“…Dr Clare Polkinghorn, for example, in her 2012 Morris Markowe award winning article entitled, ‘Doctors go mad too’, stated that, “…As a psychiatrist, I had hoped that I was pretty good at empathising with my patients…However, the last nine months of my life has taught me more about mental illness than years of clinics, ward-rounds and home visits or reading psychiatric literature…I was diagnosed with a depressive illness, detained under the Mental Health Act and spent 6 weeks in an NHS psychiatric hospital…”40 Dr Polkinghorn, in the epigram of her exposition, quotes Atticus Finch from Harper Lee's To Kill a Mocking Bird : “In order to understand someone you have to slip into their shoes and walk around in them…”41 It seems that the author is suggesting that healthcare professionals who have first-hand experience of mental health challenges are able to better understand what it is like for mental healthcare service users. This understanding can facilitate empathy, which in turn can enable ‘healing’ to take place.…”