Teaching Mental Health
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More About This Title Teaching Mental Health

English

Mental health service users and carers are increasingly involved in the planning and delivery of a mental health education that gives a "real-life" perspective to the practice of mental health care. Teaching and Learning about Mental Health is designed to teach and train new mental health workers, using an interdisciplinary approach. Divided into three parts, the first discusses learning from service users; the second looks at innovative practices in teaching and learning; and the final part examines several approaches in teaching and learning, all illustrated with examples.

English

Theo Stickley is Lecturer in Mental Health in the School of Nursing at the University of Nottingham. He teaches the post-graduate certificate in primary mental health care and is the Chair of the Arts and Mental Health Development Group within Nottingham Healthcare NHS Trust.

Thurstine Basset is an independent mental health training consultant. He works for various national organisations in the mental health field, including the Mental Health Foundation, Mind and the Richmond Fellowship. He is Honorary Senior Research Fellow at the Tizard Centre at the University of Kent.

English

About the Editors.

Contributors.

Preface.

1 Setting the Scene.

Theo Stickley and Thurstine Basset.

Part I Learning from one another.

2 Making Waves in Nurse Education: The PINE project.

Sharon Roberts, Ron Collier, Becky Shaw and Joan Cook.

3 Learning from Experience: The CAPITAL Project.

Clare Ockwell.

4 The highs and lows of service user involvement.

Rachel Nickeas.

5 “I am the Visual Aid”: A teacher who is also a service user, not a service user who used to be a teacher.

Allan Foreman and Alan Pringle.

6 The evolving minds experience: Using video for positive change, education and empowerment.

Melissa Gunasena.

7 Personal perspectives on mental health problems: an introduction in the medical undergraduate curriculum

Jacqueline Atkinson.

8 Consumer involvement: Collaborative working in post basic mental health education.

Jayne Breezeand Julie Repper.

9 The Ten Essential Shared Capabilities – their development and application.

Ian Baguley, Thurstine Basset and Peter Lindley.

10 Educators learning together: Linking communities of practice.

Jill Anderson and Hilary Burgess.

11 Interprofessional action research: loosening bricks in the modernist’s walls.

William Spence.

Part II Key Topics in mental health education.

12 Values-based practice in teaching and learning.

Bill Fulford and Kim Woodbridge.

13 Emotional intelligence in mental health education.

Dawn Freshwater and Theo Stickley.

14 Teaching recovery to the Support Time and Recovery workers.

Esther Cooke.

15 Towards social inclusion.

Peter Bates.

16 Race Equality & Cultural Capability.

Peter Ferns.

17 Psychosocial Interventions: Implementation in Practice.

Lorraine Rayner, Norman Young and Madeline O’Carroll.

18 Exploring practitioners’ relationships with the pharmaceutical industry.

Neil Carver and Russell Ashmore.

Part III A variety of approaches.

19 Revisiting Psychosis (a two-day workshop).

Mark Hayward, Alison Blank, Philip Houghton and Becky Shaw.

20 Developing Problem-based Learning for a Pre-registration Mental Health Nursing Programme.

Carol Cooper and Sue Gunstone.

21 Using Problem-based Learning in Mental Health Nurse Education.

Paul Bickerstaffe, Ben Hannigan, Steve Wood and Norman Young.

22 Teaching and Learning Reflective Practice.

Dawn Freshwater.

23 The buzzing, blooming confusion of clinical practice: Preparing mental health nurses to generate knowledge within, from and for practice.

Liam MacGabhann and Chris Stevenson.

24 Enquiry-Based Learning and Service User Involvement.

Janet H Barker and Brenda Rush.

25 Promoting emotional development through using drama in mental health education.

Yolanda Wasylko and Theo Stickley.

26 Work-based Learning: a model for the future.

Alan Beadsmoore and Thurstine Basset.

27 Information Technology (from the classroom to the workplace).

Paul Linsley.

28 Therapy training online- using the internet to widen access to training in mental health issues.

Chris Blackmore, Emmy van Deurzen, Digby Tantam.

29 Teaching and Learning in the future.

Theo Stickley and Thurstine Basset.

Index.

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"The focus on active involvement of people who use mental health services make this book valuable for psychiatric rehabilitation trainers as well as for educators and policy makers in the more generic behavioral health field. Their message is a strong one, insisting that mental health trainers and educators have political and ethical responsibility as well as a practical obligation to teach recover-oriented practice." (Psychiatric Rehabilitation Journal, Winter 2009)

"…provides the health professional with an insight into the concerns and questions that someone suffering with schizophrenia needs to consider…" (Mental Health Today, March 2008)

"With twenty-nine chapters by over fifty authors it certainly brings together a wealth of experience" (Journal of Analytical Psychology, 2008)

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