Search results for ‘Subject term:"mental health problems"’ Sort:
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When are attachment difficulties an indication for specialist mental health input?
- Authors:
- RATNAYAKE Adheesha, BOWLAY-WILLIAMS Jeanette, VOSTANIS Panos
- Journal article citation:
- Adoption and Fostering, 38(2), 2014, pp.159-170.
- Publisher:
- Sage
This article presents the characteristics of 83 looked after and 67 adopted children at the time of their first assessment by a designated mental health team in the context of potential appropriateness of this service. Attachment and mental health problems were significantly associated across most subscales of the Relationships Problems (RPQ) and the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaires (SDQ). Adopted children were younger and were rated higher on both measures. One-third of the children were rated below the clinical cut-off SDQ score. The service appeared to adopt broad referral criteria to include attachment difficulties rather than just mental health disorders. The findings are discussed in relation to the varied interpretation of the constructs of attachment difficulties and disorders, and the future development of care pathways for looked after and adopted children. (Publisher abstract)
Organisational issues facing a voluntary sector mental health service for homeless young people
- Authors:
- TAYLOR Helen, STUTTAFORD Maria, VOSTANIS Panos
- Journal article citation:
- Journal of Integrated Care, 15(1), February 2007, pp.37-47.
- Publisher:
- Emerald
The voluntary sector has an important role to play in the provision of services for people with mental health needs of lessor severity, thus complementing statutory services, as suggested by recent national policy. This article describes such a service for young homeless people, and discusses the perceptions of key stakeholders of the benefits and challenges of such a service. The service largely met the mental health needs of young people who would not have easily accessed statutory mental health services, and who fulfilled the criteria (low/moderate need) of the service. Challenges for the future include the different organisational cultures, the professional isolation of the mental health practitioners and the lack of operational and commissioning links with statutory mental health services.
A UK survey on how homeless shelters respond to the mental health needs of homeless young people
- Authors:
- TAYLOR Helen, STUTTAFORD Maria, VOSTANIS Panos
- Journal article citation:
- Housing Care and Support, 9(2), October 2006, pp.13-18.
- Publisher:
- Emerald
Research and national policies have highlighted that accommodation providers need to offer holistic interventions to encourage young homeless people with mental health needs to break the cycle of homelessness. In this study a postal questionnaire was sent to 132 managers of the Foyer Federations homeless shelters in the UK, achieving a response rate of 64.4%. Frequencies and descriptive statistics were calculated, and written data was analysed using content analysis. Mental health problems were prevalent, and homeless shelters responded in a variety of ways (use of GP services, internal services, referring to external services, in-house outreach services, no service provision, etc). Only 27% of managers of homeless shelters reported that their services were sufficient to meet their young people's needs. These findings reflect the need for inclusion of mental health in homeless shelters' strategic objectives, and development of commissioning of local partnerships with health agencies.