Clients from our Ards New Horizons Service graduated from the WRAP Course taken by Facilitator John O’Grady. The Wellness Recovery Action Plan or WRAP is used worldwide by people who are dealing with all kinds of health and life challenges. WRAP was developed by a group of people with mental health issues. They learned to identify the things that they can do to feel better and stay well. These personal resources are ‘wellness tools’. You can learn about WRAP working with other people in a group, or you can learn on your own or with a supporter. Its your plan. For more info on WRAP; please visit: www.wrapandrecoverybooks.com
All posts by actionmentalhealth
Time Out takes Time Out!
Participants in the Time out programme in AMH New Horizons Fermanagh are showcasing their art work at an exhibition in Grangewood Hospital Gransha Park, Derry. The Time Out programme which is funded by the Big Lottery through the Western Regional Impact of Alcohol Portfolio Project introduces people to a range of artistic medium including sculpture, glass work, and photography. The programme also supports people who are concerned about the damaging role which alcohol play…s in their life through 1-1 support, group work, and training programmes.
At present , 20 people are attending the programme. The Time Out exhibition includes our Kaleidoscope collection ,a stunning contemporary art installation worked in various hues of shaded glass, inspired by the artists lived experience. Shards of broken glass, symbolising a shattered life, are gently reconnected, piece by piece, creating breath taking art work mirroring the colourful journey of recovery. Sculptures are hand made from recycled cotton or linen, which is treated with textile hardener, and can be used indoors and outdoors – all sculpted by Time Out people!
Stress in the Workplace Conference
The third conference in this series of events will take place in Crumlin Road Gaol on Thursday 30th April 2015. The topic this time will be Stress in Workplace. Special Guests will include Virgin Atlantic and Schrader Electronics. Schrader will also unveil their Stress Audit. This is a free event, for more information and to book your place, please contact [email protected].
Our brochures from the previous 2 conferences can be downloaded here:
Mental Health in the Workplace Waterfoot Hotel Derry
Managing Mental Health in the Workplace Clotworthy House Antrim
Give it a Shot! Clay Pigeon Shoot
Give It A Shot! First Clay Pigeon Shooting Event For AMH!
Action Mental Health (AMH) announce their 2015 charity partnership in style with a fundraising-first for the organisation – the “Give It A Shot” Clay Pigeon Shooting event!
Partnered by local employer The Wilson Group, AMH will host this fundraising event with a difference, continuing our theme of supporting sports and physical activity to improve the mental wellbeing of the nation.
One of the fastest growing sports in the UK today, Clay Shooting is a social, competitive, safe and fun sport. Accessible to men and women of all abilities, it is easy to learn but difficult to master!
This Shoot will take place on Saturday 30th May from 09.30 in Field of Dreams, 55 Upper Gransha Road, Bangor, BT19 7QE. Open primarily to experienced shooters who will bring their own guns, the £50 entry fee includes 40 birds, archery, BBQ lunch, prizes for Top Gun of £250, 1st of £150, 2nd of £100 and 3rd of £50. There will also be a raffle drawn on the day with other fantastic prizes up for grabs.
Commenting on the charity partnership, Desmond Wilson, Group Managing Director said;
“As a local company providing sustainable employment, each year we support a nominated charity by organising events to raise funds. We are delighted to support a local charity who also provide employment opportunities and we hope that the money raised will help make a difference to those living with mental ill-health.”
To purchase tickets visit www.giveitashot.eventbrite.co.uk or contact Callum [email protected] or 028 9182 8494
Salus Takes A Bow
Salus Project: model mental health awareness training for young people
Salus sadly comes to an end at the end of March 2015 and to mark the project’s many wonderful achievements we hosted a Final Salus event, on Friday 27th February at Erne Integrated College, Enniskillen, Co Fermanagh.
The Salus Project has been held up as “an exemplar mental health awareness training model for young people, front line staff, Teachers Parents & Carers” by an independent evaluation. These were some of the highlights shared at event .
Salus (meaning wellbeing in Latin) began delivering in post primary schools across Fermanagh, Derry, Donegal and Cavan in September 2013. This vital project, received over £300,000 from the European Union INTERREG IVA Programme, and was delivered as a joint initiative between Action Mental Health and the National Learning Network, providing pupils, teachers, parents, carers and youth facilitators with vital mental health awareness training.
Pauline Flanagan, Manager of the Salus project, informed an audience of invited guests including local MLAs, Councillors and key people from the Education and Health sectors North and South, that 6,700 young people aged 11 to 25 years and the adults in their lives had received Mental Health Resilience training in the form of ‘Provoking Thought’ workshops.
These sessions help recognise the signs and symptoms of mental ill-health as well as providing advice on how to look after your mental wellbeing and where to seek help if you need it.
Other bespoke workshops were delivered on topics such as Bullying & Peer Pressure, Confidence & Self-esteem, Self-harm & Suicide Prevention, Stress & Exam Stress – all from the suite of programmes designed by Action Mental Health.
Celebrating the success of the project, key note speakers included the charity’s CEO, David Babington and David Muldoon, Head of Accreditation, Standards & Supports at the National Learning Network, Dr Cody, a Consultant Psychiatrist in the Western Health and Social Care Trust and Chair of Royal College of Psychiatrist in Northern Ireland.
They jointly called on policy makers to endorse this model which has been independently evaluated and to place Mental Health awareness training as a compulsory subject on the school curriculum.
A drama production ‘Sound of Silence’ was performed by young people from across the four counties under the guidance of Brenda Burns, Drama Facilitator. This was one of many mental health promotion activities carried to endorse the Public Health Agency’s campaign “5 Ways to Wellbeing” on how to look after you mental health. The production was recorded professionally and will be available for future resilience training presentations, run by Action Mental Health, as a legacy of the Salus project.
Major Study into Mental Health Services
ACTION MENTAL HEALTH ANNOUNCE MAJOR STUDY ON PROVISION OF MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES TO BE CARRIED OUT BY QUEEN’S UNIVERSITY BELFAST
Have Your Say …. by completing our on-line survey. CLOSING DATE 13th March 2015!!
As one of Northern Ireland’s largest mental health charities, AMH are delighted to announce the commissioning of a major report into the level of service provision for people with mental health issues across Northern Ireland. The study, which will be carried out by Queen’s University Belfast will survey the opinions of staff working with people living with mental ill health, in both the statutory and voluntary sectors, as well as with service users and carers.
The aim of the study is to explore possible gaps, limitations, inconsistencies and strengths in services across Northern Ireland and the views of staff, service users and carers. This expert examination aims to provide a platform for all those with experience of and an opinion on mental health services to have their say.
Action Mental Health’s Chief Executive David Babington said that the charity wanted to compile a realistic picture of how people with mental illness in Northern Ireland are supported, which could be used as a resource in the planning of future services and funding.
“As one of the main voluntary and community based service providers of support for people with mental health issues, we are all too aware of the level of disparity between what is on offer and what is required. We also have serious concerns that the closure of beds and the removal of services as part of TYC are not being balanced by investment in community based services. Ultimately people in Northern Ireland with mental health issues, and the family members who care for them, are being let down, and we felt that it was necessary to audit services and perceptions in order to present government with a realistic and detailed picture of the reality people face.”
He added,
“Queen’s University has huge experience in this field, and we have been impressed with their approach to the research to date. Over the coming weeks they will be carrying out further interviews and we have also launched an online questionnaire which is open to all. We will launch the findings of the report in late May, and then ensure that every MLA and decision maker in Northern Ireland gets a copy. Action Mental Health is passionate about its work, and committed to the people it serves. This initiative will help us lobby Stormont to finally accept that even in these straightened times, people with mental health issues in Northern Ireland and their families require better services”
Dr George Wilson of the School of Sociology, Social Policy & Social Work at Queen’s University, who is leading the team of researchers, said
“This study is one of the most comprehensive surveys undertaken in Northern Ireland of the views of professional staff involved in providing mental health services and people who use them. It should make a significant contribution in helping to inform future mental health policy and service development.”
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Background
In the Budget 2011-15, the Northern Ireland Executive stated its continuing commitment to the implementation of the Bamford Review on mental health, in particular early intervention, the development of community services, further reduction in long-stay hospital populations, and improvement in prison mental health and children and young people’s provision. However, the second Bamford Action Plan, 2012-15, acknowledges that funding will continue to be a significant challenge in the period to 2015. In stark contrast with the anticipated budget at the outset of the 2009-11 Action Plan, the only additional funding to the Health and Social Care sector earmarked for mental health services over the 2012-15 budget period is £2.80m.
In recent years there have been calls for a more radical approach to the consideration of the cost of, and also public spending on, mental health in the UK. A report published by the London School of Economics’ Centre for Economic Performance Mental Health Policy Group argues that there are massive inequalities in the way in which mental illness is treated by the NHS as compared with physical illness:
“The under-treatment of people with crippling mental illness is the most glaring case of health inequality in our country”
For example, the report states that nearly half of all ill health among people under 65 is mental illness and yet only a quarter of those with mental illness are in treatment compared with the vast majority of those with physical illness, and that mental illness accounts for 23% of the total burden of disease yet it receives only 13% of NHS expenditure. The authors of the report suggest that more expenditure on the most common mental disorders would cost the NHS nothing, mainly because psychological therapies are low cost and have high recovery rates. Furthermore, if a wider and more long-term approach was adopted, effective mental health treatment would generate other savings, such as increasing employment or improving the behaviour of children.
Other reports have questioned why public spending on mental health services in Northern Ireland was 15.6% lower than in England in 2002/3, when the overall prevalence of mental health problems in Northern Ireland was estimated to be 25% higher than in England. This inequality in the proportion of funding and resources allocated to mental health services in Northern Ireland was also reported by the Bamford Review in 2007.
Congratulations!
Many congratulations to our own Peter Shields who scooped an award at the CO3 Leadership Awards recently. Along with Kieran Molloy from the Cedar Foundation, Peter collected the Partnership Award – Working Collaboratively Together. Peter and Kieran were honoured for their work on the SES Supported Employment Solutions partnership which supports people with disabilities and health conditions and helps them get back into employment.
SES is made up of seven disability organisations from across N Ireland who have come together to deliver the Work Connect and Workable (NI) Programmes.
Congratulations also to our Board Members Billy Kohner and Pam Hunter. Billy was shortlisted for the “Lifetime Commitment to the Third Sector” award and Pam won “Best Newcomer of the Year” award.
Belfast Marathon 2015!
Take part in this year’s Belfast City Marathon for Action Mental Health and help change the lives of those living with mental ill health.
Sign up today at www.belfastcitymarathon.com and join TEAM AMH to run, fun run, relay or walk 8 miles.
Contact Callum [email protected] for your complimentary AMH running vest and fundraising pack!