An Overview of Homelessness and Mental Health

Introduction

In a study in Western societies, homeless people have a higher prevalence of mental illness when compared to the general population.

They also are more likely to suffer from alcoholism and drug dependency. It is estimated that 20-25% of homeless people, compared with 6% of the non-homeless, have severe mental illness. Others estimate that up to one-third of the homeless have a mental illness. In January 2015, the most extensive survey ever undertaken found 564,708 people were homeless on a given night in the US. Depending on the age group in question and how homelessness is defined, the consensus estimate as of 2014 was that, at minimum, 25% of the American homeless—140,000 individuals—were seriously mentally ill at any given point in time. 45% of the homeless – 250,000 individuals – had any mental illness. More would be labelled homeless if these were annual counts rather than point-in-time counts. Being chronically homeless also means that people with mental illnesses are more likely to experience catastrophic health crises requiring medical intervention or resulting in institutionalisation within the criminal justice system. Majority of the homeless population do not have a mental illness. Although there is no correlation between homelessness and mental health, those who are dealing with homelessness are struggling with psychological and emotional distress. The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration conducted a study and found that in 2010, 26.2% of sheltered homeless people had a severe mental illness.

Studies have found that there is a correlation between homelessness and incarceration. Those with mental illness or substance abuse problems were found to be incarcerated at a higher frequency than the general population. Fischer and Breakey have identified the chronically mentally ill as one of the four main subtypes of homeless persons; the others being the street people, chronic alcoholics, and the situationally distressed.

The first documented case of a psychiatrist addressing the issue of homelessness and mental health was in 1906 by Karl Wilmanns.

Historical Context

United States

In the United States, there are broad patterns of reform within the history of psychiatric care for persons with mental illness.  These patterns are currently categorised into three major cycles of reform. The first recognised cycle was the emergence of moral treatment and asylums, the second consists of the mental hygiene movement and the psychopathic (state) hospital, and most recent cycle includes deinstitutionalisation and community mental health.  In an article addressing the historical developments and reforms of treatment for the mentally ill, Joseph Morrissey and Howard Goldman acknowledge the current regression of public social welfare for mentally ill populations. They specifically state that the:

“historical forces that led to the transinstitutionalization of the mentally ill from almshouses to the state mental hospitals in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries have now been reversed in the aftermath of recent deinstitutionalization policies”.

Asylums

Refer to Greyhound Therapy.

Within the context of transforming schemas of moral treatment during the early nineteenth century, the humanitarian focus of public intervention was linked with the establishment of asylums or snake pits for treatment of the mentally ill.  The ideology that emerged in Europe disseminated to America, in the form of a social reformation based on the belief that new cases of insanity could be treated by isolating the ill into “small, pastoral asylums” for humane treatment. These asylums were meant to combine medical attention, occupational therapy, socialisation activities and religious support, all in a warm environment.

In America, Friends Asylum (1817) and the Hartford Retreat (1824) were among the first asylums within the private sector, yet public asylums were soon encouraged, with Dorothea Dix as one of its key lobbyists. The effectiveness of asylums was dependent on a collection of structural and external conditions, conditions that proponents began to recognise were unfeasible to maintain around the mid-nineteenth century. For example, with the proliferation of immigrants throughout industrialisation, the original purpose of asylums as small facilities transformed into their actualised use as “large, custodial institutions” throughout the late 1840s.  Overcrowding severely inhibited the therapeutic capacity, inciting a political reassessment period about alternatives to asylums around the 1870s. The legislative purpose of state asylums soon met the role society had funnelled them toward; they primarily became institutions for community protection, with treatment secondary.

Deinstitutionalisation

Toward the end of World War II, the influx of soldiers diagnosed with “war neurosis” incited a new public interest in community care. In addition to this, the view that asylums and state hospitals exacerbated symptoms of mental illness by being “inherently dehumanizing and antitherapeutic” spread through the public consciousness. When psychiatric drugs like neuroleptics stabilised behaviour and milieu therapy proved effective, state hospitals began discharging patients, with hope that federal programs and community support would counterbalance the effects of institutionalisation. Furthermore, economic responsibility for disabled people began to shift, as religious and non-profit organisation assumed the role of supplying basic needs.  The modern results of deinstitutionalisation show the dissonance between policy expectations and the actualized reality.

Community Mental Health Centres

In response to the flaws of deinstitutionalisation, a reform movement reframed the context of the chronically mentally ill within the lens of public health and social welfare problems. Policy makers intentionally circumvented state mental hospitals by allocating federal funds directly to local agencies. For example, the Community Mental Health Centres (CMHC) Act of 1963 became law:

“which funded the construction and staffing of hundreds of federal centers to provide a range of services including partial hospitalization, emergency care, consultation, and treatment.”

Despite efforts, newly founded community centres:

“failed to meet the needs of acute and chronic patients discharged in increasing numbers from public hospitals”.

With decreased state collaboration and federal funding for social welfare, community centres essentially proved unable “to provide many essential programs and benefits”, resulting in a growth of homelessness and indigency, or lack of access to basic necessities. It is argued that an over reliance on community health has “left thousands of former patients homeless or living in substandard housing, often without treatment, supervision or social support.”

State Mental Hospitals

As debates regarding the deteriorating role of US asylums and psychiatry amplified around the turn of the century, new reformation arose. With the founding of the National Committee for Mental Hygiene, acute treatment centres like psychopathic hospitals, psychiatric dispensaries and child guidance clinics were created. Beginning with the State Care Act in New York, states began assuming full financial control for the mentally ill, in an effort to compensate for the deprivations of asylums. Between 1903 and 1950, the number of patients in state mental hospitals went from 150,000 to 512,000. Morrissey recognises that despite persistent problem of chronic mental illness, these state mental hospitals were able to provide a minimal level of care. US president John F. Kennedy signed the Community Mental Health Act (1963) that was put in place to give funding for community-based facilities rather than having patients going to state hospitals. Decades later, once the Community Mental Health Act was implemented a lot of state hospitals suffered and were on the verge of forced to close which pushed patients to the community-based facilities. The closures of the state hospitals lead to an overcrowding in the community facilities and there was a lack of support, which lead to patients not having access to the medical help they needed.

Personal Factors

Neurobiological Determinants

The mental health of homeless populations is significantly worse than the general population, with the prevalence of mental disorders up to four times higher in the former.  It is also found that psychopathology and substance abuse often exist before the onset of homelessness, supporting the finding that mental disorders are a strong risk factor for homelessness.  Ongoing issues with mental disorders such as affective and anxiety disorders, substance abuse and schizophrenia are elevated for the homeless.  One explanation for homelessness states that “mental illness or alcohol and drug abuse render individuals unable to maintain permanent housing.”  One study further states that 10–20% of homeless populations have a dual diagnoses, or the co-existence of substance abuse and of another severe mental disorder. For example, in Germany there is a link between alcohol dependence and schizophrenia with homeless populations.

Trauma

There are patterns of biographical experience that are linked with subsequent mental health problems and pathways into homelessness.  Martens states that reported childhood experiences, described as “feeling unloved in childhood, adverse childhood experiences, and general unhappiness in childhood” seem to become “powerful risk factors” for adult homelessness. For example, Martens emphasizes the salient dimension of familial and residential instability, as he describes the prevalence of foster-care or group home placement for homeless adolescents. He notes that “58 percent of homeless adolescents had experienced some kind of out-of-home placement, running away, or early departure from home.”  Moreover, up to 50% of homeless adolescents report experience with physical abuse, and almost one-third report sexual abuse.  In addition to family conflict and abuse, early exposure to factors like poverty, housing instability, and alcohol and drug use all increase one’s vulnerability to homelessness. Once impoverished, the social dimension of homelessness manifests from “long exposure to demoralizing relationships and unequal opportunities.”

Trauma and Homeless Youth

Youth experiencing homelessness are more susceptible to developing post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Common psychological traumas experienced by homeless youth include, sexual victimisation, neglect, experiences of violence, and abuse. In an article published by Homeless Policy Research Institute it notes that homeless youth are subjected to many different forms of trauma. A study was done and found that 80% of youth that experienced homelessness in Los Angeles suffered at least one traumatic experience. Another study was conducted in Canada that showed a more severe statistic that Canadian homeless youth have been through 11 to 12 traumatic experiences. While trauma is prevalent in homeless youth, it is not uncommon for an adolescent to experience an increase of trauma after they experience homelessness. The LGBTQ community represents 20% of the homeless youth population. The reason for this high percentage is due to the issues and/or rejection from their family due to the sexual orientation.

Societal Factors

Draine et al. emphasize the role of social disadvantage with manifestations of mental illness. He states that “research on mental illness in relation to social problems such as crime, unemployment, and homelessness often ignores the broader social context in which mental illness is embedded.”

Social Barriers

Stigma

Lee argues that societal conceptualizations of homelessness and poverty can be juxtaposed, leading to different manifestations of public stigma. In his work through national and local surveys, respondents tended to de-emphasize individual deficits over “structural forces and bad luck” for homeless individuals. In contrast, the respondents tended to associate personal failures more to the impoverished than homeless individuals. 

Nonetheless, homeless individuals are “well aware of the negative traits imputed to them – lazy, filthy, irresponsible dangerous – based on the homeless label.” In an effort to cope with the emotional threat of stigma, homeless individuals may rely on one another for “non-judgmental socializing”. However, his work continues to emphasize that the mentally ill homeless are often deprived of social networks like this.

Social Isolation

People who are homeless tend to be socially isolated, which contributes negatively to their mental health. Studies have correlated that those who are homeless and have a strong support group tend to be more physically and mentally healthy. Aside from the stigma received by the homeless population, another aspect that contributes to social isolation is the purposeful avoidance of social opportunity practiced by the homeless community out of shame of revealing their current homeless state. Social isolation ties directly to social stigma in that homeless socialisation outside of the homeless community will affect how the homeless are perceived. This is why homeless individuals talking with those who are not homeless is encouraged since it can combat the stigma that is often associated with homelessness.

Racial Inequality

One dimension of the American homeless is the skewed proportion of minorities. In a sample taken from Los Angeles, 68% of the homeless men were African American. In contrast, the Netherlands sample had 42% Dutch, with 58% of the homeless population from other nationalities.  Furthermore, Lee notes that minorities have a heightened risk of the “repeated exit-and-entry pattern”.

Institutional Barriers

Shinn and Gillespie (1994) argued that although substance abuse and mental illness is a contributing factor to homelessness, the primary cause is the lack of low-income housing. Elliot and Krivo emphasize the structural conditions that increase vulnerability to homelessness. Within their study, these factors are specifically categorized into “unavailable low-cost housing, high poverty, poor economic conditions, and insufficient community and institutional support for the mentally ill.”  Through their correlational analysis, they reinforce the finding that areas with more spending on mental health care have “notably lower levels of homelessness.”  Furthermore, their findings emphasize that among the analysed correlates, “per capita expenditures on mental health care, and the supply of low-rent housing are by far the strongest predictors of homelessness rates.” Along with economic hardship, patterns of academic underachievement also undermine an individual’s opportunity for reintegration into general society, which heightens their risk for homelessness.

On a psychological level, Lee notes that the “stressful nature of hard times (high unemployment, a tight housing market, etc.) helps generate personal vulnerabilities and magnifies their consequences.” For example, poverty is a key determinant of the relationship between debilitating mental illness and social maladjustment; it is associated with decreased self-efficacy and coping. Moreover, poverty is an important predictor of life outcomes, such as “quality of life, social and occupational functioning, general health and psychiatric symptoms”, all relevant aspects of societal stability.  Thus, systemic factors tend to compound mental instability for the homeless. Tackling homelessness involves focusing on the risk factors that contribute to homelessness as well as advocating for structural change.

Consequences

Incarceration

It is argued that persons with mental illness are more likely to be arrested, simply from a higher risk of other associated factors with incarceration, such as substance abuse, unemployment, and lack of formal education. Furthermore, when correctional facilities lack adequate coordination with community resources upon release, the chances of recidivism increase for persons who are both homeless and have a mental illness. Every state in the United States incarcerates more individuals with severe mental illness than it hospitalises. Incarcerations are due to lack of treatments such as psychiatric hospital beds.  Overall, according to Raphael and Stoll, over 60% of US jail inmates report mental health problems. Estimates from the Survey of Inmates in State and Federal Correctional Facilities (2004) and the Survey of Inmates in Local Jails (2002) report that the prevalence for severe mental illness (the psychoses and bipolar/manic-depressive disorders) is 3.1–6.5 times the rate observed for the general population.  In relation to homelessness, it is found that 17.3% of inmates with severe mental illness experienced a homeless state before their incarceration, compared to 6.5% of undiagnosed inmates.  The authors argue that a significant portion of deinstitutionalised mentally ill were transitioned into correctional facilities, by specifically stating that “transinstitutional effect estimates suggest that deinstitutionalization has played a relatively minor role in explaining the phenomenal growth in U.S. incarceration levels.”

Responses

Responses to mental health and homelessness include measures focused on housing and mental health services. Providers face challenges in the form of community adversity.

Housing

Modern efforts to reduce homelessness include “housing-first models”, where individuals and families are placed in permanent homes with optional wrap-around services. This effort is less expensive than the cost of institutions that serve the complex needs of people experiencing homeless, such as emergency shelters, mental hospitals and jails. The alternative approach of housing first has shown positive outcomes. One study reports an 88% housing retention rate for those in Housing First, compared to 47% using traditional programmes. Additionally, a review of permanent supportive housing and case management on health found that interventions using “housing-first models” can improve health outcomes among chronically homeless individuals, many of whom have substance use disorders and severe mental illness. Improvements include positive changes in self-reported mental health status, substance use, and overall well-being. These models can also help reduce hospital admissions, length of stay in inpatient psychiatric units, and emergency room visits. There is a new intervention called “Permanent Supportive Housing” that was designed help independent living and help with employment and health care. 407,966 individuals were homeless in shelters, transitional housing programmes, or on the streets. Those with mental illnesses have difficulty not only with their current housing issues, but have issues with housing if they get evicted. Youth can benefit from permanent housing, increases social activity, and improve mental health. Federally funded rental assistance are in place, but due to the high demand of the funds, the government is unable to keep up.

One study evaluating the efficacy of the Housing First model followed mentally ill homeless individuals with criminal records over a two-year period, and after being placed in the Housing First programme only 30% re-offended. Overall results of the study showed a large reduction in re-conviction, increased public safety, and a reduction in crime rates. A significant decline in drug use was also seen with the implementation of the Housing First model. The study showed a 50% increase in housing retention and a 30% increase in methadone treatment retention in programme participants.

Mental Health Services

Uninterrupted assistance greatly increases the chances of living independently and greatly reduces the chances of homelessness and incarceration. Through longitudinal comparisons of sheltered homeless families and impoverished domiciled families, there are a collection of social buffers that slow one’s trajectory toward homelessness. A number of these factors include “entitlement income, a housing subsidy, and contact with a social worker.” These social buffers can also be effective in supporting individuals exiting homelessness. One study utilising Maslow’s hierarchy of needs in assessing housing experiences of adults with mental illnesses found a complex relationship between basic needs, self-actualisation, goal setting, and mental health. Meeting self-actualisation needs are vital to mental health and treatment of mental illness. Housing, stable income, and social connectedness are basic needs, and when met can lead to fulfilment of higher needs and improved mental health. Those with a brief history of homelessness and managed disabilities may have better access to housing.

Research calls for evidence based remediation practices that transform mental health care into a recovery oriented system. The following list includes practices currently being utilised to address the mental health needs of homeless individuals:

  • Integrated service system, between and within agencies in policy making, funding, governance and service delivery.
  • Low barrier housing with support services.
  • Building Assertive Community Teams (ACT) and Forensic Assertive Community Teams (FACT).
  • Assisted Community Treatment (ACT).
  • Outreach services that identify and connect homeless to the social service system and help navigate the complex, fragmented web of services.

Challenges

Fear surrounds the introduction of mentally ill homeless housing and treatment centres into neighbourhoods, due to existing stereotypes that homeless individuals are often associated with increased drug use and criminal activity. The Housing First Model study, along with other studies, show that this is not necessarily the case. Proponents of the NIMBY (not-in-my-backyard) movement have played an active role in the challenges faced by housing and mental health service interventions for the homeless.

Summary

For some individuals, the pathways into homelessness may be upstream. E.g. issues such as housing, income level, or employment status. For others, the pathways may be more personal or individual, e.g. issues such as compromised mental health and well ‐ being, mental illness, and substance abuse. Many of these personal and upstream issues are interconnected.

This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article < https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homelessness_and_mental_health >; it is used under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY-SA). You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the CC-BY-SA.

How Mad Are You? (2008): Part 02

Introduction

“How Mad Are You?” is a two-part 2008 BBC Horizon/Discovery Channel Co-Production produced and directed by Rob Liddell.

Part of the BBC’s Horizon documentary series.

The programme was recreated in 2018 by SBS for Australian TV.

Outline (UK Version)

Ten Britons spend a week together. Five have a history of mental illness. Five do not. The question is – Who’s Who?

The programme explores the relationship between character traits and mental illness and considers the social implications of inaccurate diagnosis of the latter. Ten volunteers, five of whom have been previously diagnosed with psychiatric disorders, are observed and interviewed by a panel of three mental health experts who then venture their diagnoses. The experts include a psychiatrist, a professor of clinical psychology, and a psychiatric nurse. The volunteers and experts have no prior knowledge about one another, and were brought together for this one week study.

The program was inspired by the 1972 “Rosenhan Experiment,” in which the American psychologist David Rosenhan and several associates feigned auditory hallucinations in order to have themselves admitted to psychiatric hospitals. Eight of these “pseudopatients” were diagnosed with psychiatric disorders. Although they ceased displaying any symptoms once admitted to a hospital, they were detained for between 17 and 52 days. None were recognised by hospital staff. The experiment’s results, published in Science in 1973,1 raised questions about the validity of psychiatric diagnosis.

You can read an in-depth overview of the programme by Yusef Progler in the Journal of Research in Medical Sciences.

Part 02

Second part of the special documentary considering where the line between sanity and madness lies as ten volunteers come together for an extraordinary test.

With five ‘normal’ volunteers and five who have been officially diagnosed as mentally ill, Horizon asks if you can tell who is who.

Part 01 here.

Outline (Australian Version)

Recreates the BBC UK version.

New two-part SBS documentary series How ‘Mad’ Are You? addresses mental illness in a way never seen before on Australian television. Ten Australians, from all backgrounds and ages spend a week together. Five have a history of mental illness. Five do not. Who is who?

  • This ground breaking two-part series will address the issue of mental illness in a way never seen before on Australian television.
  • Around one in five Australians experience mental illness every year. Despite the scale of the problem – the stigma remains.
  • Ten Australians with diverse backgrounds and from right across the country, have all agreed to take part in a bold and daring study in the hope of breaking down this stigma.
  • Five of them have been diagnosed as being mentally unwell, five have not; the question is – Who’s Who?
  • Over the next week, they will take part in a series of specially designed tests.
  • The group will be under the gaze of experts who face the daunting task of working out who has been diagnosed as mentally ill and who has not.
  • The experts are putting their professional reputations on the line, and the ten risk being labelled with a mental illness they don’t have. It is all in the name of breaking down stigma and exploring where the fine line between being ‘well’ and ‘mentally ill’ lies.
  • Each episode delves into the relationship between character traits and mental illness, and considers the social implications arising from the diagnosis of mental illness.
  • The series will explore major disorders including Clinical Depression, Social Anxiety Disorder, Schizophrenia, Bipolar Disorder, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder and Anorexia Nervosa.
  • The question of who is ‘mad’ and who is not goes to the core of how we see ourselves, and how we see others in Australia today.
  • Crucially the volunteers who take part are ultimately living proof that a history of mental illness does not have to define you or make you ‘other’ in today’s society.

Production & Filming Details

  • Narrator(s):
    • Judy Davis.
    • Paul McGann
  • Director(s):
    • Naomi Elkin-Jones … (2 episodes, 2018)
    • David Grusovin … (2 episodes, 2018)
    • Rob Liddell
  • Producer(s):
    • Darren Dale … producer (2 episodes, 2018)
    • Jacob Hickey … series producer (2 episodes, 2018)
    • Agnes Teek … story producer (2 episodes, 2018)
    • Rob Liddell
  • Writer(s):
    • Jacob Hickey … (2 episodes, 2018)
  • Music:
    • Angela Little … (2 episodes, 2018)
  • Cinematography:
    • Justin Brickle … (2 episodes, 2018)
    • Marden Dean … (2 episodes, 2018)
    • Daniel Gallagher … (2 episodes, 2018)
  • Editor(s):
    • Mark Atkin … (2 episodes, 2018)
  • Production:
    • Blackfella Films
  • Distributor(s):
    • BBC.
    • SBS.
  • Release Date:
    • UK: 11 and 18 November 2008.
    • Australia: 11 and 18 October 2018.
  • Running Time: 2 x 50 minutes.
  • Rating: Unknown.
  • Country: UK.
  • Language: English.

How Mad Are You? (2008): Part 01

Introduction

“How Mad Are You?” is a two-part 2008 BBC Horizon/Discovery Channel Co-Production produced and directed by Rob Liddell.

Part of the BBC’s Horizon documentary series.

The programme was recreated in 2018 by SBS for Australian TV.

Outline (UK Version)

Ten Britons spend a week together. Five have a history of mental illness. Five do not. The question is – Who’s Who?

The programme explores the relationship between character traits and mental illness and considers the social implications of inaccurate diagnosis of the latter. Ten volunteers, five of whom have been previously diagnosed with psychiatric disorders, are observed and interviewed by a panel of three mental health experts who then venture their diagnoses. The experts include a psychiatrist, a professor of clinical psychology, and a psychiatric nurse. The volunteers and experts have no prior knowledge about one another, and were brought together for this one week study.

The program was inspired by the 1972 “Rosenhan Experiment,” in which the American psychologist David Rosenhan and several associates feigned auditory hallucinations in order to have themselves admitted to psychiatric hospitals. Eight of these “pseudopatients” were diagnosed with psychiatric disorders. Although they ceased displaying any symptoms once admitted to a hospital, they were detained for between 17 and 52 days. None were recognised by hospital staff. The experiment’s results, published in Science in 1973,1 raised questions about the validity of psychiatric diagnosis.

You can read an in-depth overview of the programme by Yusef Progler in the Journal of Research in Medical Sciences.

Part 01

First of a two-part special. Ten volunteers have come together for an extraordinary test. Five are ‘normal’ and the other five have been officially diagnosed as mentally ill. Horizon asks if you can tell who is who, and considers where the line between sanity and madness lies.

Part 02 here.

Outline (Australian Version)

Recreates the BBC UK version.

New two-part SBS documentary series How ‘Mad’ Are You? addresses mental illness in a way never seen before on Australian television. Ten Australians, from all backgrounds and ages spend a week together. Five have a history of mental illness. Five do not. Who is who?

  • This ground breaking two-part series will address the issue of mental illness in a way never seen before on Australian television.
  • Around one in five Australians experience mental illness every year. Despite the scale of the problem – the stigma remains.
  • Ten Australians with diverse backgrounds and from right across the country, have all agreed to take part in a bold and daring study in the hope of breaking down this stigma.
  • Five of them have been diagnosed as being mentally unwell, five have not; the question is – Who’s Who?
  • Over the next week, they will take part in a series of specially designed tests.
  • The group will be under the gaze of experts who face the daunting task of working out who has been diagnosed as mentally ill and who has not.
  • The experts are putting their professional reputations on the line, and the ten risk being labelled with a mental illness they don’t have. It is all in the name of breaking down stigma and exploring where the fine line between being ‘well’ and ‘mentally ill’ lies.
  • Each episode delves into the relationship between character traits and mental illness, and considers the social implications arising from the diagnosis of mental illness.
  • The series will explore major disorders including Clinical Depression, Social Anxiety Disorder, Schizophrenia, Bipolar Disorder, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder and Anorexia Nervosa.
  • The question of who is ‘mad’ and who is not goes to the core of how we see ourselves, and how we see others in Australia today.
  • Crucially the volunteers who take part are ultimately living proof that a history of mental illness does not have to define you or make you ‘other’ in today’s society.

Production & Filming Details

  • Narrator(s):
    • Judy Davis.
    • Paul McGann
  • Director(s):
    • Naomi Elkin-Jones … (2 episodes, 2018)
    • David Grusovin … (2 episodes, 2018)
    • Rob Liddell
  • Producer(s):
    • Darren Dale … producer (2 episodes, 2018)
    • Jacob Hickey … series producer (2 episodes, 2018)
    • Agnes Teek … story producer (2 episodes, 2018)
    • Rob Liddell
  • Writer(s):
    • Jacob Hickey … (2 episodes, 2018)
  • Music:
    • Angela Little … (2 episodes, 2018)
  • Cinematography:
    • Justin Brickle … (2 episodes, 2018)
    • Marden Dean … (2 episodes, 2018)
    • Daniel Gallagher … (2 episodes, 2018)
  • Editor(s):
    • Mark Atkin … (2 episodes, 2018)
  • Production:
    • Blackfella Films
  • Distributor(s):
    • BBC.
    • SBS.
  • Release Date:
    • UK: 11 and 18 November 2008.
    • Australia: 11 and 18 October 2018.
  • Running Time: 2 x 50 minutes.
  • Rating: Unknown.
  • Country: UK.
  • Language: English.

Just Like You: Anxiety + Depression (2023)

Introduction

Follows the stories of various people as they tackle the fear and stigma plaguing the mental health community.

Outline

10 brave kids, 2 Emmy award winning journalists, 1 clinical psychologist at Columbia University and 1 determined mother take on the fear and stigma plaguing the mental health community.

Production & Filming Details

  • Director(s):
    • Jennifer Greenstreet
  • Producer(s):
    • Karen Arkin … executive producer
    • Jennifer Greenstreet … executive producer
    • Mauria Stonestreet … producer
    • Chad Swenson … producer
  • Writer(s):
    • Jennifer Greenstreet
  • Music:
  • Cinematography:
  • Editor(s):
    • Hugh Ormond
  • Production:
    • Just Like You Films
  • Distributor(s):
    • Gravitas Ventures (world-wide)
  • Release Date: 08 March 2022 (internet).
  • Running Time: 77 minutes.
  • Rating: Not Rated.
  • Country: UK.
  • Language: English.

RTE Investigates: Ireland’s Unregulated Psychologists

Introduction

RTÉ Investigates the lack of regulation of psychologists in the private sector where families of young children are forced to seek help because of long public waiting lists.

Outline

Reporter Barry O’Kelly shows how easy it is to call yourself a psychologist in Ireland today.

You can read comments made by the Psychological Society of Ireland (PSI) here (PDF, external link) regarding the programme.

Production & Filming Details

  • Director(s):
  • Producer(s):
  • Writer(s):
  • Music:
  • Cinematography:
  • Editor(s):
    • Hugh Ormond
  • Production:
    • RTE
  • Distributor(s):
    • RTE One
  • Release Date: 06 March 2023 (Ireland).
  • Running Time: 41 minutes.
  • Rating: Unknown.
  • Country: UK.
  • Language: English.

An Overview of South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust

Introduction

South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust (also known as SLaM), is an NHS foundation trust based in London, England, which specialises in mental health. It comprises:

SLaM forms part of the institutions that make up King’s Health Partners, an academic health science centre. In its most recent inspection of the Trust, the CQC gave SLaM a ‘good’ rating overall, but a ‘requires improvement’ rating in area of safety. In 2019, Southwark Coroner’s Court ruled that SLaM was guilty of “neglect and serious failures” in relation to the death of a patient in 2018. In 2020, a further investigation into the Trust’s conduct was opened following the death of a patient in its care.

Overview

Each year the South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust provides about 5,000 people with hospital treatment and about 40,000 people with community services. In partnership with King’s College London, the Trust has major research activities. This academic partnership enables the Trust to develop new treatments and to provide specialist services to people from across the UK such as the National Psychosis Unit at Bethlem Royal Hospital. The Trust forms part of the King’s Health Partners academic health science centre and together with the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience at King’s College London and University College London is host to the UK’s only specialist National Institute for Health Research Biomedical Research Centre for mental health. In 2009/10 the Trust had a turnover of £370 million.

The Trust’s work on promoting mental health and well-being, developed in partnership with the new economics foundation, has featured in the national media.

It was named by the Health Service Journal as one of the top hundred NHS trusts to work for in 2015. At that time it had 4218 full-time equivalent staff and a sickness absence rate of 3.74%. 58% of staff recommend it as a place for treatment and 59% recommended it as a place to work.

As of 2018, the trust employed 5,328 staff.

Select Chronology

The following are some important historical dates:

  1. The Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem, Bishopsgate, was founded on land given by Alderman Simon Fitzmary. It later became a place of refuge for the sick and infirm. The names ‘Bethlem’ and ‘Bedlam’, by which it came to be known, are early variants of ‘Bethlehem’. It is first referred to as a hospital for ‘insane’ patients in 1403, after which it has a continuous history of caring for people with mental distress.
  2. In 1867, the Southern Districts Hospital (or Stockwell Fever Hospital as it became known) opened on the site which is today known as Lambeth Hospital.
  3. Henry Maudsley wrote to the London County Council offering to contribute £30k towards the costs of establishing a “fitly equipped hospital for mental diseases.” The Maudsley initially opened as a military hospital in 1915 to treat cases of shell shock and became a psychiatric hospital for the people of London in 1923.
  4. Bethlem Royal Hospital moved to a new site at Monks Orchard, where it has been situated to this day.
  5. With the introduction of the National Health Service in 1948, the Bethlem Royal Hospital and Maudsley Hospital were merged to form a postgraduate psychiatric teaching hospital. The Maudsley’s medical school became the Institute of Psychiatry.
  6. Sister Lena Peat and Reginald Bowen became the first community psychiatric nurses, following up patients at home who had been discharged from Warlingham Park Hospital in Croydon.
  7. The Ladywell Unit, located at University Hospital Lewisham, was refurbished for use by adult inpatient mental health services. The development brought together inpatient services which had previously been spread across other hospital sites (Hither Green, Guy’s and Bexley).
  8. South London and Maudsley NHS Trust was formed – providing mental health and substance misuse services across Croydon, Lambeth, Lewisham and Southwark; substance misuse services in Bexley Greenwich and Bromley; and national specialist services for people from across the UK.
  9. South London and Maudsley became the 50th NHS Foundation Trust in the UK under the Health and Social Care [Community Health and Standards] Act 2003.
    2007 The Maudsley Hospital closed its 24-hour emergency mental health clinic, amidst protest from patient groups and politicians who continued campaigning for several years for a promised replacement at nearby KCL Hospital.
  10. South London and Maudsley is part of one of the five Academic Health Sciences Centres (AHSCs) in the UK to be accredited by the Department of Health. King’s Health Partners AHSC consists of SLaM, King’s College London, and Guy’s and St Thomas’ and King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trusts.
  11. South London and Maudsley is fined by the Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman for its failure to properly assess mental capacity.

Governance

The Chief Executive appointed in 2013 is Matthew Patrick, a psychiatrist with a background in psychoanalysis who was formerly head of the Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust.

Former Member of Parliament Sir Norman Lamb was appointed chair of the trust in December 2019.

Services

The Trust provides a wide range of mental health and substance misuse services. The Trust provides care and treatment for a local population of 1.3 million people in south London, as well as specialist services for people from across the country. The Trust provides mental health services for people of all ages from over 100 community sites in south London, three psychiatric hospitals (the Bethlem Royal Hospital, Lambeth Hospital and the Maudsley Hospital) and specialist units based at other hospitals.

In March 2016 it established a joint venture with the Macani Medical Centre in Abu Dhabi to provide child and adolescent services with specialisms in autism, Obsessive Compulsive Disorder and eating disorders. Maudsley International also signed an agreement with the Ministry of Public Health in Qatar for expert advice to help advance Qatar’s national mental health strategy.

It established a joint venture limited liability partnership with Northumbria Healthcare Facilities Management, run by Northumbria Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust in 2019. This will run its private and international work, develop its capital assets and employ its facilities staff. It will initially employ 192 existing staff. It plans rapid growth in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and China.

Performance

255 patients were injured in 2016-17 through use of restraints on psychiatric patients in South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust. This was the third largest number in England, There were more injuries in Southern Health NHS Foundation Trust and Mersey Care NHS Foundation Trust. Critics say restraints are potentially traumatic even life threatening for patients.

Research

The Trust’s research activities take place in close partnership with the Institute of Psychiatry, King’s College London and University College London. In the 2008 Research Assessment Exercise the Institute was judged to have the highest research power of any UK institution within the areas of psychiatry, neuroscience and clinical psychology.

Biomedical Research Centre

The Trust manages the NIHR Maudsley Biomedical Research Centre, the UK’s only Specialist Mental Health Biomedical Research Centre, in partnership with the Institute of Psychiatry at King’s College London. The Centre, which is based on the Maudsley Hospital campus, is funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR). Its aim is to speed up the pace that latest medical research findings are turned into improved clinical care and services.

The team at the Centre are working towards ‘personalised medicine’ – developing treatments based on individual need. The aim is to diagnose illness more effectively and much earlier, assess which treatments will work best for an individual and then tailor the care they receive accordingly.

The BRC’s development of an advanced computer programme to accurately detect the early signs of Alzheimer’s disease from a routine clinical brain scan was reported in the media in 2011. The ‘Automated MRI’ software automatically compares or benchmarks someone’s brain scan image against 1200 others, each showing varying stages of Alzheimer’s disease. Another study has concerned the reduced life expectancies of people diagnosed with different mental illnesses.

In 2011 the Department of Health announced that the Trust and the Institute of Psychiatry, King’s College London would receive a further £48.8m to continue running the Biomedical Research Centre for Mental Health for a further five years from 01 April 2012. An additional £4.5m was awarded to the Trust to launch for a new NIHR Biomedical Research Unit for Dementia.

King’s Health Partners

The Trust is a member of the King’s Health Partners academic health sciences centre, together with King’s College London, Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust and King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust.

In December 2013 it was announced that a proposed merger with Guy’s and St Thomas’ and King’s College Hospitals had been suspended because of doubts about the reaction of the Competition Commission.

National Addiction Centre

In partnership with the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King’s College London, the Trust runs the National Addiction Centre (NAC), which aims to develop new treatment services for alcohol, smoking and drug problems. This work ranges from trials of new therapies and preventative treatments, to studies seeking to understand the genetic and biological basis of addictive behaviour. An example of research conducted is the Randomised Injecting Opioid Treatment Trial (RIOTT).

Media

The services provided by the Trust feature in a four-part observational television documentary to be broadcast on Channel Four in Autumn 2013. Produced by the makers of 24 Hours in A&E, Bedlam focuses on the work of the Anxiety Disorders Residential Unit at Bethlem Royal Hospital, the Triage ward at Lambeth Hospital, adult community mental health services in Lewisham and services for people over the age of 65.

This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article < https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_London_and_Maudsley_NHS_Foundation_Trust >; it is used under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY-SA). You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the CC-BY-SA.

Hiding in Plain Sight: Youth Mental Illness (2022): Part 02

Introduction

A documentary about the mental health crisis among youth in America.

Outline (General)

Mental illness is one of the most significant health crises in the world – as pervasive as cancer, diabetes, and heart disease – but it often exists in secret and is endured in isolation. It is the place where sadness leaves off, and depression begins; where nervousness becomes anxiety; excitement becomes mania, and habit becomes addiction. It’s the place where simply living becomes painful.

It affects all ages, in families both rich and poor, healthy and dysfunctional. Trauma can be the trigger – from personal crises such as divorce and neglect to environmental disasters, racial injustice, and pandemics. Over time, the symptoms can progress, and lead to increasingly extreme behaviours – like eating disorders, self-harm, and thoughts of suicide.

The issues surrounding mental illness are extraordinarily complex. The risk factors are daunting, the economics bewildering, and the politics contentious. But the most important step – and often the most difficult one – is to start talking about it. Hiding in Plain Sight will bring that conversation into homes, schools, the workplace, and community organisations across the country.

The two-part, four-hour film follows the journeys of more than 20 young Americans from all over the country and all walks of life, who have struggled with thoughts and feelings that have troubled – and, at times – overwhelmed them. They share what they have learned about themselves, their families, and the world in which they live. Through first-person accounts, the film presents an unstinting look at both the seemingly insurmountable obstacles faced by those who live with mental disorders and the hope that many have found after that storm. In the process, they will directly confront the issues of stigma, discrimination, awareness, and silence, and, in doing so, support the ongoing shift in the public perception of mental illness today.

Outline (Part 02)

Our “heroes” speak about finding help and inpatient and/or outpatient treatment. It also explores the criminalization of mental illness, tragedy of youth suicide, and “double stigma” that occurs when mental illness is combined with racial or gender discrimination. Throughout, the interviewees demonstrate the power of resiliency and hope.

Part 01 here.

Production & Filming Details

  • Director(s):
    • Christopher Loren Ewers.
    • Erik Ewers.
  • Producer(s):
    • Ken Burns … executive producer.
    • Julie Coffman … producer.
    • Christopher Loren Ewers … co-producer.
    • Susan Shumaker … co-producer.
    • Erik Ewers … co-producer.
    • Christopher Loren Ewers … co-producer.
    • David Blistein … co-producer.
    • John F. Wilson … executive producer: WETA.
    • Tom Chiodo … executive producer: WETA.
  • Writer(s):
    • David Blistein.
  • Music:
    • David Cieri.
  • Cinematography:
    • Christopher Loren Ewers … director of photography.
  • Editor(s):
  • Production:
    • Florentine Films.
    • Ewers Brothers Productions.
    • WETA Washington D.C.
  • Distributor(s):
  • Release Date: 27 June 2022 to 29 June 2022.
  • Running Time: 60 minutes.
  • Rating: Unknown.
  • Country: US.
  • Language: English.

Hiding in Plain Sight: Youth Mental Illness (2022): Part 01

Introduction

A documentary about the mental health crisis among youth in America.

Outline (General)

Mental illness is one of the most significant health crises in the world – as pervasive as cancer, diabetes, and heart disease – but it often exists in secret and is endured in isolation. It is the place where sadness leaves off, and depression begins; where nervousness becomes anxiety; excitement becomes mania, and habit becomes addiction. It’s the place where simply living becomes painful.

It affects all ages, in families both rich and poor, healthy and dysfunctional. Trauma can be the trigger – from personal crises such as divorce and neglect to environmental disasters, racial injustice, and pandemics. Over time, the symptoms can progress, and lead to increasingly extreme behaviours – like eating disorders, self-harm, and thoughts of suicide.

The issues surrounding mental illness are extraordinarily complex. The risk factors are daunting, the economics bewildering, and the politics contentious. But the most important step – and often the most difficult one – is to start talking about it. Hiding in Plain Sight will bring that conversation into homes, schools, the workplace, and community organisations across the country.

The two-part, four-hour film follows the journeys of more than 20 young Americans from all over the country and all walks of life, who have struggled with thoughts and feelings that have troubled – and, at times – overwhelmed them. They share what they have learned about themselves, their families, and the world in which they live. Through first-person accounts, the film presents an unstinting look at both the seemingly insurmountable obstacles faced by those who live with mental disorders and the hope that many have found after that storm. In the process, they will directly confront the issues of stigma, discrimination, awareness, and silence, and, in doing so, support the ongoing shift in the public perception of mental illness today.

Outline (Part 01)

Focuses on more than twenty young people who provide an intimate look at what it’s like to experience the symptoms of mental illness, from depression to addiction to suicide ideation. The film includes insights from families, providers, and advocates and explores the impact of childhood trauma, stigma, and social media.

Part 02 here.

Production & Filming Details

  • Director(s):
    • Christopher Loren Ewers.
    • Erik Ewers.
  • Producer(s):
    • Ken Burns … executive producer.
    • Julie Coffman … producer.
    • Christopher Loren Ewers … co-producer.
    • Susan Shumaker … co-producer.
    • Erik Ewers … co-producer.
    • Christopher Loren Ewers … co-producer.
    • David Blistein … co-producer.
    • John F. Wilson … executive producer: WETA.
    • Tom Chiodo … executive producer: WETA.
  • Writer(s):
    • David Blistein.
  • Music:
    • David Cieri.
  • Cinematography:
    • Christopher Loren Ewers … director of photography.
  • Editor(s):
  • Production:
    • Florentine Films.
    • Ewers Brothers Productions.
    • WETA Washington D.C.
  • Distributor(s):
  • Release Date: 27 June 2022 to 29 June 2022.
  • Running Time: 60 minutes.
  • Rating: Unknown.
  • Country: US.
  • Language: English.

Elizabeth is Missing (2019)

Introduction

Elizabeth Is Missing is a television drama film directed by Aisling Walsh, adapted by Andrea Gibb from the novel of the same name by Emma Healey. It was broadcast on 08 December 2019 on BBC One. It stars Glenda Jackson as Maud, an elderly woman living with dementia who struggles to piece together a double mystery.

It premiered on PBS on 03 January 2021 as part of its Masterpiece anthology series.

Outline

Maud, a grandmother in her 80s living with Alzheimer’s disease, relies on sticky notes to get through the day as her memory slowly deteriorates. One day her best friend, another elderly woman named Elizabeth, fails to meet her as promised. Maud begins to believe something sinister has happened to Elizabeth, but her attempts to raise the alarm are dismissed by those around her. She is forced to investigate on her own as her memory flashes back to the mystery of another disappearance: that of her elder sister, Sukey, 70 years earlier.

Ultimately, Maud’s daughter Helen learns that Elizabeth is not missing, she is in the hospital having become sick following gardening with Maud. Prompted by Maud, Helen digs in the garden of Maud’s home and uncovers the skeletal remains of Sukey. Sukey’s body had been buried there by Frank, Sukey’s husband, when the neighbourhood was first being constructed 70 years earlier after he had killed her.

cast

  • Glenda Jackson as Maud Horsham, a widowed grandmother living with Alzheimer’s disease who lives alone.
  • Liv Hill as Young Maud Palmer.
  • Sophie Rundle as Susan “Sukey” Jefford, Maud’s sister who went missing seventy years earlier.
  • Helen Behan as Helen, Maud’s daughter.
  • Nell Williams as Katy, Helen’s daughter and Maud’s granddaughter.
  • Mark Stanley as Frank Jefford, Sukey’s husband.
  • Neil Pendleton as Douglas, a lodger who stays with Sukey, Maud and their parents.
  • Sam Hazeldine as Tom Horsham, Maud’s son who lives in Germany.
  • Maggie Steed as Elizabeth, Maud’s friend.
  • John-Paul Hurley as Mr Palmer, Maud and Sukey’s father.
  • Michelle Duncan as Mrs Palmer, Maud and Sukey’s mother.
  • Linda Hargreaves as Carla, Maud’s carer.
  • Tom Urie as a desk sergeant.
  • Anna-Maria Nabirye as Detective Sergeant Grainger.
  • Rachel Mcphail as PC Pam.
  • Stuart McQuarrie as Peter, Elizabeth’s son.

Background

Elizabeth Is Missing is based on the novel of the same name by Emma Healey, published in 2014. Glenda Jackson, who left acting in 1992 to begin a 23-year career as a Labour Party MP, returned to the stage in 2015. She stated that she was inspired after director Aisling Walsh approached her about the role in New York. “I read the script and the book, and they concern issues I have been banging on about for a decade. We are living in a society where no political party, at least in my country, has addressed the issue of how we provide the money to provide the care that an elderly population needs,” Jackson told The New York Times. To prepare for the role, Jackson met with a doctor from Dementia UK, who she said “explained that the anger that many patients with dementia express was frustration.”

Production

STV Studios were responsible for Elizabeth Is Missing, which was filmed in July and August 2019 in Scotland. Paisley, Renfrewshire, stood in for an English town in flashbacks to the 1940s.

Release

Elizabeth Is Missing was well received by critics, who praised the outstanding performance by Glenda Jackson, who returned to television after a 27-year absence.

On 31 July 2020, Jackson won the BAFTA TV award in the leading actress category.

Production & Filming Details

  • Director(s):
    • Aisling Walsh.
  • Producer(s):
    • Sarah Brown … executive producer.
    • Victoria Dabbs … line producer.
    • Andrea Gibb … executive producer.
    • Gaynor Holmes … executive producer: BBC.
    • Chrissy Skinns … producer (produced by).
    • Mark Thomas … executive producer: Creative Scotland.
  • Writer(s):
    • Andrea Gibb … (written by).
    • Emma Healey … (based on the novel by).
  • Music:
    • Dominik Scherrer.
  • Cinematography:
    • Lukas Strebel … director of photography.
  • Editor(s):
    • Alex Mackie.
  • Production:
    • STV Productions.
    • BBC One (for).
  • Distributor(s):
    • British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) (2019) (UK) (TV) (BBC One).
    • BBC One (UK) (TV).
    • Canal+ Polska (2021) (Poland) (TV).
    • HBO Latin America (2020) (Argentina) (TV).
    • KRO-NCRV (2021) (Netherlands) (TV) (NPO2).
    • Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) (2021) (USA) (TV).
    • Yleisradio (YLE) (2021) (Finland) (TV).
  • Release Date: 08 December 2019 (UK).
  • Running Time: 87 minutes.
  • Rating: 12.
  • Country: UK.
  • Language: English.

Surface (2022): S01E08 – See You on the Other Side

Introduction

Surface is an American psychological thriller miniseries created by Veronica West for Apple TV+, and it premiered on 29 July 2022.

A woman’s quest to rebuild her life after a suicide attempt, and her struggle to understand all the things that led up to that moment.

Also known as The Girl in the Water (alternative title, Germany).

Outline

Sophie seems ready to move forward, but can she accept a life with James while questions about her past still linger?

Surface Series

You can find a full index and overview of Surface here.

Production & Filming Details

  • Release Date: 02 September 2022.
  • Running Time: 48 minutes.
  • Rating: TV-MA.
  • Country: US.
  • Language: English.