New Thinking About Mental Health and Employment

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Until recently it has been assumed that people who experience severe and enduring mental health problems are unable to work, unless or until they recover. That assumption is now being challenged by international research demonstrating that, with the right support, people can succeed in finding and keeping a job even when they continue to need support from mental health services. New Thinking about Mental Health and Employment draws together the research undertaken to date and combines it with mental health service users’ perspectives on the workplace to validate key points. Vital reading at both policy and practitioner levels, this book will be of great value to mental health nurses, social workers, general practitioners, psychiatrists and occupational therapists. It will also be of interest to employment advisors, government departments, commissioners, and policy makers and shapers.

Author(s): Bob Grove, Jennifer Secker, Patience Seebolm
Publisher: CRC Press
Year: 1998

Language: English
Pages: 184
City: Boca Raton

Cover
Title
Copyright
Contents
Foreword
About the editors
About the contributors
Acknowledgements
Introduction: rethinking employment and mental health
Part 1 Work with security when you can, security when you can’t
1 Sheep and goats: new thinking on employability
2 What do service users want?
3 Working wounded
4 What’s kept me working?
Part 2 Hitting the bottom and getting back up
5 Getting back to work: what do we know about what works?
6 Employment support in the UK: where are we now?
7 Recovering a life: an in-depth look at employment support in the UK
8 Putting the community back into community care
9 A whole-system approach
10 Unlocking Potential in Sheffield
11 Unlocking the potential of young black men
12 What’s worked for us
Part 3 Avoiding the slippery slope
13 Getting off the slippery slope: what do we know about what works?
14 Getting off the slippery slope: an example from the UK
15 Early intervention: a hand up the slippery slope
Conclusion: the end of all our exploring . . .
Index