Pounds 60m for City Mental Health PlanA pounds 60 million scheme to unite mental health services and create four new centres in Birmingham has been approved.The Birmingham Post (England)
A team at the University of Birmingham's Institute for Mental Health and Centre for Human Brain Health, working with researchers from the PRONIA consortium wanted to explore the possibility of using machine learning to create highly accurate models of 'pure' forms of both illnesses and to use t...
An exploration of the significance of mental health day centres in the lives of their members This thesis explores the significance of the mental health day centre in members' lives. Drawing on diary entries and interviews with mental health day cen... Smith,B Jayne - University of Birmingham ...
In the United Kingdom, a youth-based mental health service called ‘Youth space’ has implemented integrated health benefits for people aged 0–25 years in the Birmingham catchment area [135]. Similar models have been developed or under construction in Denmark, Israel, California, Canada (the ...
Programs include: headspace and Orygen Youth Health in Australia, Jigsaw in Ireland, Forward Thinking Birmingham (formerly Youthspace) in the United Kingdom, Youth One Stop Shops in New Zealand, and YouthCan IMPACT, Foundry, and ACCESS Open Minds in Canada. See Table 1 for information on all...
MARIAN BARNES is Director of Social Research in the Department of Social Policy and Social Work at the University of Birmingham. Over the last 12 years she has worked extensively on user involvement and user self-organisation in the context of health and social care. She is a member of the ...
a walk through his Jamaican heritage and upbringing in Birmingham; Shepherd Manyika whose work largely centres on experimental and socially engaged projects; and the filmmaker Michelle Williams-Gamaker, who focuses not only on themes of gender, capitalism and migration, but, aptly, ment...
A sample of parents in 113 homeless families were interviewed within 2 weeks of admission to seven homeless centres in the City of Birmingham, and compared with a sample of 29 low-income families who were not homeless. Both sets of interviews used the Child Behaviour Checklist (CBCL), the ...
Institute for Mental Health, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK Tumelo Bogatsu & Steven Marwaha Tees, Esk and Wear Valley, NHS Foundation Trust, Durham, UK Richard Carroll & Keith J. Thompson Camden and Islington NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK ...
Most of the sample resided in London, with remain- ing participants from either Birmingham or Manches- ter. All the respondents had multiple long-term serious mental and physical health conditions, with many ser- vice users [11] and carers [3] having more than one physical health condition....