Search results for ‘Subject term:"mental health problems"’ Sort:
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Hidden healthcare
- Author:
- JOHNSON Robin
- Journal article citation:
- Mental Health Today, April 2011, pp.14-17.
- Publisher:
- Pavilion
- Place of publication:
- Hove
Some of the mental health problems that social housing staff have to deal with in their work are discussed. These include paranoia, hoarding and personality disorders. The article highlights how social housing is supporting some of the most vulnerable people in society and argues that social housing should be include in partnerships and joint initiatives to identify needs.
Public health and social housing: a natural alliance
- Author:
- JOHNSON Robin
- Journal article citation:
- Housing Care and Support, 14(1), 2011, pp.6-14.
- Publisher:
- Emerald
In November 2010, the UK Coalition Government unveiled its White Paper on the future course of the new national public health services. The White Paper offers significant advances in the promotion of public health, and especially the role of local government in brokering local partnerships. The aim of this paper is to summarise and comment on evolving UK policy in public health and social housing, using mental health is as an example. It especially aims to outline the gaps in conventional health research approaches that have tended to obscure the evidence and potential in collaborative working. The paper describes how the evidence base relating to public health policy remains scattered across different disciplines and their various disparate communication channels. Any new public health strategy focussed on health inequalities needs to recognise the role that social housing already plays in supporting concentrations of the more vulnerable. Better recognition of the everyday social and mental health problems that social housing staff deal with illustrates the central role of housing management as the defining factor in social housing, and the potential for partnerships with public health.
Social psychiatry and social policy for the 21st century - new concepts for new needs: the ‘psychologically-informed environment’
- Authors:
- JOHNSON Robin, HAIGH Rex
- Journal article citation:
- Mental Health and Social Inclusion, 14(4), November 2010, pp.30-35.
- Publisher:
- Emerald
There are many modern-day environments in which the original therapeutic community (TC) model has been unable to make headway. This paper describes new ideas have been emerging over recent years for the development of institutions and services that can be adapted to a wide range of psychological needs and settings, such as homelessness hostels and refuges. It proposes that where the concept of a TC was unable to go, the more flexible and adaptable concept of a psychologically-informed environment (PIE) can be applied. The PIE approach seems to offer greater flexibility in scope than the TC model. With its stress on reflective practice in frontline services, the PIE approach, along with its counterpart the psychologically-informed planned environment (PIPE) for high risk or security settings, aim to revitalise discussion over how best to manage the psychological and emotional needs of some of the most excluded from society and to support them into recovery.
Medical-social divide hindering homeless people
- Author:
- JOHNSON Robin
- Journal article citation:
- Community Care, 12.8.10, 2010, p.28.
- Publisher:
- Reed Business Information
The need for homelessness services to develop a greater understanding of the emotional needs of homeless people is highlighted. The author draws on the new guidance 'Meeting the psychological and emotional needs of people who are homeless' issued by the Department for Communities and Local Government and the government's National Mental Health Development Unit.
Bringing it all back home: mental health and housing
- Author:
- JOHNSON Robin
- Journal article citation:
- Housing Care and Support, 11(3), November 2008, pp.30-35.
- Publisher:
- Emerald
This article calls for better co-operation and co-ordination between mental health and housing support services, and greater recognition of the important role of social housing in community mental health care. The article was originally published as: Johnson R (2008) A Life in the Day 12(2), pp.9-13.
Innovation, local engagement and leadership; the future of supported housing in mental health
- Authors:
- JOHNSON Robin, ROBINSON Zoe
- Journal article citation:
- Housing Care and Support, 11(1), July 2008, pp.20-25.
- Publisher:
- Emerald
The new local government performance framework, in combination with the move to greater personalisation in services, creates a very new funding environment for housing with care and support. From the Public Service Agreement (PSA) on achieving settled accommodation for individuals at risk of exclusion, through to the impact of local joint strategic needs assessments and individual budgets, the principles and mechanisms of the new joint commissioning culture create more opportunities for providers to articulate the needs of the client group served, and to assert the case for more joined-up and responsive services. This may require different skills and new styles of leadership at local level, and providers who have become adept at being competitors may need to re-discover the skills of partnership. Meanwhile, new social exclusion policy frameworks are emerging for supported accommodation, which can support moves way from institutional care for those with mental health problems. This author discusses this changing environment.
Housing, home and recovery
- Author:
- JOHNSON Robin
- Journal article citation:
- Mental Health Today, December 2007, pp.27-29.
- Publisher:
- Pavilion
- Place of publication:
- Hove
Supported housing can provide the community and peer support that many vulnerable groups need to maintain mental well-being. This article looks at the role supported housing in the development of new ways of thinking about mental health - where supported housing is not only meeting needs but also providing a community.
Do “complex needs” need “complex needs services”? – part one
- Author:
- JOHNSON Robin
- Journal article citation:
- Mental Health and Social Inclusion, 17(3), 2013, pp.127-134.
- Publisher:
- Emerald
Purpose – This paper – the first of two – aims to trace the origins of, and suggest the underlying intentions behind, the recent appearance of the new term “complex needs”, amongst commissioners, service providers and some service user groups. Design/methodology/approach – The paper takes a narrative approach, describing the early appearance of the term “complex needs” in services for those excluded from and/or stigmatised in mental health services. This is then contextualised with UK Government policy papers. Findings – Contemporary usage of the term “complex needs” may at times be inconsistent and confusing; but it reflects government concerns that service provision has become too narrow in focus, and less needs-led. The concept embodies an implicit critique of overly narrow practice, and holds the prospect of more systemic change. Originality/value – “Complex needs” is relatively new, as a quasi-technical term; as is any analysis locating its usage in the context of current overly narrow service definitions. (Publisher abstract)