’s extraordinary that you can subject women to travelling mid-abortion [after they have taken both drugs used to induce miscarriage],” said one.


In Northern Ireland, which did not pass the 1967 act, women have been prosecuted for obtaining abortion pills online and using them. Last year a 21-year-old woman was given a suspended sentence after she pleaded guilty to procuring her own abortion by using a poison, and of supplying a poison with intent to procure a miscarriage – two offences under the Victorian legislation.


If the 1861 act was repealed, the 1967 act which amends it would also fall, but abortion could be better regulated in the health rather than criminal sphere, by medical bodies such as the General Medical Council or royal colleges, says Johnson.


“I do think the time has come 50 years on from the 1967 act to at least look at the criminal offence of abortion and do something about it. Decriminalisation is not the same as deregulation,” said Johnson.


Ann Furedi, Bpas chief executive, called the law “offensive and absurd”.


The 19th century law


Section 58, Offences Against the Person Act, 1861.


Every woman, being with child, who, with intent to procure her own miscarriage, shall unlawfully administer to herself any poison… or unlawfully use any instrument… shall be liable … to be kept in penal servitude for life.


The law in England, Wales and Northern Ireland governing abortion is based on the law dating back to the middle years of the Victorian era. Scotland was more liberal at that time. Common law made abortion a criminal offence unless performed for “reputable medical reasons”, which effectively meant few prosecutions.


This 1861 criminal law is the foundation stone still of the abortion regulation in England, Wales and Northern Ireland. In 1929, the Infant Life (Preservation) Act was passed creating a further criminal offence of the deliberate destruction of a child capable of being born alive.


The 1967 act was a response to the deaths of women as a result of backstreet abortions. It made abortion legal up to 28 weeks gestation if it was carried out by a doctor, with the written agreement of a second doctor, on registered premises. The upper limit was reduced to 24 weeks in 1990. The 1967 act was not passed in Northern Ireland, where abortion is now a devolved issue, as in Scotland.



MPs to discuss reform of UK"s Victorian-era abortion law

3 Mart 2017 Cuma

UK"s appetite for gourmet takeaway fuels restaurant delivery boom

“You don’t need a silver fork to eat good food,” the late celebrity chef Paul Prudhomme once said. But these days, you don’t even need to leave the comfort of your living room, as more and more restaurants offer take-out options to cash in on the growing market for fine dining at home.


The demand for home deliveries of ready-to-eat food grew 10 times faster than for dining out last year, according to figures released on Thursday, and food delivery apps specialising in restaurant-quality meals have seen a huge jump in popularity.


According to analysts NPD Group, the delivery sector rose almost 10% to 599m visits in the UK last year, while total visits to restaurants and other dining venues rose by just 1%. The delivery channel was worth £3.6bn last year, a 6% increase on 2015 and 50% more than in 2008.


NPD noted that even pubs were part of the home-delivery revolution by partnering with brands such as Deliveroo, Just Eat, Hungry House and UberEats. While British pubs only accounted for 4% of the delivery market, they increased their delivery visits by 59% over the previous year.


Deliveroo, which was founded by William Shu and Greg Orlowski in 2013 and now operates in 120 cities in 12 countries, said its orders grew by 650% in 2016. This included 20% more lunch orders, 20% more deliveries on a Monday, 10% more deliveries on Monday to Wednesday, and a 34% increase in people ordering healthy dishes, suggesting restaurant-style deliveries were seen less and less as an indulgent weekend treat.


The company is partnering with new restaurants every week and employs more than 1,000 people. Popular chains that have joined Deliveroo in the last 12 months include Five Guys, Cafe Rouge, Franco Manca, Ottolenghi, Farmacy, Sticks’n’Sushi and Pizza Pilgrims.



Restaurant chains such as Franco Manca are taking advantage of the surge in demand for food delivery.


Restaurant chains such as Franco Manca are taking advantage of the surge in demand for food delivery. Photograph: Michelle Grant/Rex/Shutterstock

The latter’s management say they joined Deliveroo to try new technology and make customers happier. “For some people pizza is the ultimate takeaway, while others see it as a casual dining out option, so working with Deliveroo just allowed us to please as many people as possible,” said Michael Dench, the chain’s operations director.


One restaurant group, London rotisserie Clockjack, opened a delivery-only kitchen last year to cater solely for Deliveroo orders.


The NPD study found the average bill for delivered food was just £1 lower than for a meal eaten on the premises. However, the difference was bigger for some operators such as local Indian, Thai, Chinese, Japanese, Greek, Italian or Mexican restaurants at £12 for a meal on the premises versus £6.90 for delivery.


Cyril Lavenant, NPD’s UK food service director, said: “Ordering ready-to-eat food for delivery via an app or by phone is growing so fast that eating in is becoming the new eating out. It goes beyond getting delivery of conventional takeaway food because full-service restaurants are offering delivery too.”


A spokesman for Deliveroo said it was not replacing the dine-in experience, rather complementing it by bringing a new breadth of choice to the delivery market. “We work with thousands of restaurants that traditionally did not offer food delivery, creating £200m in added revenue for the restaurant industry in 2016,” he said.


But it’s not all good news. Cancer Research UK has warned of the risks of weight gain and obesity linked to the consumption of fast food and ready meals, which tend to have a high calorie content and higher levels of fat and sugar.


Figures released on Friday by the charity show that at least 79m ready meals and 22m fast-food and takeaway meals are eaten weekly by adults in the UK. Young adults aged 18-24 are more likely to rely on convenience meals, and are seven times more likely to indulge in fast food and takeaways at least once a week compared with the over-65s.


Alison Cox, Cancer Research UK’s director of prevention, said the figures showed that “grab and go” foods and a growing appetite for takeaways and ready meals were helping to propel people towards an epidemic of larger waistlines.


“The whole food industry needs to step up and commit to working with government to cut the amount of fat and sugar in our food. This would make it that bit easier for all of us to become healthier and reduce our cancer risks,” she said.



UK"s appetite for gourmet takeaway fuels restaurant delivery boom

22 Ocak 2017 Pazar

Bringing a breath of fresh air to the UK’s polluted cities

Featuring a sturdy leather head-strap and mask, two large tubes and a transparent backpack containing a small potted plant, designer Chih Chiu’s response to crowded, polluted cities is stark.


“My initial idea was to separate an individual from the public space,” he says.


Titled Voyage on the Planet and originally created by Chiu for his BA final project in China in 2013, the work is set to take to the streets in Space to Breathe, a two-day exhibition based at Somerset House, central London, that is hoping to propel the issue of air pollution and public health into the limelight.


Kitting out visitors with the apparatus and taking them on to the Strand, Chiu, now a joint student at the Royal College of Art and Imperial College, hopes the sight of the people donning the otherworldly masks will shake the city out of its complacency.


“When all of us are sharing this polluted air, but none of us has a reaction to it, we feel nothing [is] really seriously wrong,” he says. “But when people start to have a reaction to the polluted air, like wearing this [mask], we start to [pay] attention.”


It is time we did. Amid a growing crisis in cities around the world, air pollution in parts of London smashed through the annual limit in the first week of this year. And with poor air quality linked to dementia, heart attacks and strokes, it is taking its toll on public health.


“What people really struggle with is the dislocation in time,” says Ian Mudway, lecturer in respiratory toxicology from the environmental research group at King’s College London. “The exposures you have now could produce effects in 20, 30, 40 years’ time,” he adds, pointing out that air pollution is estimated to cause around 40,000 premature deaths a year in the UK alone.


A collaboration between curators Shrinking Space, scientists from the environmental research group at King’s College London and Cape Farewell, an organisation that pioneers the use of art to promote cultural changes to tackle climate change, Space to Breathe is an energetic mix of art, science and entertainment.


Among the weekend’s highlights, which includes a DJ set by former Pulp frontman, Jarvis Cocker, visitors will be able to don virtual reality headsets to take a tour around the Strand with the project Energy Renaissance. A 360° video, the experience explores how the area could be transformed through interventions ranging from tree planting to urban wind turbines and zero-emission buses.


Taking the ideas further, the weekend will encompass a set of panel discussions, with representatives from the Greater London Authority, the British Lung Foundation and Tidal Lagoon Power, the company behind the mooted Swansea Bay project, to share their views on the air pollution crisis and how to tackle it while, perhaps more creatively, a pollution-removing bench designed by Airlabs will be exhibited on the river terrace.


Also on show is a specially commissioned installation by sound artist Wesley Goatley based on six months’ worth of air pollution data gathered by instruments in the area surrounding Somerset House. The aim, says Goatley, is to offer visitors an innovative way to explore pollution data, while pushing back against the perception that such figures and statistics are only for specialists.


Entitled Breathing Mephitic Air, the experience involves a 360° soundscape with three different components of air pollution – nitrogen dioxide, nitric oxide and particles known as PM10s – depicted by different sounds. These sounds, the rush of traffic, a catalytic converter and the sound of a refinery are themselves linked through their relationship to a metal intricately involved in the problem of air pollution: platinum.


The sounds, notes Goatley, rise and fall in volume with the levels of the pollutant they represent, while the apparent direction of sound mimics the direction and speed of the wind when the data was recorded. “There is a very firm connection between what you hear and what the data says – you can kind of read the data through the sound,” he says, adding that the data is also depicted dynamically through a visual display.


But Space to Breathe is not only about raising awareness of air pollution: it’s also an attempt to put the public back in control. Scientists will be offering visitors the chance to try out some of the latest real-time pollution-monitoring technology, as well as revealing how web-based apps can be used to plan journeys and dodge pollution hotspots.


“We will get people not just to think about what the pollution is on the day, but to actually have a perception of what their long-term exposures are likely to be,” says Mudway. The hope, he adds, is that the experience will galvanise visitors into action, from the way they navigate cities to the cars they choose to drive, and even encourage them to lobby those in power for change.


Andy Franzkowiak, a creative producer of the exhibition from Shrinking Space, agrees. “Every single person can make a difference,” he says.


Space to Breathe takes place at Somerset House, London WC2, on 28 and 29 January



Bringing a breath of fresh air to the UK’s polluted cities

23 Aralık 2016 Cuma

Better than prison: life inside the UK"s secure hospitals

One day in early August, 36-year-old Gavin bumped into an old friend outside That’s Entertainment music and DVD shop in Preston market.


“He pulled me to one side, but I didn’t recognise him,” Gavin (a pseudonym) says when we meet a week later. “He was like, ‘How you doing? I’m just going to get some stuff, make some money.’ He’s opened his bag and it’s full of razor blades. He’s selling razor blades for a tenner a pop, all of that business.”


Gavin says that he and the man were former “grafting partners”: commercial burglars and thieves, working around Lancashire. But in the six years since they had last seen one another, their lives had taken divergent paths.


“He’s ended up on the gear, shoplifting,” Gavin says. “I was like, ‘See you later mate.’ I felt guilty, tight, leaving him, but I thought: ‘What would happen if I’m with him and he gets pulled over and I’m in the hospital?’ I’d be in a lot of trouble, wouldn’t I? I gave him a couple of quid to buy himself a couple of pies, a cup of tea, and he wandered off … I sat there and thought: ‘If I’d not been in here, it’d be me doing that.’”



Guild Lodge hospital in Lancashire


Guild Lodge hospital in Lancashire

Gavin relates the story inside a meeting room at Guild Lodge hospital, in the Lancashire village of Whittingham, where he has lived for the past three years. Guild Lodge is one of 60 medium-secure mental health hospitals in England and Wales that house people deemed to be a danger either to themselves or others on account of their mental illness. Most of the 149 patients have committed offences while mentally ill, or have been diagnosed with a mental illness while already in prison. Some have been in higher-security institutions; almost all are being held under the terms of the Mental Health Act.


Gavin, who has schizophrenia, describes a life of substance abuse and crime, sometimes with violence, that took him in and out of prison and secure care settings for the past 18 years – his entire adult life. He was most recently admitted to a medium-secure ward at Guild Lodge in 2013, and is now in low-secure, from which he is permitted release to go into town, as he waits first for a tribunal hearing that could clear him for discharge and then, crucially, for a bed in supported accommodation.


“It might not work if I was just kicked out like I was in the prison system. I would have nowhere to go,” Gavin says. “I’d be on the street, in a hostel, back in crime or something. When I’ve been released from prison, it’s been a few weeks at the most. I’ve been straight back in for something else.”


From 1873 until 1995, the leafy park that surrounds Guild Lodge’s complex of modern buildings concealed Whittingham Hospital, which was Britain’s largest psychiatric institution and a centrepiece of the notorious Victorian asylum system. But Guild Lodge, which opened in 1999, is a striking representation of the advancements in secure-care provision across the UK – particularly at a security level one step below Broadmoor, Ashworth and Rampton, England’s three high-secure forensic psychiatric services.



Staff helping a service user (right) during a crafts session at Guild Lodge.


Staff helping a service user (right) during a crafts session at Guild Lodge. Photograph: Christopher Thomond for the Guardian

From the outside, the pale bricks and long windows of the medium-secure area of Guild Lodge could pass for a leisure centre. Even the high mesh fence that surrounds it could be for tennis courts or a five-a-side football pitch. The low-secure area that sprawls outside looks and feels like a business park. There is little to distinguish buildings containing administration offices and meeting rooms from the wards in which patients sleep.


Service users (the preferred term for patient) considered low-risk are free to wander through the adjacent woodland, around an Anglican church, a cemetery and even a cricket pitch. One service user, who told me he spends much of his days watching wildlife and listening to music on a wind-up radio, insisted that a relative of local hero Andrew Flintoff was the groundsman.


As with all hospitals, the aim is that patients will one day be discharged from Guild Lodge with their illnesses under control. It is recovery-focused rather than punitive, and although the Ministry of Justice retains a controlling interest in the onward progression of many patients (some will go back to prison), funding for medium-secure hospitals comes entirely from NHS England’s special commissioning budget.


The unique challenge is to balance care with custody; to maintain the public’s security while effectively treating patients’ illnesses. For thousands of people like Gavin, who is genial, articulate and rational when his schizophrenia is under control, secure care units can prove the difference between what might be considered a worthwhile life, and one wasted as hostage to an unpredictable and often dangerous illness.


Such endeavours are not cheap. According to figures from NHS England, expenditure on medium- and high-secure mental health services during the past year was £1.23bn, which accounts for 74% of the special commissioning budget and is one fifth of all public spending on adult mental health care. Accurate figures on a patient-by-patient basis are difficult to obtain, but conservative estimates put the cost of a bed and care for a year in a medium-secure hospital at £150,000, nearly five times as much as a male inmate in a category B prison.



A view of one of the security fences at Guild Lodge NHS secure mental health unit in Lancashire. Christopher Thomond for The Guardian.


A view of one of the security fences at Guild Lodge. Photograph: Christopher Thomond for the Guardian

Partly because of their cost, forensic psychiatry hospitals are under almost constant review. Medium-secure services in particular have remained a focal point for mental health campaigners, who say patients are often too readily admitted to an unnecessarily high level of security and then stay too long. The most recent government taskforce report on mental health – titled Five Year Forward View for Mental Health, released in February – made fresh commitments to “prevent avoidable admissions”, support recovery in the “least restrictive setting” and “address existing fragmented pathways in secure care”. In essence, it emphasises a need to get patients hastily into secure care when mental illness is the root cause of their offending, but also to discharge them quickly and safely, with adequate continued care, to get on with their lives.


Yet there remain frequent claims that the Ministry of Justice is overly cautious in approving discharge from secure hospitals, and that there is inadequate onward housing provision for patients reintegrating into communities. In general, treatment for mental illness has progressed significantly since the days of the asylums, but age-old misconceptions persist about psychiatric institutions. Patients still suffer familiar prejudice on account of their illness, compounded by their detention in hospital.


“It’s very, very risk-averse stuff,” says Jenny Shaw, the recently retired clinical director for specialist services at Lancashire Care Foundation Trust, which oversees Guild Lodge. “Even having conversations with some of my friends, who should know better, [I hear] ‘How can you ever let people who have committed those kinds of offences out?’ It’s a complete lack of understanding of what we’re trying to do. I think there’s still a massive stigma around mental health, and people with mental health problems and who are offenders – it’s a massive double whammy.”


I visited Guild Lodge twice earlier this year, touring the medium-secure unit and talking to some service users about treatment programmes and the challenges they face. Journalists are rarely permitted inside secure care environments: service users are often vulnerable and their recovery programmes easily undermined by external distractions. Administrators are also wary of the sensationalist reporting mental health hospitals have been known to attract, while victims and their families stand to gain little by repeated exposure to the perpetrators of the crimes against them. All names have therefore been changed and details of offences omitted.



Staff in the woodwork room at Tarnbrook unit at Guild Lodge NHS secure mental health unit in Lancashire.


Staff in the woodwork room at Guild Lodge. Photograph: Christopher Thomond for the Guardian

In general, people who have committed offences as a result of a mental illness tend to be blighted by extreme guilt for their actions. Many people hear voices or suffer delusions that have encouraged their offences. Hospitals house people suffering from a vast range of illnesses – schizophrenia, psychosis, acute depression, bipolar disorder – from hugely varying backgrounds, many of whom have suffered extreme trauma. The propensity to self-harm is also high.


The area “over the fence” – as one service user described the medium-secure part of the hospital – has the atmosphere of a vocational college, albeit one in which most doors are permanently locked. Staff and visitors pass through an air-lock security door, past a small office where patients can meet guests, and then into a courtyard, with various separate buildings situated either side of an access road and areas of green lawns. After appropriate risk assessment, service users are allowed access to an art room and wood and metal-working workshops, or to learn gardening skills in an on-site greenhouse and nursery. There is also a music room, and a service-user band regularly plays gigs both in and outside the hospital.


My visit to the medium-secure unit coincided with lunch, when the common areas were almost entirely deserted. Patients were in gender-specific wards, where they sleep in single-occupancy rooms, with washing facilities, and are locked in overnight. Although neither staff nor service users denied that tempers can flare, and that patients’ moods and illnesses can often raise tensions inside the hospital, I saw no threatening behaviour. Patients at different stages of recovery demand varying levels of supervision, but I met service users for interview in the low-secure area to which they brought themselves and left unescorted.


Many patients in secure care have co-morbidity issues – drug or alcohol misuse, or personality disorders – and programmes work to tackle these, as well as to improve patients’ physical health. Smoking is entirely prohibited inside Guild Lodge, and service users are encouraged to use an on-site gym and sports hall. Weight gain remains one of the most damaging side-effects of many psychotropic medications, leading both to physical ailments and reduced self-esteem.



The horticulture polytunnel at Guild Lodge NHS secure mental health unit in Lancashire


The horticulture polytunnel at Guild Lodge. Photograph: Christopher Thomond for the Guardian

Guild Lodge is also relatively unusual in that its administrators have won a battle to permit computer use for service users. Access to technology brings out the most risk-averse tendencies of lawmakers, who fear that vulnerable patients may be drawn to the darkest fringes of the internet. (Mobile phones are also strictly forbidden.) But a lack of even rudimentary IT skills may be damaging to a patient’s prospects of reintegrating to the job market on release. Service users can suffer an extreme sense of isolation, as though they are separate from the community in which they hope to reintegrate. Any further barriers, such as a lack of basic skills, only compound anxiety issues surrounding discharge.


One low-secure service user named Janet, who was not at Guild Lodge and who met me in a coffee shop in London, described a scenario where she was required to go online to arrange her own onward housing in order to be discharged from a hospital, but was not permitted access to the internet before she left.


“In the five years I’ve been in hospital, the world has moved a lot,” Janet says. “One of the people I live with has been in hospital for 16 years. She is about to be discharged and she has got no concept of how to use the internet. None at all.”


She adds: “No matter how confident you are as an individual, your confidence just plummets. Even the most arrogant individuals in hospital – it’s quite interesting watching them go out into the community, all that arrogance and bravado seems to quite quickly crumble. It’s fearful. We have a bridge at the front of the hospital. It’s called ‘life beyond the bridge’. Patients fear crossing that bridge.”


In recent years, studies into the effectiveness of treatments for mental illness, including schizophrenia, have centred on involving patients themselves in planning their own recovery. Research has shown that patients respond better to treatment when they are engaged in it and given more control over the direction of their own care.


In the secure environment, attempts to empower patients in this way can be seen to run counter to the demands of security, but initiatives are now in place that focus on service-user involvement and are aimed at hastening recovery and expediting discharge. “These things are related,” says Ian Callaghan, a former service user, with experience of both low- and medium-secure hospitals, who now works for Rethink Mental Illness. “As soon as a person’s mental health is stabilised, things should change. Stabilising mental health and managing risk go hand-in-hand.”


Callaghan is the national service user lead for a Department of Health initiative named My Shared Pathway – a programme followed throughout a patient’s stay in hospital. My Shared Pathway is tailored to an individual’s specific needs and defines closely their shared relationships with the clinicians, support workers, other service users and eventually the community they hope to return to. Meanwhile, a scheme launched by Rethink Mental Illness’ Innovation Network is aiming to involve service users in planning their futures in a far more detailed way than has been the norm.


These initiatives aren’t to everyone’s taste. One 57-year-old service user, who had spent many years in Ashworth high-secure hospital before transferring to Guild Lodge seven years ago, said: “They have meetings about when to organise meetings.” The same service user was also not a supporter of the smoking prohibition, and said fellow patients squirrelled cigarettes just outside the fence.



A crafts session at Guild Lodge NHS secure mental health unit in Lancashire.


A crafts session at Guild Lodge. Photograph: Christopher Thomond for the Guardian

Nevertheless, initial feedback from staff and patients has mainly been good, and further trials are also currently under way to enhance the role of peer-support workers in secure hospitals. The idea is that experienced service users can volunteer their support and advice to other patients, building on informal relationships on some wards and broadening networks of trusted individuals. Service users are known to respond well to people who have been through the secure-care system and have successfully returned to the community. Janet says: “It does sometimes take somebody who has recovered to let you see the light a little bit.”


Service users and staff both told me that it can be detrimental to recovery if, after being cleared for discharge by a clinician, a patient is denied release either by the Ministry of Justice, or by a lack of onward accommodation provision. After the taskforce recommendations, NHS England is trialling a reorganisation of budgets to allow local administrators to manage pathways out of hospital and into community mental health care teams. The aim is that medium-secure services be used only to address the most pressing clinical needs, rather than by patients for whom there is simply nowhere else to go.


Gavin says that the severity of his illness did not allow him to understand the benefit of his treatment during previous admissions to secure hospital. He returned to the prison system and stopped taking medication, leading to a deterioration in his condition. (Prisoners can reject medication, but some sections of the Mental Health Act, under which service users will be in hospital, allow for doctors to administer it without consent.) Eventually, after returning again to secure care, a course of therapy helped him manage his illness and turn over a new leaf.


“You get to a certain point where [you think], ‘What’s been going on? What have I been doing with my life?’” he says. “I just want to leave now. I don’t smoke anymore, I’ve not done drugs, I’ve not drunk alcohol and I don’t intend to. I don’t want to go back to that life.”



Better than prison: life inside the UK"s secure hospitals

1 Aralık 2016 Perşembe

UK"s first case of sexually transmitted Zika detected

The UK’s first case of sexually transmitted Zika has been detected, health officials believe. They said a woman was likely to have been infected with the virus by her partner, who had recently visited a Zika-hit country.


That was one of two cases of the virus seen by Public Health England (PHE) in the last week, which the body said took the total number of UK Zika diagnoses to 265 since the outbreak began in 2015, including seven pregnant women. Of those, 181 have been confirmed, PHE said in an update released on Wednesday.


“It is important to remember that the main risk relates to travellers to countries classified as high or moderate risk for Zika infection,” said professor Dilys Morgan, PHE’s Zika incident director.


Zika is usually a mild illness, though it can be particularly dangerous in pregnant women because it can cause brain damage and developmental disorders in a baby’s head. The woman believed to have been the victim of a sexually transmitted infection has since made a full recovery.


“PHE’s advice is based on the fact that our main concern is to avoid infection in pregnancy, in order to avoid risk to the unborn child,” Morgan added. Authorities say that men returning from a Zika-hit area should use a condom during sex for six months and women should do so for eight weeks.


Sexual transmission of the virus is uncommon, with only about 60 cases believed to have been seen worldwide, and the mosquito that transmits the virus is not present in the UK, PHE said.


The government’s National Travel Health Network and Centre (NaTHNaC) advised people to protect themselves against mosquito bites and warned pregnant women to avoid all but unavoidable travel to areas reporting high Zika transmission.


“Women who are planning to become pregnant and their partners should discuss their travel plans with their healthcare provider to assess the risk,” NaTHNaC’s director Dr Dipti Patel said.


This week, health officials in Texas declared the first case of Zika transmitted by local mosquitoes, making it the second US state to do so. The World Health Organisation has downgraded Zika from a “global health emergency”, instead defining it as an ongoing threat, like other mosquito-borne diseases.


“News that one case of sexual transmission of Zika has occurred in the UK is not unexpected. About 60 cases of sexual transmission of Zika have been reported worldwide, so we think this is quite rare,” said Prof Jimmy Whitworth of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.


He told the BBC: “Discovering just how common it is for the virus to be passed during sex by a man or woman is a key focus for Zika researchers. Public Health England’s updated advice is also welcome.


“Zika virus survives in semen longer than other body fluids so recommending male travellers returning from Zika transmission countries, with or without symptoms, practise safe sex for six months is sensible.”



UK"s first case of sexually transmitted Zika detected

19 Ağustos 2016 Cuma

UK’s sad lack of ambition in tackling obesity | Letters

The food industry targets cheap junk food at children and adults and this has caused the wave of obesity in the UK (Experts condemn ‘watering down’ of obesity strategy, 18 August). The taxpayer pays for the consequences and this is eroding the NHS. This is a prime example of the “tragedy of the commons”, in which the exploitative activity of the few damages the interests of the many. The government intends to continue to protect the food industry and so is ignoring this tragedy of the commons. So much for the promise made by Theresa May when she became Tory leader to “unite our country … not for the privileged few but … for every one of us”.


She has fallen at the first hurdle. She is following Michael Gove’s pre-Brexit advice that “people in this country have had enough of experts”. She has not challenged the might of the food lobby.


Predictably the food lobby continues to complain about the nanny state, just as did the tobacco lobby. The government had to be nanny when it introduced anti-smoking laws, vaccination programmes, seatbelt laws, clean air acts and all those other laws that make life worthwhile.


The government eventually took on and defeated the smoking lobby. It will have to do the same with the food lobby. The food industry has a big advantage over tobacco in that people will still have to eat, so big food can carry on selling food and making profits, but it will be healthy food. Why are we waiting?
Ann and Neil Holmes
Bromsgrove, Worcestershire


The government’s obesity strategy published today was an opportunity to tackle childhood obesity and household food insecurity that has been missed. While welcoming some positive elements in the strategy, such as the targets for reducing sugar content in food and drink, and the commitment to the Healthy Start scheme, we are dismayed by the government’s lack of ambition.


We know from the significant bank of evidence that exists on childhood obesity that in order to tackle it we need limits on food marketing to children, continuation of vital public health schemes, and strong targets for the reduction of childhood obesity. Instead the government’s strategy relies on voluntarism, an approach that has so far failed to make any real inroad into childhood obesity.


We need a strategy that can stand up against the major spending power of the big food and drink brands. The seven biggest brands alone spend more than £300m a year on marketing, over 10 times the amount spent on the government’s flagship healthy eating initiative. But this strategy has failed to deliver.


It is time for the government to make a real statement on tackling childhood obesity in the UK. We simply can’t afford not to.
Geoff Tansey Chair, Fabian Commission on Food and Poverty
Jeanette Orrey Co-founder, Food for Life
John Middleton President, Faculty of Public Health


Expecting the food industry to police itself with regard to junk food is like waiting for the oil industry to tell people not to drive their cars or for arms sellers to advise gun owners not to shoot.


Is it too idealistic to hope for a more ethical form of capitalism whereby manufacturers have a moral responsibility to avoid – or at least limit – any harm caused through the production and sale of their goods? Given how unlikely this is in a world driven by economic growth and profit margins, we need a government that will exercise the necessary controls to protect citizens from the excesses of the corporate world.
Fiona Carnie
Bath


The UK faces a massive obesity crisis which Action on Sugar says could “bankrupt the NHS”. However, we need to think not just about reducing sugar consumption, but promoting physical activity too.


We have invested strategically, and successfully, in promoting Olympic cycling. Yet all over Britain, parents are deterred from allowing their children to cycle to school for fear of road danger.


The Dutch spend £24 per person annually on creating a cycle-friendly environment, and 49% of pupils there cycle to school. By contrast, the UK government proposes investment in its draft Cycling and Walking Investment Strategy (CWIS) of just £2 per person next year, falling to a paltry 72p by 2020. It’s hardly surprising that 1% of school trips in Britain are cycled, and our obesity rates are significantly higher.


As part of its obesity plan, shouldn’t the government use some of its sugar tax revenues for enabling non-athletes of all ages to cycle safely for day-to-day journeys? That would be a hugely cost-effective way not only to tackle obesity, but also congestion, air pollution and climate change. By creating people-friendly streets and communities, it would surely be a fantastic vote-winner too.
Roger Geffen
Policy director, Cycling UK


The government has started consulting on the introduction of a tax on sugary drinks. We are already seeing marketing for sugar-free drinks as being healthier than the originals, and they will now be cheaper. But there is no evidence that artificial sweeteners are healthier than sugar, so we can help the manufacturers with their marketing while doing nothing to improve children’s health.
Michael Peel
Winscombe, Somerset


Join the debate – email guardian.letters@theguardian.com



UK’s sad lack of ambition in tackling obesity | Letters

6 Ağustos 2016 Cumartesi

UK’s ‘hidden disgrace’: mental health problems can lead to 42% pay gap

People suffering from mental health problems such as depression and panic attacks earn up to 42% less than their peers, prompting the government’s equalities watchdog to brand the pay gap “a disgrace”.


Evidence collected by the Equality and Human Rights Commission has exposed stark differences between the earnings of those suffering from psychological illness and those who are not. For every pound that a non-disabled man earns, men who have conditions such as phobias or panic attacks earn only 58p. Similarly, men with anxiety or depression are paid only 74p for every pound earned by their contemporaries those who have no such troubles.


The commission has found a similar but less pronounced pattern with women: those suffering from anxiety or depression earn 10p less for every pound earned by their non-disabled peers, according to research to be published next month which the commission has passed to the Observer.


“We must do more to tackle the injustice in our society of this mental health pay gap,” said David Isaac, EHRC chair. The figures revealed “the hidden disgrace of British society’s pay gap for men and women living with depression and panic attacks”, he added.


The watchdog’s findings have prompted claims of discrimination in the workplace against people with mental health problems. “These findings are really shocking,” said Martin Tod, chief executive of the Men’s Health Forum. “Our research shows that men with mental health difficulties are very concerned about how their employers will perceive them. This research shows they’re absolutely right to be.”


Related: Have men been let down over mental health?


The commission has been taken aback by the scale of some of the differentials uncovered during its research into gender, ethnic and disability pay gaps. Isaac urged ministers to narrow the gaps as part of its promise to improve mental health support.


“Business leaders and government must get together to understand why this is happening and ensure that employers have the right policies and culture to protect and support people with mental health issues at work and help them develop in their chosen careers,” he said.


Commission analysis of men who suffer from mental impairment, including learning difficulties and mental health problems, has concluded that they are more likely to earn less as a result of working part-time, being in low-paid jobs or having few educational qualifications. Notwithstanding that, however, “there is still a large and unexplained gap and the impact of discrimination and stigmatisation as underlying factors should not be underestimated”.


Related: Younger voters put social issues and environment before economy, survey shows


The findings come days after the latest British Social Attitudes Survey found evidence of perceptions of prejudice in the workplace. For example, few people believe that a person with depression (17%) or schizophrenia (8%) that is well controlled by medication would be as likely as others to be promoted. And about one in three think that the medical history of someone with either condition should make a difference to their chances of gaining promotion.


NatCen Social Research’s study also found that while 71% of people would be willing to move next door to someone with depression, just 45% said the same about a person with schizophrenia. Similarly, just 36% are happy to have someone with depression marry into their family, and fewer than 20% would want someone with the condition providing childcare for their family.


Emma Mamo, head of workplace wellbeing at the mental health charity Mind, said: “Fortunately, employer attitudes towards recruiting and supporting people with mental health problems are improving, with many employers now putting in place measures to support staff wellbeing.


Related: The Guardian view on mental health: still underfunded after too many false promises | Editorial


“It’s unacceptable that people with mental health problems earn less than those without mental health problems.“Staff who have a mental health problem can and do make a valuable contribution to the workplace,” said Mamo: “People with mental health problems face barriers in getting into, and staying in, work. Many employees don’t feel comfortable disclosing a mental health problem to their employer, often fearing they’ll be perceived as weak, incompetent or unable to cope.”


The EHRC has found that people with mental health conditions wanted three things from employers: flexible working, more supportive managers and understanding from colleagues. However, almost none of them had been offered those things.



UK’s ‘hidden disgrace’: mental health problems can lead to 42% pay gap

5 Mayıs 2014 Pazartesi

How councils can perform a crucial position in tackling UK"s growing diabetes crisis

Woman with fast food

If folks at risk of acquiring variety two diabetes can be encouraged to eat more healthily then they stand a good possibility of preventing it. Photograph: Murdo Macleod




The number of folks with diabetes has risen dramatically above the previous decade and a staggering three.2m people in the Uk now have the situation. If this rise continues then the amount of individuals with diabetes could reach 5m by 2025.


This has worrying implications for the two the nation’s wellness and its finances. At least £10bn was spent right on diabetes in excess of 2010-11 – a figure that is very likely to rise a excellent deal over coming decades.


How councils can assist fight increasing ranges of diabetes
Regional government wants to be at the forefront of diabetes treatment method and prevention if there is any possibility of managing this crisis.


The excellent news is that these rises are not inevitable. Type-two diabetes accounts for 90% of instances. By focusing on preventing it, we might be ready to end the issue in its tracks.


I was concerned with a report on the NHS Well being Check – a programme that checks absolutely everyone in England aged 40 to 74 for danger of kind-two diabetes. This scheme has huge potential since about 80% of instances of this sort of diabetes can be delayed or prevented however life-style modifications.


eing overweight is the largest danger issue. If people people recognized as getting at higher risk of sort-two diabetes can be alerted to their threat and encouraged to eat more healthily then they stand a great likelihood of delaying or avoiding diabetes.


Councils such as Leicester, Blackpool and Stockport have completed a great work of rolling out the NHS Health Check programme and there have also been some other fantastic innovations. In Wandsworth, for example, the public overall health team has commissioned pharmacies to supply the programme, making it more available for communities.


But overall the picture is less rosy. Just half the individuals in England who are supposed to be getting the Well being Verify are obtaining it. It really is essential that these identified as being at higher threat are consistently presented powerful interventions to make life style changes.


There are other methods to tackle this
Public wellness need to be at the forefront of the organizing process because having towns and cities in which it is effortless to stroll or cycle and lots of parks and open spaces can make a real variation to people’s activity levels, assisting reduce obesity.


There may possibly also be spot-specific action councils can consider – promoting neighborhood markets or contemplating the overall health implications of licensing schemes, for illustration.


Nearby authorities are often one of the biggest employers in their region so can make a huge distinction by promoting a healthy workforce. Ultimately, the causes for substantial weight problems rates are challenging and touch on various factors of our lives. So councils’ broad selection of responsibilities mean they have an crucial position in addressing variety-two diabetes, regardless of whether by way of the NHS Overall health Check out or obesity prevention.


Barbara Youthful is chief executive of Diabetes Uk.


Not presently a member? Join us now for much more comment, evaluation and the latest occupation opportunities in neighborhood government.




How councils can perform a crucial position in tackling UK"s growing diabetes crisis

7 Nisan 2014 Pazartesi

Minutes-outdated little one is UK"s youngest heart op patient

A feeding tube in her left nostril carries nutrients to her stomach although a tube in her other nostril connects her to a ventilator to help her breathing. Two tubes to her belly button are linked a blood-circulating pump, even though other wires keep track of her heart rhythm and oxygen amounts.


Chanel Murrish created a uncommon heart problem in the womb (Sunday Mirror)


When Chanel was 7 days outdated, doctors felt she was robust sufficient to undergo another heart operation. Doctors say she is now making very good progress.


Chanel had hypoplastic left heart syndrome, which meant only one particular half of her heart was beating. The situation affects one in 3 million newborns.


Her parents were referred to the Royal Victoria Infirmary in Newcastle in which her parents said medical professionals initial supplied them the termination.


“We were informed Chanel could have operations, but would have only a 50-50 chance of surviving the initial and would need two more,” Mrs Murrish informed the Sunday Mirror.


“Even her existence expectancy would only be to young adulthood and she would sooner or later want a heart transplant


“When you hear that you wonder if you could carry a youngster into the planet. But Chanel started kicking. There was no way I could have a termination. I know she wanted to reside because she was offering a massive thumbs-up at her scan.”


Additional issues had been detected with the blood flow in Chanel’s heart, cutting her probabilities of surviving surgical procedure to 20 per cent. Again, the couple had been asked to think about a termination but stated they had been established to go by way of with the birth.


Inside of minutes of Chanel’s arrival on February 24, at Newcastle’s Freeman Hospital, surgeons placed a stent in her heart so that she could survive long enough to have corrective surgical treatment.


“It was awful,” Mrs Murrish said. “I did not even get a likelihood to hold her prior to she was taken away.”


A week after her birth, Chanel underwent a 7-hour operation. She is now out of intensive care and generating progress, but physicians say she will need to have two further operations.


Her mothers and fathers, from Seaham, County Durham, have considering that been capable to introduce their new daughter to their two other kids, Chase, four, and Cole, 22 months.


The family is now fundraising for the Freeman Hospital and have collected more than £2,000. To contribute, go to: http://www.justgiving.com/ChanelMurrish-HLHS



Minutes-outdated little one is UK"s youngest heart op patient

21 Mart 2014 Cuma

Inside the UK"s mental health crisis: "It is my view that men and women will die"

Overnight there have been 7 admissions to this psychological overall health crisis unit in west London, which implies that 68 out of the 71 beds are full. There are almost no beds elsewhere in west London, and the senior management team use their eight.30am meeting to go over who may well fairly be discharged to make room for incoming sufferers.


Working with just three free beds in the unit is both a mark of commendable efficiency, or a sign of the terrifying strain the technique is beneath, and even the consultants are not certain which it is. A senior manager concedes: “We are sailing quite near to the wind.”


Ward managers are asked to assess if anybody on their lists could be sent home. “We’ve currently sent residence absolutely everyone we could,” 1 says, scanning his listing. “There is a remote opportunity we could discharge Maria,” a ward nurse, says doubtfully. “Have there been any improvements in Mikhail?” the senior manager wonders, but there have not. “Is there no one else?”


Occupancy ranges for acute adult psychiatric beds elsewhere are frequently running at one hundred%, and this level of intense demand is not regarded notably intense. But the pressure on beds is not the only indicator of strain the staff faces. One particular senior nurse complains that the trust’s psychological well being teams have been so radically and repeatedly restructured above the past two years that it is her view that “folks will die”. A psychologist describes feeling “despairing” and “heartbroken” at the eight-month waiting record for his providers. Some patients are angry at currently being discharged from hospital and offered what they come to feel is inadequate adhere to-up care.


3 days with the teams operating with patients going through a mental health crisis in west London reveal some of the profound pressures the NHS’s support is working under. But it also reveals how overworked employees are managing to search after a tough group of sufferers with immense care and dedication, in spite of the combined pressures of those restructurings and ongoing funding cuts (which are nonetheless officially supposed to be referred to as “efficiency financial savings”).


Staff in the crisis resolution and house treatment method group have a fluctuating listing of among thirty and forty individuals who they are treating at house, working to avert them from becoming admitted unnecessarily to hospital, and making an attempt to get those who are admitted discharged as rapidly and as safely as attainable. The whiteboard that covers a wall of their cramped staff meeting area, up to date twice a day, detailing names and signs, provides an insight into how significantly unwell these sufferers are and exhibits the higher degree of chance concerned in caring for them.


A woman has been admitted right after trying to throw herself off a bridge into the Thames, distraught that her children have been eliminated from her, but also also drunk to be noticed by medical professionals. Another girl has been provided a bed on the ward soon after going to the police and telling them she has murdered some babies. 1 patient is at the moment locked up in a police station right after punching his mum in the encounter. A third girl is hearing voices telling her to harm her sister. A fourth has named the team to tell them that unless they visit her urgently, she is going to consider an overdose and end up in A&ampE. The board offers quick summaries of signs – patient a single: lower mood, psychotic depression patient two: low mood, suicidal, helpless patient 3: schizoaffective patient 4: hearing voices.


The list goes on, with each and every patient presenting disturbing troubles that need attention, but personnel members are cheerful, and relieved that this morning’s caseload is fairly light. “We necessary this lull,” a nurse says. “Individuals had been truly operating flat out and asking yourself, how long can we can sustain it? Is this the consequence of the reorganisation, or is this the cuts truly biting?”


It isn’t going to truly feel like significantly of a lull. The workplace is incredibly hectic personnel eat their breakfast and lunch at their personal computers, and there is no time amongst visits, meetings and typing up notes for any breaks. Full-time staff are becoming paid to do overtime to make up for posts that have been cut – which managers concede tends to make no sense financially, but is the best way of coping with the new staffing pressures.


It has been obvious for several months that mental well being services within the NHS are underneath enormous strain. They had been currently underfunded – accounting for 28% of the condition burden but receiving just 13% of the NHS budget – but concern about new cuts has prompted foremost mental health charities to warn that lives will be at threat. Sue Bailey, president of the Royal College of Psychiatrists, explained just lately that mental wellness companies were at a tipping level.


Meanwhile, charities warn that the cocktail effect of the recession and welfare reform has elevated demand for mental well being providers. In a recent survey, 90% of managers with the psychological overall health charity Mind recently mentioned benefit cuts and unemployment had been partly responsible for the enhance in demand for mental overall health providers.


A pile of kinds headed “How to Challenge Your Benefit Sanctions” is next to the whiteboard, in situation personnel believe it could assist their individuals. Benefit cuts, housing issues and debt are a issue with at least eleven of the 30 people on the listing right now. A single woman is beneath increased pressure because she has to depart the three-bedroom flat she has lived in for decades and downsize, because of the bedroom tax – but there are really number of one particular-bedroom flats to move into in the spot. An additional current patient had all his rewards cut off, for motives that are not completely clear, so personnel brought him loaves of bread from the hospital when they visited. One particular loved ones with a psychotic teenage son who hears Bob Marley and Tupac speaking to him are renting rooms in a shared property. Several have been housed in extremely poor top quality short-term accommodation. One more couple with 4 kids are struggling in a two-bedroom flat. Only 3 people have no fiscal troubles, the staff feel.


The house remedy team make a quick routine of sufferers they require to check out. They go over what precautions they want to consider ahead of going to a new patient who has a background of aggression in direction of specialists, and who recently knocked someone unconscious by hitting them more than the head with a skateboard. Prior to every single go to, they record their spot on a ‘lone worker’ device – an electronic alarm system that makes it possible for them to summon the police if they get into problems.


Most of their sufferers, even so, are welcoming and grateful for their interest, and need no this kind of precautions. First they attend a meeting to discharge a guy who was hospitalised with suicidal ideas a few weeks ago. They give him medicine for the up coming number of weeks, and ask how he is feeling.


“So several ideas buzzing through my thoughts that I am bewildered, then I will not sleep, and then I do not come to feel that I am real. I really feel like I’m residing in a dream,” he says, but he understands he is a lot greater than he was, and is no longer feeling suicidal. “I genuinely will not want to die. I just want the ache to stop.”


He is worried he will not get the help he requirements following discharge. He hasn’t been allotted a focused care co-ordinator (a named individual who would have personalized responsibility for his care) but has been, in the team’s perplexing jargon, “discharged to duty” – handed on to someone who has never ever noticed him prior to, and who is unlikely to see him yet again, with the outcome that no one will have supervisory duty for his continued treatment. He might be better served by becoming allocated a care co-ordinator, rather than an intermediary figure who is just passing on notes, but there is a shortage of care co-ordinators, and so they are sparsely allocated. “I just need some help for a little bit – not just medicines. I truly feel that, in the mental wellness planet, any excuse is used to discharge men and women.”


Personnel acknowledge that the pressure on these co-ordinators has elevated, despite the fact that Dr Jonathan Scott, a consultant psychiatrist and deputy clinical lead, says the individuals who most need to have this sort of personalised assist do nonetheless get it. But workers are nevertheless coming to terms with the fallout from the restructuring of their teams, and locate it hard to inform whether selections this kind of as these signify excellent clinical practice, or are just the very best response to increased strain on employees.


The particulars of the reorganisation are technical and puzzling, even for everlasting workers members. This services utilised to have 3 community mental health teams two many years in the past, these had been reconfigured into two recovery teams (for people who were in excess of their crisis, and in require of longer-phrase help) and 1 assessment team (which helped folks for the duration of their crisis, and gave them short-term help). But then there was another restructuring, which meant that the evaluation team only assessed men and women, and no longer gave them brief-term assistance. The outcome has been that more individuals have been referred to the recovery teams, where care co-ordinators have observed their lists of individuals soar from all around 25 to as many as 40, or a lot more when their colleagues are on leave. This has made it difficult to allocate more individuals to them, and has produced their job very nerve-racking.


“We have been restructured twice in two years. The method keeps shifting, so you shed track of it. No one particular knows who they are working with,” 1 senior team leader says. “Every single time we have a reorganisation, men and women fall through the cracks. We are becoming asked to discharge a specified percentage so they can make area for new men and women, irrespective of how well they are.” She feels that individuals are nevertheless just about getting the services they require, but it’s really shut to currently being inadequate. “There is no slack. Complaints from support users are going up.”


On busier days, she feels so rushed that she is unable to give patients the help she is skilled to give. “You are clock-watching. You have an additional 4 visits … You cannot keep as extended as you want to,” she says.


A senior nurse who has been functioning right here for numerous years is much more blunt about the attainable consequences of the restructuring. “The adjust in the support is horrendous. It is my view that individuals will die,” she says. She, as well, points to the strain on the recovery teams (whom she describes as “overwhelmed”) and the shortage of care co-ordinators, and also says a current closure of a walk-in assessment services has led to quite hefty use of A&ampE.


mental health crisis man at window in home ‘The technique keeps shifting, so you get rid of track of it. Every single time we have a reorganisation, folks fall through the cracks,’ says 1 psychological overall health crisis staff leader. Photograph: Graeme Robertson for the Guardian


The next individual they are due to see is not in, but there are alarming new deep depressions in his wooden front door, as if it has been attacked by a hammer. They drive as an alternative to provide some medication to a patient with schizophrenia, who is unwilling to speak to them, but who grudgingly agrees to take the medication.


They check out a woman who has just lately produced a plan to destroy herself, booking a hotel space so her husband wouldn’t discover her. She is no longer feeling so suicidal, but cries throughout the meeting, silently. For some of the meeting they speak about how friendly her cat is, but gently they tease out how she is feeling, and what help she wants. This patient, as well, is mindful that there are long waiting lists that stand amongst her and the therapy she hopes to have.


“I would like to talk to an individual about the items that are worrying me. I was advised it would consider a few months for psychology appointments,” she says.


They acknowledge that there is a wait, and request her if she has the cash to go personal she says she will consider about it.


“You have carried out quite nicely. Make confident you give oneself some praise,” the home group employee says. The patient tries to smile, but her fingers are clasped together whilst her nails claw at the flesh on the back of her hands, and the tears continue to pour down.


The team’s psychologist, who has worked right here for seven years, is annoyed that individuals have to wait so lengthy, and is dismayed by the reduction of (he estimates) three psychology posts out of 10 for this support across the trust in excess of the past couple of years.


“There is an eight-month waiting list for psychology my impression is that it is a great deal longer than it was 3 or 4 months ago. You get folks in absolute tension – screaming misery, death appears far better than the place they are – and we patch them up above a few weeks, quite intensively, in hospital or in home remedy. They will go from that to the recovery group, where folks have a caseload of 40 men and women. I commence a piece of psychological function with them and there is no one particular to take that on for eight months. The very best I can do is to give them a self-aid guide,” he says. “It is pretty depressing.”


He, as well, dislikes becoming under strain to see as several as five or six sufferers throughout a round, when ideally he would visit two or 3. “It leaves you ten or 15 minutes. You’ve barely got time to say, ‘Hello, how are you, have you taken your meds?’ We will not want to be like Domino’s Pizza for meds, just delivering the medicine. We want to help men and women,” he says.


An additional pair of nurses go to Stella in her flat, the place she is making an attempt to readjust to normality soon after her second hospital admission (due to depression and suicidal intent) in four months. She is tearful and angry about the service she has received, and tells the nurses she is going to make a formal complaint.


She explains that she was in hospital for three weeks the very first time, prior to currently being allowed house in December. “I wasn’t treated. I was just contained. I wasn’t given abilities to support me when I leave,” she says. She was discharged at the beginning of December and wasn’t given an appointment with a psychiatrist until finally 31 January, she says. “They mentioned, ‘If you have a crisis, phone us or go to A&ampE.’ I received progressively worse.”


Hospital employees sustain that she was offered assistance, but she believes the house remedy staff has been too active to aid her appropriately. “Often they do not have time to speak to you. They just tick a few boxes – ‘Are you suicidal? No?’ – and then they depart.” She was hospitalised for a handful of days final week, following police discovered her wandering a distant element of London in excellent distress. She is feeling greater, but is dismayed that she now has to wait between 6 and 12 months for treatment. “I’m just asking yourself how I can cope,” she says.


The team’s psychologist acknowledges that this “is a far more acquainted story than it ought to be. I am certain that would not have occurred two many years in the past.” He feels despondent when former sufferers bounce back into the system because of obvious lack of help soon after discharge. “It really is heartbreaking. I feel despairing,” he says. “Individuals feel that there are no NHS cuts, but there are horrible cuts.”


Jonathan Scott won’t examine person cases, but says there are circumstances in which it can be positively useful for a patient to be encouraged to come to feel they can control on their own, rather than reinforcing their sense of their own vulnerability and inability to cope by admitting them, or making them really feel they need to have optimum assistance. “Even in a excellent technique, we may possibly not be able to handle each and every case nicely,” he says.


But he acknowledges that the alterations imposed on the group have designed challenging pressures, and stresses that the division is feeling “reorganisation fatigue” presently, even as further reorganisation plans are mentioned. “There is yet another round of cuts on the way. We have stored our head above water so far, but we are close to the point the place we cannot get a lot far more, and we’re told that there are significant financial savings that require to be produced. I never know how significantly more vitality there is for reorganisation. There need to be a level at which employees just burn up out, since it is countless, but as you see, we haven’t really burned out nevertheless.”


He worries that, when companies are minimize, the real losers are the most profoundly sick – individuals who are unable to fight for their demands. “The focus is slowly shifting to folks with typical mental problems, I suspect at the expense of individuals with severe problems. People with schizophrenia don’t have the capacity to lobby for themselves.”


Scott pays a go to to Noor, an asylum seeker from Pakistan, in the small box-room she is borrowing from a pal who rents it in a shared terrace residence. He has to squeeze all around the door to get into the area, in which there is no area for anything at all except the narrow bed, a suitcase and a black plastic bag full of Noor’s belongings. He perches on the edge of her bed to speak to her. The curtains are hanging off the rail dispiritingly, letting light in at the best. The noise of planes taking off from the close by airport is so powerful that it drowns out the patient’s quiet voice each two or three minutes. The walls are bare, and there is nothing in the area that is not depressing.


She tells him she is hearing the voices of men from her past, threatening to beat her they are so terrifying that she has to consider to hide when they start. When she goes out, she hears her dead mother berating her, and when her mom isn’t speaking, she hears computerised voices in her head.


“I never know if I can dwell this daily life. I don’t want this life. I just want to get rid of this lifestyle. Occasionally I truly feel this lifestyle is burdening on me,” she says, as one more plane howls above the house.


“It’s not effortless,” Scott tells her. “What do you do for the duration of the day?”


“Practically nothing.”


“You have to persevere. It is extremely difficult for you.”


“The voices, they are shouting at me.”


He recognises that she is experiencing a higher level of distress, and promises that a psychologist will come to give her some help to get her through this. In the end she is moved to new accommodation in Liverpool by the Property Workplace just before she can be noticed.


Regardless of the bleak funding outlook, there is nonetheless one thing inspiring about the operate workers do in tough conditions. For numerous individuals, their focus so clearly has a constructive influence.


They go to a middle-aged guy, Bill, and are pleased to discover him feeling significantly far better a number of weeks right after he took an overdose and cut his wrists and abdomen following a split from his spouse.


“I am managing to maintain away from knives. I know they are a element of each day existence, but I am more able to control myself,” he tells them, as they sit on a mattress on his floor. “I am feeling more positive. This is the very first time I’ve opened the curtains in two weeks. Prior to, I considered people would be searching in at me.


“There is a lifestyle out there to be lived. Why be dead?” he says, searching out at the spring sunshine.


He rolls up his sleeves and pulls up his shirt to demonstrate the nurses the spot he minimize himself. “When I wash now, I seem at this and I believe, ‘How stupid! Why did I do that?’”


Names in this write-up have been altered. Samaritans: 08457 90 90 90.



Inside the UK"s mental health crisis: "It is my view that men and women will die"