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Experiences of Mental Health In-Patient Care: Narratives from Service Users, Carers and Professionals - Mark Hardcastle, David Kennard, Sheila Grandison and Leonard Fagin (eds) Routledge, 2007, £19.99 pb, 218pp. ISBN 978-0-415-41082-3

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Larry Culliford*
Affiliation:
PO Box 2567, Steyning, West Sussex BN5 0BR, UK, email [email protected]
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Abstract

Type
The columns
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2008

Contributors to this fine book are to be thanked and congratulated for forthright, deeply reflective pieces. The editors are particularly praiseworthy for vision and tenacity, in both setting up and completing the project. To produce such a consistent and seamless read demonstrates consummate skill.

The title tells exactly what the book is about. Two forewords and three introductory chapters clarify its scope and format. Three sections follow, one each on the experiences of service users, carers (close relatives) and mental health staff. Typically, in each chapter there is a first-person account of psychiatric in-patient experience – always insightful, frequently challenging and often moving – followed by two complementary (but not necessarily complimentary) ‘commentaries’. Chapters end with ‘Questions and issues for discussion’ and an exercise, ideal for use in multidisciplinary CPD training.

Each section is followed by a ‘Summary of the main issues’. The book is completed by a commendable, brief after-word on ‘Things you can do to make in-patient care a better experience’ (just six headed paragraphs including ‘Tell people what's going on and why’ and ‘Looking after yourself’), followed by a reference list and index. The book also carries an art psychotherapist's line drawing illustrations.

The book is an easy, fluent read, but a sometimes uncomfortable one. There is a strong argument that the quality of a mental health service depends on with what degrees of kindness, compassion and generosity the most severely ill and disabled are handled. The investment here of time, intelligence and resources (material and human) can provide a necessarily strong infrastructure and repay big dividends. Looking at it another way, as this book makes plain, if a service fails to provide a central, adequately sized, adequately staffed in-patient service at one end (and does not have easy access for service users to appropriate housing of good quality at the other), the system will struggle and everyone will feel the pressure: patients, carers and mental health staff alike, easily then finding themselves at loggerheads.

Many contributors, including professionals, agree that a human response – to engage with the distressed person, listen, validate the emotions and allow them to settle – is preferable to the ‘us-and-them’ institutional response involving staff distancing themselves from patients and carers by using medication, restraint and/or seclusion, and by retreating into the office to complete ‘essential’ paperwork (or read a magazine). It appears that staff members are systematically encouraged to deny and suppress their own natural feelings of distress. Solutions to key problems will not be easy until it is clear where responsibility for change really lies. One idea, emphasised repeatedly, is that managing mental illness involves supportive teamwork, and a successful team includes the service user and the carers as equal and valued partners.

There is another helpful pointer in the admirable concluding chapter, where hospital chaplain Mike Pritchard advocates the raising of spiritual awareness among mental health professionals, and recommends curiosity about the person's inner self, about what gives life meaning, and about what helps best in adversity. Asking these types of question can be uniquely satisfying, helping to build confidence and thus improve professional–patient relationships.

Although admittedly painful reading in places, this splendid book is an excellent resource at many levels. Its honesty commends it to service-users, carers and mental health staff, both to validate their own experiences and suggest ways to improve things. Mental health service managers, commissioners, local and national politicians will also benefit by reading some of the narratives presented. News may then filter through to the public that mental illness can be managed safely and effectively, with community services backed by adequate numbers of in-patient places, plus sufficient suitable housing options.

As a Royal College, we have not recently been shy of telling people how common mental illness is. Now is the time, with the help of this book, to acquaint them unapologetically with details of how destructive it can be too. Let people draw for themselves the obvious conclusion that we need greater recognition. Their support will help us focus better on facing, finding meaning in and growing through the suffering, rather than continually seeking to deny, avoid, control, suppress or remove it. To read this book is to discover that what we do could seem increasingly worthwhile.

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