Monthly Archives: April 2022

April Carer News Updates 2022

The latest edition of my online carer, mental health and ethnic mental health news is out for April.

Click below to view latest carer news for April

April 2022 Carer news

For April edition we have

Sarah Spoor – Cost of Living Crisis on carers – Interview on how the cost of living is affecting unpaid carers across the UK.

Carers and individuals accessing social care services urged to ‘submit evidence’ to House of Lords committee – Shropshire Council and many other councils are urging carers as well as individuals who use social care services to take part in the House of Lords inquiry ‘Lifting the veil: Removing the invisibility of adult social care’.

Why mental healthcare is less accessible to marginalized communities – News piece from the US on the problem of mental healthcare when it comes to marginalized communities.

Unpaid UK carers 4.5% worse off as cost of living erodes benefits value – Warnings of cost-of-caring crisis as state allowance is cut by £170 a year in real terms

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Look after yourself – Carer poem by Matthew McKenzie

No one ever told you that you will be doing this
Yet here you are trying to cope
Trying to care

No one ever told you how much you both will suffer
Yet you are are trying your best
Being there

No one ever told you that things could go wrong
And yet each day you struggle
hoping the illness to disappear

No one ever told you about the sacrfices
Yet you will keep sacrificing
Year after year

No one ever told you about the future
Yet you are putting it on the line
facing it with fear

No one ever told you that you was a carer
Still caring?
Look after yourself.

The thin line of Patience – Carer Poem by Matthew McKenzie

This poem is number 9 of the new book I am working on regarding the experience of care expressed as poetry.

I am looking at that clock again
Tick tock, tick tock
The sound is driving me crazy
Tick tock, tick tock

His in the ward again, being detained
It has been weeks now, and I am going insane
All these thoughts rushing through my brain
Wondering when if things will ever be the same

I think I will sit down and watch the TV
Maybe if I put something on, the time will pass easy
My brain hurts and my stomach is queasy
Oh when will they ring, so someone can inform me

While the TV is on, its only been 20 minutes
Nothings good worth watching and I am hitting my limits
The sound of that clock, its making me fidgit
Maybe I ll head out and see him on one of my visits

Oh I don’t know. Why am I doing this
I rang them ages ago, something is amiss
I grit my teeth, have a frown
Something needs to turn around
No one is calling
My heart is falling
My patience is gone and I am about to start bawling

Lewisham and Greenwich NHS Trust – QI Improvement Showcase Event

Welcome fellow unpaid carers and families. With my involvement in local accute hospital NHS trusts. I have news of a great event that will be of interest. Lewisham & Greenwich NHS Trust are to launch their Improvement Showcase event for 2022. It will be open to all and be run virtually over Zoom. There will be national speakers presenting and also opportunity to hear about the great local improvements happening around health inequalities, patient co design and more.

Click on picture below for more details

Black Families Involvement in New E-learning (Be FINE) Project

Welcome back to another blog by former mental health carer Matthew McKenzie. I have an exciting project which black families could be interested in.

Black Families Involvement in New E-learning (Be FINE), is a new study funded by the Economic and Social Research Council, as part of UK Research and Innovation’s rapid response to COVID-19 and is led by Dr Valentina Cardi and Dr Juliana Onwumere at King’s College London.

The study has two aims. Firstly, to understand the experiences and impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the carers of children and young people (6-24 years) from Black minority ethnic communities in the UK. The second aim is to explore with carers of children and young people from Black minority ethnic communities, the type of information they would find helpful to include in an online course that aims to offer carers skills to support children and young people with their mental health and wellbeing. The Be FINE study will employ a mixed methods design, using both online surveys and individual and group-based interviews.

The study has two parts; an online survey and focus groups. To participate, individuals have to be parents or carer of a young person from a Black racial minority and the child has to be aged between 6 – 24 years. We then ask that the participant fills out the online survey, this should take around half an hour. The participant will receive £15 amazon voucher for participating. Following this, the participant will have the chance to also sign up to the focus groups. These will last around an hour and the participant will receive a further £15 amazon voucher for this.

Black communities have been disproportionately impacted by COVID-19. We hope the study findings will aid the development of a more in-depth understanding of the experiences of Black minority families during the pandemic, and of what type of help, delivered online, might be perceived as beneficial in empowering carers to support the psychological wellbeing of children and young adults.

Below is the Link to the survey people can take part in.

https://qualtrics.kcl.ac.uk/jfe/form/SV_6Gs0lQzfWHtpgO2

Supporting informal carers of people with mental health problems during hospital discharge

Welcome fellow unpaid carers. I am involved in this exciting new study, where I feel it is very much needed to help shape mental health services. I hope members of my carer’s network or other carers who fit this role can also get involved.

We are looking for carers who support someone with mental health problems during hospital discharge. Please view the image below to get involved or email Dr Natasha Tyler via natasha.tyler@manchester.ac.uk

There is also more research carers can get involved in. This involves carers of adolescents or CAMHs services. You can also email ioannis.angelakis@manchester.ac.uk

Lewisham Mental Health Carers forum February 2022

Welcome to my February update of my Carers forum for Lewisham by former mental health carer Matthew McKenzie FRSA. This forum allows those who care for someone suffering mental illness to get togther, network, gather information and get engagement from Health & social care services. I also allow for particular speakers on carer empowerment, carer’s rights, advocacy, campaigning and discussions.

For february our speakers were

  • Charolette from Healthwatch Lewisham
  • Cath Collins from South London & Maudsley
  • The new Lewisham service user network
  • Plus Wendy Dewhurst who is the General Manager for Lewisham Community Services (SLaM)


Charlotte Bradford from Healthwatch Lewisham presents

As you can probably tell from my previous blog posts, Healthwatch tends to listen and engage with my carer groups every so often. I am thankful for healthwatch to also help promote my carer groups to spread the word. Charlotte who is a project officer from Healthwatch Lewisham remembered attending one of my carer groups before Christmas, and this is her first into 2022. Charlotte oversees a number of different reports that healthwatch Lewisham produce on a yearly basis.

The most recent one that they published on their website is the digital exclusion report. Healthwath Lewisham spoke to a number of residents to hear more about their experiences over the past 18 months with accessing health and social care services. This will help Healthwatch Lewisham look at what their priorities will be for this year. Plus they will be focusing on the next report where they will be conducting a number of interviews on visits to care homes.

  • Cath Collins – carers social worker updates the group

Where ever I go and engage mental health carers I often ask if their mental health trust have a focus on unpaid carers. It really helps if there is a designated person whose role it is to focus on unpaid mental health carers. Over in Lewisham, we have a social worker whose job it is to focus and support unpaid carers. Cath Collins is employed by Lewisham council, but works closely with South London & Maudsley NHS trust.

I am glad we have Cath to update our carer members over in Lewisham. Cath mentioned that as of this moment for inpatient mental health services for Lewisham particularly on the wards they are going through a process called the “Triangle of Care” audit, which is a very good practice when it comes to supporting the mental health carers.

In a nutshell, it was put together by a carer (Alan Worthington). The triangle of care policy is kind of like a checklist. So you have the six key areas to check whether you are mental health carer friendly on your inpatient NHS wards in your services.

All five wards at the (SLaM) ladywell unit are going through their submitted assessments, these being the home treatment team assessment, although she is still waiting on the psychiatric liaison team to submit theirs. Basically it is all about making them think on how they support carers. These things could be : –

  • How do they evidence that?
  • How can we how can they prove that they do that?
  • What information do they give people?
  • How do they involve people in the assessment of the person who needs support.
  • If the staff are carer aware and that they know about the needs of carers and the impact of caring?
  • Do they have a lead in their team who supports carers?

So the triangle of care audit is really thorough and even though it seems like an exercise it’s been really good. Cath mentioned it’s really sort of good practice on going on some of the wards and in some of the teams it’s helped them to highlight and really think about visitors be it the mothers, partners, brothers and sisters who come to the wards who support someone in hospital.

Cath also reminded my carers group about the carers support session that evening, which is run in conjunction with Carers Lewisham.

  • Linda from Lewisham service user network presents

Our next speaker to the carers forum was Linda Amoakohene who is the Sun Project Lead and Senior Occupational Therapist. Linda works for the Lewisham personality disorder service. She is also leading on the Lewisham service User network which is part of the Lewisham personality disorder service.

Linda was here to tell us a little bit about a new project. Even though it is new it actually was launched in October 2021. So they are still relatively new. The project is open to really anyone in the community of Lewisham who may be having some mental health difficulties. It doesn’t have any particular mental health labels even though the service Linda is providing is sitting within a specific service the personality disorder service, the project is actually available to anyone in the community in Lewisham. So whether you identify yourself as a carer or a patient of South London and Maudsley or just a patient of a GP or a member of the community. It is open access.

The Service User network is a peer support group. So people who attend the group come to get support when they’re in crisis, or perhaps they are struggling with things that impact on their mental health. So people end up self referring where they can come as often or as little as they like. Linda also mentioned that they don’t have to be under the South London and Maudsley NHS services to access the project, they could just be under the GP. There are also leaflets about the project or people email the team, and then they will send you the link to self refer to the project. So once the person self refers, they then make contact with the person on the phone, to find out a little bit more about them.

At the team they then complete something called a “Crisis and support plan”, which is basically applied to help someone think and plan, especially when things are really tricky. This can lead to questions on what sorts of things help or don’t help. This is so people basically go away with something that they can sort of use in a dynamic way, whenever they need it.

As of this moment, the project has got three groups a week, and they’re happening online. They might launch a face to face group since the COVID situation is obviously changing, and the government rules are relaxing, but they may still maintain some of the health requirements because COVID hasn’t gone away, and they still want to protect lives.

I thought to ask Linda a Carer question : Where I was happy about the new project and service, but I was interested in what support will be provided to unpaid carers.

Linda responded at length that this group is for anybody, they don’t identify carers or service users

  • Wendy Dewhurst from South London & Maudsley presents

Wendy apologised for being a little late due to just catching up from coming off another online meeting. Wendy introduced herself as the general manager for community services in Lewisham, which essentially means that she has the day to day oversight and operational management for all of the services in the community. So that’s the primary care teams, community mental health teams, early intervention, low intensity and the personality disorder. Wendy has been in the role about a year and a half and during that time, She has taken all services through the transformation into the new model, which they are now trying to embed an implement, which is an ongoing process and is not going to happen overnight. However they have certainly seen some good results, particularly at the front end.

Wendy answered a few questions from group, where she fed back concerns about access to mental health services. Currently, the access is by the GP, although she is in the process of setting up a mental health advice line which should be operational, hopefully in the next month, where people that have any sort of concerns can talk about a mental health crisis. The service will be manned by the mental health charity MIND.

So if following a conversation with someone who mans that line and they feel that the person needs a service then they can put you directly into that team. So it will be a sort of option for self referral. Wendy thinks that there will be some people that maybe don’t want to engage with statutory services like GPS and maybe don’t trust particular services, so it’s another option to get that much needed support and they very keen on being able to process self referrals. This so SLaMs (South London & Maudsley) primary care mental health teams have something in Lewisham, which is where they can provide the most appropriate treatment that’s the least intrusive.

So it’s an intervention that services which involve psychology, Occuptional therapy and mental health advisors from MIND. Where they will work in an alliance, SLaM will work with the local authority and Bromley, Lewisham & Greenwich Mind.

Wendy mentioned they have an enhanced multidisciplinary team, where they work very closely with the GPS in the primary care team, and the GP tends to remain as the responsible doctor. The enhanced multidisciplinary team and the consultant will focus more on serious mental illness and longer care term needs where maybe patient might be subject to CPA (care Programme approach), still the move is that CPA is going to not exist going forward.

Wendy gave a talk describing the CPA where it has certain sorts of conditions with it. This is where you have to review every six months, you have a care coordinator, social worker and psychiatrist. Although what they found is that so often people that were on CPA, all the care was focused on that, and people that didn’t have CPA might not have got the same level of care. So what they want is for everybody to have the same level of care, irrespective of of what what that is, so has the same rights.

  • Final update from Cath Collins

Cath reminded us that our mental health NHS trust has a carer’s strategy called the family and care strategy. This is what they are doing in Lewisham and are trying to make it Lewisham specific. So things that are in the carer strategy as a whole will be relevant. So making sure the wards and the crisis services adhere to that good practice of the triangle of care. There’s another priority about young carers, identifying those 18 and under who are caring for their parents or brothers and sisters. Other things like making that SLaM’s carer information is up to date and relevant for mental health carers.

Joint Southwark & Lambeth MH Carers forum February 2022

Welcome to my latest update for joint Southwark & Lambeth carers forum. I have been unwell with COVID for the past week, but due to my previous vaccinations the affect was not so horrible. If I did not have the previous vaccinations I am sure the COVID would have been 10 times worse. If you are caring for someone vulnerable please get the vaccination as you cannot always avoid catching the virus. It is good to have some form of protection rather than nothing.

Speakers for my February forum were

  • Southwark Heathwatch
  • Lambeth Healthwatch
  • Kieran Quirke the Mental Health lead from Kings College NHS FT

Just a quick reminder, the aim of my carer forums is to allow unpaid carers who care for someone suffering mental ill health, get a chance to network and hear updates on what the services are doing for carers and for those using health & social care services. My carer groups cover half of London.

  • Megan Isherwood and Gosia Kaczmarczyk from Southwark healthwatch presents

There have been a few changes over at Southwark Healthwatch and it had been a while since they attended the group and engage with unpaid carers. Megan who is the research and projects officer at Southwark Healtwatch gave us a quick introduction on some of their projects. Megan also let my group know how they could get involved with Southwark Healthwatch and their upcoming events.

Megan mentioned that there is a Healthwatch in every area of England, and they were created from the Health and Social Care Act of 2012. Healthwatch are a statutory organisation. Healthwatch are funded by the local authority that being Southwark council, but healthwatch Southwark are very much independent. Healthwatch Southwark hosted by community Southwark and has helped them to work closely with the voluntary community groups in the area of Southwark.

Basically Healthwatch Southwark want everyone who lives in the London Borough of Southwark to be able to access and receive the best possible health and care services appropriate for our diverse community. As a reminder Healthwatch Southwark are the independent champion for the patient voice.

So Healthwatch are here to represent the local community and make sure that services work for those in the borough of Southwark. So this means that they listen to local people about their health and social care needs and experiences. Healthwatch Southwark helps patients and service users voice their views and concerns in order to make services better and more suited to their needs. Healthwatch also have a signposting function. So they can provide advice and information helping people to navigate the very complicated health and social care system. Healthwatch knows that navigating the system can be a real maze, but as an extra form of empowerment they also promote patient involvement in shaping services.

This can mean helping people to get involved in health and social care decision making bodies and processes. Megan continued to talk about how their community engagement can lead to different ways for local people to have their say. Regarding generic experiences this can be both online and in person. Healthwatch also have the power to enter and view services, like GPS, hospitals care homes. Healthwatch can go in and observe them and find out the views of patients and staff.

Healthwatch Southwark connects with local voluntary and community organisations and work collaboratively with them. Healthwatch conducts research, and works on reports and give recommendations to health commissioners (Southwark CCG). Healthwatch also influences boards and committees particular the Southwark Council health and wellbeing board.

Healthwatch feeds into monitoring systems and consultations and they share these concerns with commissioners to make sure your voice is heard and to aid directly into influence change. Megan wanted to finish up her talk focusing on mental health, so she talked about their recent mental health services project. This was a recent report on the mental health services which is published their website site. It came about due to a workshop held in January, where lots of people attended, and there were representatives from South London & Maudsley hospital where they presented their formal response to the report. The report basically identified the key themes and areas that about unmet needs around SLaMs adult mental health community services provision where Healthwatch made recommendations to them on how to address these unmet needs.

The report involves carrying out a survey to find out people’s experiences of the services. Healthwatch focused on issues of access, waiting, suitability, impact and staff. So in the end Healthwatch received 81 responses, which was from service users and carers. The key findings were that the Southwark improving access to psychological therapies, which is IAPTs on if you’re talking therapies, and also the community mental health teams, which were the most used services, followed by crisis services, integrated psychological therapy teams and assessment and liaison services.

Since my carer forum tends to focus on wellbeing, the next section was from Gosia Kaczmarczyk who is Southwark Healthwatch Community Engagement Officer. Gosia did a wellbeing meditation session online for the group to experience. Gosia then went on to talk about the volunteering opportunities at Southwark Healthwatch.

Since Southwark Healthwatch do the enter and view programme. They are going to be working on induction training to train these representatives in the coming months. They will also be recruiting for community engagement.

Healthwatch will also recruit for committee health ambassadors where those interested can even become an advisory board member. Such opportunities can have an impact on how healthwatch do their work and what they are focusing on. It is like a really important part. Volunteers can also help guide healthwatch on their upcoming events.

Anna D’Agostino from Lambeth Healthwatch presents

After the talk and engagement from Healthwatch Southwark, it was now Healthwatch Lambeth’s turn to talk about what they do. Anna who is the Engagement Lead for Mental Health gave the carers an overview of what Healthwatch Lambeth does. Anna also reminder my forum that Healthwatch was established in 2013 as a charity, where each part in England has a HealthWatch. In fact there are around 150 Healthwatch organisation throughout England. Anna mentioned it was established to give the people a stronger voice on how health and social care services are really set up and in some cases challenge the way that they are actually run those services. This is why healthwatch really want to hear people voices.

Healthwatch contacts people, liaise with them and gather their feedback, and then they contact the providers to see how services can be improved.

As with what Healthwatch Southwark does. Healthwatch Lambeth does Enter and View – Where they visit commissioned services, interview service users and staff suggest how the service can improve.
Healthwatch Lambeth also do Information & Signposting – they help people find the information & services they need and signpost them to organisations that can provide support.

Anna wanted to talk about a particular project Healthwatch Lambeth are currently running this is in regards to healthcare during the Pandemic.

Healthwatch Lambeth want to talk to people with mental health needs and their carers
How easy or difficult was it for you to access healthcare?
Did you get the support you needed?
Where you offered an annual health check?
Were you offered Covid-19 testing and/or the vaccine?

Kieran Quirke From Kings NHS trust presents

Kieran gave us a brief update from King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust. Kieran admitted that since the last time he came to the group, a lot of the projects have been put on hold because the Omicron virius (a varient of the corona virus). It is only in the last couple of weeks, things are starting to get back towards a state normality however one of the first things to mention is that visiting the hospital is now back to to visitors or patients across the majority of sites, which is an improvement.

Kieran mentioned that Kings NHS trust can hopefully start moving forward on some of the John’s campaign stuff, which I stalled during the pandemic where the dementia and delirium team are leading. Kieran mentioned two important things to mention updates where the first was the launch of their butterfly Cafe dementia group, which is due to start on the 8th of March in the afternoon, and they have got a venue for that where it is going to be held at the institute of psychiatry, They have got a room within the lounge area. Where that will be running monthly.

It’s free to attend. There’s no ability to provide transport, unfortunately, but there is wheelchair access and there will be some refreshments.
It is also going to be supported by KINGs NHS volunteers alongside some of their community partners. All they need to do is email in advance to say they’re coming where there is a bit of a chance to plan for numbers that is needed to provide for.

Another update is joint working with Mosaic clubhouse, where they come in and engage with some of their medical patients. This project was unfortunately delayed because of the pandemic. So it has taken a little while to get it back up and running. They are looking to launch in March, although it is a pilot and will initially work with four wards being medical wards. If there is a patient with a mental health concern, that is within the psych liaison threshold, The ward can then refer to Mosaic Clubhouse and Mosaic will send to a member of staff and a service user who will come and visit and spend some time with the patient and talk them about signposting Community Services, and then potentially revisit if need be, it’ll be on the medical wards, so there’ll be probably quite short, brief interventions. But that’s another really positive development.

The last update is that they plan to develop a new carers policy. This is one of those projects, which has been suspended and suspended, but hopefully now they will start to get the wheels rolling underneath it. The final update is for Matthew to get involved in KINGS NHS carers day celebration.

This is my update for my Joint Southwark & Lambeth mental health carers forum for February