Legal, social, cultural and political developments in mental health care in the UK: the Liverpool black mental health service users' perspective

Documentary evidence suggests that attitudes among local health and social services professionals towards the concept of user involvement in health and social care remain deeply polarized, a position characterized by commentators simultaneously as praise and damnation. Perhaps user involvement in he...

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Published inJournal of psychiatric and mental health nursing Vol. 9; no. 1; pp. 103 - 110
Main Author Pierre, S. A.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford, UK Blackwell Science, Ltd 01.02.2002
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc
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ISSN1351-0126
1365-2850
DOI10.1046/j.1351-0126.2001.00452.x

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Summary:Documentary evidence suggests that attitudes among local health and social services professionals towards the concept of user involvement in health and social care remain deeply polarized, a position characterized by commentators simultaneously as praise and damnation. Perhaps user involvement in health and social care will enhance, and it appears to resonate with the logic of, participatory democracy, in localities where the centralization of power has posed questions as to the nature and purpose of local governance in public services provision. The problems experienced by Britain’s black and ethnic minorities within the mental health system have been the subject of exhaustive social inquiry. This essay attempts to explore the way in which legal, social, cultural, and political developments interface with mental health care practice in the UK, in order to assist those responsible for mental health services provision to deliver services that are in line with the Government’s expectation of a modernized mental health service that is safe, sound, and supportive. An exploration of these developments within the European, national (UK), and local (Liverpool) contexts is undertaken. An appropriate local response to national priorities will ostensibly cut a swathe through the barriers confronted by the ethnic minority mental health service user in the cross‐cultural context, an important prerequisite for the implementation of genuine user involvement.
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ISSN:1351-0126
1365-2850
DOI:10.1046/j.1351-0126.2001.00452.x