During the last ten years in the UK, service user consultation and collaboration has gradually entered the vocabulary of people providing and purchasing mental health services. However, we are not convinced that much needed change in mental health services will be achieved as a function of increased commitment to market consumerism. We argue here that service user consultation and collaboration should take account of the effects of social inequalities on mental health and on mental health services. This perspective highlights the need for fundamental change in mental health services, and helps us to appreciate the strength of resistance to change, and to understand some of the dynamics involved. We describe here how this perspective has motivated and shaped our own efforts to collaborate responsibly with service users to change mental health services.
The provision of mental health services to women has come sharply into focus for providers of secure psychiatric services in the UK. Women's services are being developed in response to the known risks of mixed-sex provision, and a growing appreciation of the ways that women in secure services can be further disadvantaged by their minority status. Our intention here is to present evidence and reflections to help inform this development. The evidence is drawn from our recent work in this field, which includes carrying out a review of local mental health services for ‘difficult’ women, and developing and piloting a national training programme for staff working with women in secure services. The reflections we offer are informed by the conviction that taking social inequalities into account is central to making sense of women's mental health difficulties, and improving service responses to women's needs. While there are signs that many mental health workers in secure services are beginning to share these convictions, the challenge now is to provide the necessary authorization, training and support that will enable them to translate these understandings into empowerment practice with women.
Whilst there is increasing acceptance that social inequalities have implications
for mental health, there is minimal acknowledgement of their effects on the
development and treatment of mental ill health in older people. This paper
focuses on older women, as they are the majority sufferers of mental illness in
later life, and are particularly vulnerable to the cumulative effects of lifelong
and age-related inequalities. The authors, who draw upon literature from the
fields of gerontology and mental health, argue that for effective care to be
developed, older women's mental ill health needs to be seen within the context
of their past and present experience of social inequalities. Evidence particularly
relates to socio-economic disadvantages as well as to the consequences of
discrimination. It is argued that psychological vulnerability is further
compounded by the gendered effects of social policy, and by a care system
which constructs mental health needs as unrelated to oppression, and
dislocated from their economic, social and historical roots. Finally, the authors
outline the key components of a care and service system which takes account
of social inequalities, and which accords centrality to the experiences, views
and opinions of older women with mental health problems.
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