Total matching your search: 257
Briefing 37: Doing what works
18 Feb 2009
This briefing outlines the evidence base for Individual Placement and Support (IPS) and provides information on how to ‘do what works’.
On the Outside
2 Dec 2008
Continuity of care is especially important for released prisoners with mental health problems to help them get their lives back on track on the outside.
Briefing 36: Police and mental health
2 Sep 2008
This briefing calls on the NHS to manage health care for people in police custody and to take a more active role in diverting people with mental health problems to the services they need.
Briefing 35: Evening the odds
17 Jul 2008
Specialist mental health employment support staff need to adopt an evidence-based approach with the capacity to address issues of racism and stigma.
From the inside
25 Jun 2008
It sets out what prisoners themselves say they need to improve their mental health: ‘someone to talk to’, ‘something to do’ during the day and practical help to plan for what they will do after they are released.
About time
12 Jun 2008
About Time is the first step-by-step guide that shows how day and vocational services can make radical changes to offer people the support they need to build the lives they want to live.
Making recovery a reality
17 Mar 2008
Recovery turns mental health services’ priorities on their heads. Mental health services need to demonstrate success in helping service users to get their lives back.
Mental health at work: developing the business case
13 Dec 2007
At any one time one worker in six will be experiencing depression, anxiety or problems relating to stress. The total cost to employers is estimated at £1,035 for every employee in the UK workforce.
We Need To Talk
31 Oct 2006
We Need To Talk examines the provision of psychological therapies and calls on the Government to provide psychological therapy through the NHS in line with NICE guidance.
The costs of race inequality
16 Oct 2006
This policy paper seeks to strengthen and support the case for action by showing that these poorer experiences and outcomes come at not just a personal cost to those involved – they also increase the financial costs of mental health care