Dear Annie,
The plans for the progamme sound very encouraging. I don't have any ideas in relation to it but am interested to know how, in the context of training, community values are incorporated into evaluation and teaching/learning/training. I read the discussions on supervision earlier this year and would also be interested to see where you got with it. I am training at the moment and exploring supervision & community psychology values, on a placement drawing from this approach, and as I see it there are various interesting tensions to be negotiated.
Any thoughts would be welcomed.
Nicola
________________________________
From: The UK Community Psychology Discussion List on behalf of Annie Mitchell
Sent: Wed 01/12/2004 10:44
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: FWD: Public Health White Paper "Choosing health" & Mental health promotion [Scanned By NHC]
Hi Jan,
Yes; better than average, the ten essential capabilities one, I think. I
believe that it had Jenny Williams on the planning group and those who know
her know she does all she can to challenge inequalities.
We are re-planning our programme for the Doctorate in Clinical and
Community psychology at Exeter from 05 onwards ( the new programme in
Stafford/ Shropshire is doing some similar things and we are trying to
support one another) . Year one will have an explicit emphasis on social
context, culture, communities and systems. This document ( along with
parts of others - there's a massive plethora of documents we have to attend
to now in NHS training...) gives us a policy framework for these changes.
Bronfennbrenner and other developmental psychologists as well as social
constructionism and some aspects of social psychology such as social
identity theory contribute to the theoretical framework.
However, I am also looking for more inspiration for a pedagogical framework
to justify our belief that teaching trainees to think broad ( systems,
culture, community) before narrow ( intra-personal psychological therapies)
will make them more broad minded, resilient, flexible ( as well as socially
responsible) practitioners in the long run. It seems to us to be
inescapable logic - but I would like some more theoretical/ empirical
backup to persuade others less like-minded that this is the right approach
to promoting learning..
since the more standard approach in training psychologists seems to be to
start inside the person ( especially with the current fashion for cognitive
behaviour therapy) and ( sometimes, as an add -on) work outwards ...
Has anyone got any ideas - Freire for example - but others??
Good wishes,
Annie
--On 30 November 2004 22:24 +0000 BostockHush
<[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> Thanks for this recommendations Annie as I had not paid sufficient
> attention to yet another document with a spin!
> Jan
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Annie Mitchell" <[log in to unmask]>
> To: "Jan Bostock" <[log in to unmask]>
> Sent: Tuesday, November 30, 2004 12:57 PM
> Subject: Re: FWD: Public Health White Paper "Choosing health" & Mental
> health promotion [Scanned By NHC]
>
>
> hi penny,
> I get light in the tunnel by sustaining relationships with other like-
> minded folk who share my values - like those on this email list. And
> there are some good things happening in the NHS, individualistic though
> the dominant discourse is. have you, for example, seen the "Ten essential
> capabilities" for mental health workers - it isn't perfect but it's got
> some really good things in it that I am able to refer to in helping us
> currently to move our Doctorate in Clinical and Community Psychology
> forward to a more socially responsible model of training.
>
> I think it's important to find the hooks out there that we can hang on to
> and use for positive progress - there are a few.
>
> good wishes,
>
> Annie
>
>
>
>
>
> --On 30 November 2004 10:38 +0000 pennypriest <[log in to unmask]>
> wrote:
>
>>
>> Exactly. What's new? I have a paper here, called 'The Tyranny of Health
>> Promotion', written by Marshall Becker in 1986. He quotes Zola (in a
>> chapter called 'Medicine as an institution of social control'), who says:
>> 'By locating the source and the treatment of problems in an individual,
>> other levels of intervention are effectively closed' (it could have come
>> straight out of David Smail!). He goes on to say, himself, 'We must be
>> honest and explicit about what we can and cannot do. The domain of
>> personal health over which the individual has direct control is very
>> small when compared to heredity, culture, environment, and chance. Nor is
>> health promotion the panacea for rising health care costs.' I could go
>> on. But this was 1986, and yet we have a burgeoning evidence base on
>> Azjen's theory of planned behaviour and Prochaska and DiClemente's stages
>> of change, like psychology has gone down some long dark tunnel, seeking
>> an ever smaller source of light. And yes, it's so despairing, I sometimes
>> feel like I'm in the blooming tunnel myself and I'm damned if I can get
>> out! Perhaps I need to get myself some CBT.
>> Penny
>>
>>
>> ----- Original Message -----
>> From: Diamond Bob
>> To: [log in to unmask]
>> Sent: Tuesday, November 30, 2004 9:16 AM
>> Subject: Re: FWD: Public Health White Paper "Choosing health" & Mental
>> health promotion [Scanned By NHC]
>>
>>
>> Thanks Paul
>> It is despairing. Clearly for this Government health is considered to be
>> an individual thing, with the emphasis on making individual choices. This
>> is because it is convenient and gets them off the hook of introducing
>> policies that address inequalities. Quite despairing but then what's new?
>>
>> Bob
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Paul@home [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
>> Sent: 29 November 2004 22:53
>> To: [log in to unmask]
>> Subject: Re: FWD: Public Health White Paper "Choosing health" & Mental
>> health promotion
>>
>> Here is Mr Blair's foreword to the White paper. Don't read this if you
>> have
>> just eaten.... it may make you feel nauseous
>>
>> For each of us, one of the most important things in life is our own and
>> our
>> family's health. I believe that this concern, and the responsibility that
>> we
>> each take for our own health, should be the basis for improving the
>> health
>> of everyone across the nation. ... It aims to inform and encourage people
>> as
>> individuals, and to help shape the commercial and cultural environment we
>> live in so that it is easier to choose a healthy lifestyle.
>>
>> Small changes in the choices people make can make a big difference. Taken
>> together, these changes can lead to huge improvements in health across
>> society. But changes need to be based on choices, not direction. We are
>> clear that
>> Government cannot ? and should not ? pretend it can 'make' the population
>> healthy. But it can ? and should ? support people in making better
>> choices
>> for their health and the health of their families. It is for people to
>> make
>> the healthy
>> choice if they wish to.
>>
>>###########
>> Note that he does not mention the economic or political climate, it is
>> now
>> just culture and commerce .. interesting! I would suggest that we
>> compliment
>> the reading of the White paper with a re/reading of Richard Wilkinson's
>> book
>> on Unhealthy Societies and see what conclusions we distill from it. My
>> own
>> view is that the White Paper displays in many parts an appauling piece of
>> victim-blaming (we are primarily responsible for our own health/ill
>> health),
>> and displays an absurd lack of engagement with the systemic causes of
>> ill-health (income inequalities, corporate tyrany etc). It looks clear
>> that
>> the government are wanting to push the individual responsibilty harder
>> than
>> the corporate responsiblity so we may have to be creative in how we argue
>> that what we do merits funding under this policy initiative - thankfully
>> the
>> civil service might offer us a rescue as they re-interpret this policy.
>> You
>> might also find the following section on mental health issues in the
>> "easy
>> read summary" of the white paper interesting. I quote it in full and
>> direct
>> from source:
>>
>> "We want to help people be healthy mentally. This is because:
>> - many people living in England now have mental ill health. Mental ill
>> health is things like being very depressed.
>> - it is very important to be healthy mentally, as well as having a
>> healthy
>> body
>> - mental ill health can lead to people killing themselves"
>>
>> I promise you, the above is exactly as stated in the 'accessible' version
>> of
>> the white paper, it actually reads this way ... Oh dear, oh dear, oh
>> dear....
>>
>> p
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: The UK Community Psychology Discussion List
>> [mailto:[log in to unmask]]On Behalf Of amitchel
>> Sent: 29 November 2004 22:17
>> To: [log in to unmask]
>> Subject: [COMMUNITYPSYCHUK] FWD: Public Health White Paper "Choosing
>> health" & Mental health promotion
>>
>>> =The attached may be of interest to many of us,
>> Annie
>>
>> Annie==== Original Message From "Jean Alger-Green"
>> <[log in to unmask]> =====
>> Sent on behalf of Jeremy Voaden
>> To: Members of NIMHE South-West Mental Health Promotion and Social
>> Inclusion Networks
>>
>> Please find attached:
>> A summary of the mental health promotion content of "Choosing Health",
>> the recent Public Health White Paper.
>>
>> "We will ensure that standard one of the NSF for Mental Health which
>> deals with mental health promotion is fully implemented" (p.131, Ch.6)
>>
>> This document summarises the mental health promotion opportunities in
>> the recent White Paper "Choosing Health: Making healthy choices easier"
>> (DoH, 2004)
>> Each chapter is analysed under the following headings:
>> -Policy focus/direction
>> -Initiatives/settings highlighted as good practice
>> -New initiatives, capacity and resources
>> -Missed Opportunities
>>
>> Of particular interest is:
>> Chapter Three: Children and Young People
>> Chapter Four: Local Communities-all about social capital
>> Chapter Five: Health as a way of life-lots of implications for
>> recovery, self-management etc
>> Chapter Seven: Work and health
>>
>> Best wishes
>> Jeremy
>> Jeremy Voaden
>> Public Health & Mental Health Promotion Specialist
>> NIMHE South-West
>> Tel: 07747-562437
>> e-mail: [log in to unmask]
>>
>> Eastgate House (Ground Floor)
>> 121-131 Eastgate Street
>> Gloucester GL1 1QB
>>
>> Jean Alger-Green
>> Office Manager
>> NIMHE South West
>> Ivor House
>> 2 Tower Lane
>> Taunton
>> TA1 4AR
>> Tel; 01823 337879
>> Fax: 01823 272897
>> [log in to unmask]
>>
>> ___________________________________
>>
>> COMMUNITYPSYCHUK - The discussion list for community psychology in the
>> UK.
>> To unsubscribe or to change your details visit the website:
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>> [log in to unmask]
>>
>> ___________________________________
>>
>> COMMUNITYPSYCHUK - The discussion list for community psychology in the
>> UK.
>> To unsubscribe or to change your details visit the website:
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>> [log in to unmask] ___________________________________
>>
>> COMMUNITYPSYCHUK - The discussion list for community psychology in the
>> UK. To unsubscribe or to change your details visit the website:
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>> queries, contact the list moderator at [log in to unmask]
>>
>> ___________________________________
>>
>> COMMUNITYPSYCHUK - The discussion list for community psychology in the
>> UK. To unsubscribe or to change your details visit the website:
>> http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/lists/COMMUNITYPSYCHUK.HTML For any problems or
>> queries, contact the list moderator at [log in to unmask]
>
>
>
> Annie Mitchell
> Lecturer in Psychology,
> Clinical Director, Doctorate in Clinical and Community Psychology,
>
> School of Psychology,
> Washington Singer Building,
> University of Exeter,
> Exeter,
> EX4 4QG
>
> Phone 01392 264621 or
> Liz Mears, Programme Administrator 01392 403184
>
> ___________________________________
>
> COMMUNITYPSYCHUK - The discussion list for community psychology in the UK.
> To unsubscribe or to change your details visit the website:
> http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/lists/COMMUNITYPSYCHUK.HTML
> For any problems or queries, contact the list moderator at
> [log in to unmask]
>
> ___________________________________
>
> COMMUNITYPSYCHUK - The discussion list for community psychology in the UK.
> To unsubscribe or to change your details visit the website:
> http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/lists/COMMUNITYPSYCHUK.HTML
> For any problems or queries, contact the list moderator at
> [log in to unmask]
Annie Mitchell
Lecturer in Psychology,
Clinical Director, Doctorate in Clinical and Community Psychology,
School of Psychology,
Washington Singer Building,
University of Exeter,
Exeter,
EX4 4QG
Phone 01392 264621 or
Liz Mears, Programme Administrator 01392 403184
___________________________________
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To unsubscribe or to change your details visit the website:
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For any problems or queries, contact the list moderator at [log in to unmask]
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