Tag Archives: Cultural competence

Ethnic mental health Carer Forum : October Update 2025

By Matthew McKenzie, Facilitator, National Ethnic Mental Health Carer Forum

Introduction: A Forum that Connects and Challenges

As the facilitator of the National Ethnic Mental Health Carer Forum, I never take for granted how special these sessions are. Each month, carers, professionals, and researchers from all over the UK log in to share knowledge, raise awareness, and push for change in how mental health services understand and support ethnic minority communities.

Our October 2025 session was a powerful one. Falling on the last day of Black History Month, it brought together crucial themes on race equality, co-production, research, and carer visibility.

We heard from two key areas shaping mental health equity right now:

  • The OSMOSIS Project, led by Dr. Jacqueline Sin and Sharon Galliford, focusing on developing social care-based support for carers of people with psychosis.
  • The Patient and Carer Race Equality Framework (PCREF), presented by Aboobaker Bhana, Equality and Involvement Manager for South West Yorkshire Partnership NHS Foundation Trust.
Continue reading

Making Time for Black Mental Health: A Black Male Carer’s Reflection

By Matthew McKenzie – Carer activist with Think Tenacity Academy CIC at Nando’s High Street Kensington
(Event held during Black History Month 2025)

A Warm Welcome and a Powerful Beginning

On Tuesday 28 October 2025 at Nando’s, 229 Kensington High Street.


As soon as I entered, the scent of grilled peri-peri wings mixed with the buzz of conversation. The event Making Time for Black Mental Health was hosted by Think Tenacity Academy CIC, led by founder Bella Rareworld.

Continue reading

Lewisham, Southwark & Lambeth carer forum update October 2025

The recent Carers Forum brought together unpaid carers, health professionals, and community organisations from across South London to share updates, experiences, and ideas for improving mental health support. The event, chaired by Matthew McKenzie, created a safe and open space for carers to connect, exchange information, and have their questions heard by local health leaders.

Setting the Scene

Matthew opened the session by welcoming carers from across Lambeth, Lewisham, and Southwark. He spoke about the importance of providing carers with dedicated time to hear from service providers, particularly those supporting someone with mental ill-health and to ensure their voices shape local mental health strategies.

Continue reading

Ethnic mental health Carer Forum Update July 2025


Author: Matthew McKenzie

Building Stronger Voices: A Powerful July Gathering of the National Ethnic Mental Health Carer Forum

On Friday, July 25th, the National Ethnic Mental Health Carer Forum held another online session, continuing our work in empowering diverse carers and influencing meaningful change across mental health services. With participation from community champions, NHS professionals, experienced unpaid minority carers. The discussion was on the Triangle of Care (ToC) and PCREF (Patient Carer Race Equality Framework) stakeholders.

This forum exists to elevate the voices of ethnically diverse carers, bringing their lived experiences to the forefront of service transformation. Whether it’s holding systems to account or shaping policy guidance, this space remains vital in creating inclusive, anti-racist care across the UK.

Highlights from July’s Forum

🔵 Debbie Hustings’ Presentation on Triangle of Care & PCREF Integration
Debbie, a long-standing Triangle of Care Programme Lead and carer herself, gave an in-depth presentation on reviewing the Triangle of Care through a PCREF (Patient and Carer Race Equality Framework) lens. Her talk provided an honest look at institutional challenges and offered solutions for embedding racial equity into carer support standards. A key takeaway was how crucial lived experience is in driving real policy change not just warm words. She emphasized the importance of re-examining existing standards through a racial equity lens, stating that “beyond warm words,” carers need frameworks that are operational, measurable, and locally adaptable.

🟣 Powerful Feedback from Carers
Contributors shared difficult yet necessary truths. Carers spoke about the lack of involvement in care planning, systemic racism, the need for meaningful co-production (not “faux-production”), and experiences of isolation when navigating majority environments. One carer reflected, “In 28 years of caring for my son, I have never been involved in his care planning.”

Several carers shared their painful, sometimes shocking, experiences navigating mental health services, especially in areas with limited diversity. One participant remarked, “Even after decades of caring, I’ve never been included in a care plan.” Others spoke of staff who misunderstood or dismissed cultural nuances, the misuse of confidentiality rules to exclude carers, and the silencing of Black and Asian voices. Concerns were also raised about immigration-related fears, lack of access for non-English speakers, and a troubling rise in racism in predominantly white areas. These reflections painted a vivid picture of systemic inequality but also made clear the power of collective advocacywhen carers come together, change begins.

These testimonies highlighted how far we still need to go.

🟡 Inclusive Language & Representation
There was a passionate discussion around terminology whether to use “global majority” or “ethnically and racially diverse.” While some feared backlash from certain communities, the group leaned toward inclusivity and accountability over appeasement. This sensitivity around language underlines the forum’s thoughtful and intersectional approach.

🟢 The Work Ahead
Debbie shared the next steps in developing Standard 2 of the Triangle of Care through the PCREF lens: staff training. The goal? Mandatory, culturally safe, anti-racist care awareness education co-produced with carers from diverse backgrounds. By April 2026, the guidance will be finalized, field-tested, and launched nationally.


A Forum of Global Carers, Local Action

This month’s session proved again that our forum is more than discussion as it’s a driving force for equity. Participants from Southampton, Lewisham, Pennine, Norfolk, Leicester, South West London, Kent & Medway and beyond all shared insights into their local efforts, including cultural awareness training, community storytelling projects, and carer-led involvement initiatives.

One key message? Change is possible when carers are part of the conversation—not as guests, but as co-leaders.


Want to Get Involved?

The forum is open to carers and professionals across the UK and beyond. We meet monthly online, and everyone is welcome to join, contribute, or simply listen.

For bookings or questions, contact me at info@caringmindblog.com
📱 Or download and scan the QR code in the flyer above

Together, minority mental health carers can shape a mental health system that sees, hears, and supports all carers—ethnically, culturally, and fully.

Next National MH carer forum in August 29th 10:30 am
Matthew McKenzie
Founder – Caring Mind Blog
Facilitator – National Ethnic Mental Health Carer Forum


Ethnic mental health Carer Forum Update March 2025

The Importance of Ethnic Minority Mental Health Carer Voices: Empowering Unpaid Carers from the Global Majority by Matthew McKenzie

In today’s world, the voices of ethnic minority carers in mental health services must be heard and valued. The National Ethnic Mental Health Carers Forum meeting, held on March 28, 2025, underscored the vital role that co-production and lived experience play in shaping better services for those who care for loved ones with mental health needs.

Continue reading

Ethnic mental health Carer Forum Update February 2025

The National Ethnic Mental Health Carer Forum convened to discuss the ongoing challenges faced by minority carers in accessing mental health services. The meeting focused on strategies to improve cultural competence, equitable treatment, and accessibility within mental health care systems. A key topic was the Patient and Carer Race Equality Framework (PCREF), with organizations sharing their experiences and plans for implementation. Additionally, the discussion covered language barriers, education initiatives, and the role of co-production in fostering inclusive care.


Mental Health act research

Dr Judy, a researcher from the University of Bristol, discussed her ongoing project on the nearest relative provision in the Mental Health Act and the need for co-produced resources to support those in this role. She also mentioned the support from charitable organizations like Mind and Rethink.

Continue reading