Loretta + Nastassja + Asad + Diab + Riyad + Nagaenthran + Israel + open dialogue + housing + cheap train tickets + Friendship group + stopping ECT +

 

Loretta

 

Nastassja

 

Asad

 

Diab + Riyad

 

Nagaenthran Dharmalingam

 

Israel

 

Tell the council your ideas regarding local housing - Stag brewery development by 15th May

 

 

Money off train tickets up to 27th May

 

Friendship group

FREE – CONFIDENTIAL – ALL WELCOME

28th April 2022

Richmond Library annex

TW9 1DH

11am to 1pm

 

A future for all of us …

 

The big plastic count – 16th to 22nd May

 

Learning from other countries – energy

 

open dialogue

 

Inquiry investigates deaths of 1,500 NHS mental health patients in Essex

Not just Essex?

 

Mental health and well-being plan: discussion paper and call for evidence

Your views wanted by 5th July

 

Where we are born into privilege, we are charged with dismantling any myth of supremacy.

Where we are born into struggle, we are charged with reclaiming our dignity, joy and liberation.”

 

Adrienne Maree Brown

 

Why solidarity matters

 

Solidarity does not assume that our struggles are the same struggles, or that our pain is the same pain, or that our hope is for the same future.

Solidarity requires commitment, and work, as well as the recognition that even if we do not have the same feelings, or the same lives, or the same bodies, we do live on common ground”

 

Sara Ahmed

 

5 steps to a Green New Deal

 

Can randomly selected citizens govern better than elected officials?

 

The law in 60 seconds – legal aid for inquests video

 

Hillsborough law – duty of candour -would this help with our Freedom of information requests?

 

Cannabis, ketamine and speed to be decriminalised in London by Sadiq Khan

 

A shorter working week for Europe

 

Children imprisoned on remand – the stark reality of racial bias

 

Combatting Structural Racism and Classism in Psychiatry: An Interview with Helena Hansen

 

Suman Fernando’s book Institutional racism in psychiatry + clinical psychology

 

How Western Psychology Can Rip Indigenous Families Apart: An Interview with Elisa Lacerda-Vandenborn

 

People deprived of liberty due to misapplication of Mental Health + Capacity Acts

 

As a result of the Bournewood case the Mental capacity act came into being?

The mental capacity act

Assume capacity

Best interest

Least restrictive

People can make what others would consider unwise decisions

Supported decision making

Capacity can easily be assessed

Can someone make a decision?

Can they communicate the decision (not necessarily verbally)?

Can they remember the decision?

-Wendy-

 

Restraint, segregation and seclusion review: progress report

 

Out of sight- who cares?

 

Half of people with a learning disability and autistic people reluctant to provide feedback on care

 

The authority gap: why women still aren’t taken seriously

 

Women disproportionately affected by soaring Mental Health Act detentions

 

Report Finds Monitoring of Electroshock Treatment Unsafe

 

New Study Finds ECT Ineffective for Reducing Suicide Risk

 

We can STOP ECT with lasting power of attorney?

 

A straight-talking introduction to Psychiatric drugs – the truth about how they work + how to come off them – Joanna Moncrieff

 

Provide Tapering Strips for People Who Want to Withdraw Safely from Psychotropic Drugs

 

Petition by James Moore

 

Tapering strips

 

NICE revises antidepressant guidance to warn of 'severe' withdrawal symptoms

 

Lost Connections: Uncovering the Real Causes of Depression – and the Unexpected Solutions

 

Long-term antipsychotic use linked to breast cancer

 

Government review finds 10% of drugs dispensed in England are pointless

 

Sedated, How Modern Capitalism Created our Mental Health Crisis - James Davies +

 

Coronavirus and depression in adults, Great Britain: January to March 2021

ONS

 

Almost 4 in 10 adults earning less than £10,000 a year experienced depressive symptom compared with around 1 in 10 earning £50,000 or more”

The data shows what we know to be true: struggling with your mental health doesn’t happen in a vacuum.

 

Why not Diagnose Social Conditions Instead of Individual Symptoms?

 

The WHO Calls for Radical Change in Global Mental Health

 

Strength based approach

 

Emotional CPR: Heart-Centered Peer Support

 

Website – Emotional CPR

 

How do we pay for a basic income?

 

Welsh basic income pilot has been published

In a statement from Jane Hutt, Minister for Social Justice

The pilot will be targeted at care leavers

All young people leaving care that turn 18 over a 12-month period starting this summer will be invited to participate

That is expected to be about 500 people

Participants will receive the payments for 24 months starting from the month after their 18th birthday

A £1,600 a month basic income will be paid each month

 

A friend – walking for health

 

Thrive gardening charity

 

Castelnau Community Centre

 

Oliver Sacks

 

Suicide + co

 

Twickenham repair cafe -3rd Saturday of each month 10:30 to 13:30

 

Together as one

 

Battersea Befriending Network

 

£1 Concession Tickets for Kew Gardens

As part of their new 10-year strategy, Kew Gardens is committed to ensuring that cost is not a barrier to accessing their gardens in both Kew and Wakehurst.

They have introduced a new admission price of £1 for anyone on Universal Credit, Pension Credit or Employment and Support Allowance (ESA).

Visitors just need to present proof of their benefit on arrival to be eligible for the new concessionary ticket.

 

Ian – Wild Mind Project

 

New exhibition Piece of Mind open now

 

Big Garden Birdwatch: what do the results reveal?

 

Fill your long weekend with art

 

Your Supporters' Update 🌱

Good Thinking: Green updates from the Good Energy team

Your Wild About Gardens news for April

Get ready to welcome swifts back

Your gardening update from the RHS

Food Forever at Kew Gardens – 21st May - 18th September

Thames festival trust

 

 

Community based organisations + community recommended organisations

 

Ron Bassman, Executive Director of MindFreedom International Addresses United Nations Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities

 

Notwestminster

Create, Debate and Imagine a different local democracy

CITIZENS : Why the key to fixing everything is all of us

 

F.E.E.L. - Friends of East End Loonies

 

Antidepaware

 

A Caring Mind | A blog for carers of mental health

 

ADOODLE- community mapping

 

 

Poverty eradication organisations + self-expression

 

 

Project 16:15

 

Right here

Community power act

Join our campaign team!

 

Joseph Rowntree foundation (JRF)

Why the Chancellor shouldn't cut Universal Credit

Including Economic (in)justice explainer video – A redesigned economy

Why we need a new conversation about social security

A Minimum Income Standard for the United Kingdom in 2021

Why we must #MakeJobsWork

The biggest overnight cut to the basic rate of social security since the Second World War

People living in social housing claiming Universal Credit are struggling to afford the essentials

Why we must #KeepTheLifeline and what you can do to help

House prices see their biggest annual rise in decades, and rents are up too

New analysis exposes impact of planned Universal Credit cut

"The Rt Hon Boris Johnson MP, you must Keep the Lifeline"

Rashford targets a win on Universal Credit

what's causing structural racism in housing?

it's going to be a “very difficult winter” for low-income families

less than a week for the Government to #KeepTheLifeline

Biggest ever overnight cut to social security makes a mockery of levelling up

Invest in social housing for almost 1 million families paying private rents they can't afford

Millions of low-income households pulled under by arrears while living costs rise

A tale of two Budgets for low-income families

A just transition to net zero is necessary, and key for maintaining public support

Paving the way for good jobs through participatory co-design

Including Navigating power dynamics within participatory projects + Where next for social security after recent Universal Credit announcements?

Winning hearts and minds for decent, affordable housing

Families furthest below the minimum income standard excluded from social security gains

Inflation is pushing people deeper into poverty

Including housing ideas

UK Poverty 2022 out now

 

Elections Bill could disenfranchise millions of voters

 

600,000 people pulled into poverty by Spring Statement

 

Journey to justice project

 

addressing poverty with lived experience (APLE)

 

Allow all people to work flexibly if they want to - PETITION

 

Trussell trust

Ending the need for food banks. Can we count on you?

Record 2.5 million food bank parcels given to people in crisis in the past year

Caroline’s voice matters

95% of people referred to food banks in our network are living in destitution – CONTACT YOUR MP

Have you personally needed a food bank or experienced poverty?

Are you ready to support us to Keep the Lifeline? – EMAIL MP

Here is why we are calling on the UK government to #KeeptheLifeline!

Survey

 

Why the design of Universal Credit is driving the need for food banks

 

Urge your MP to write to the Chancellor ahead of the Spring Statement

 

Calling on the UK government to urgently bring benefit levels in line with the rate of inflation – EMAIL MP

 

Thank you for standing with us

 

Paying your energy bills: help is at hand

 

A Marshall Plan for People and Planet Starts with Africa’s Green Recovery

 

National Survivors User Network (NSUN)

NSUN is a great organisation with a great newsletter …

You can sign up to it here ….

 

This week’s newsletter

 

Extracts from the newsletters …

 

Whiteness as a chemical restraint in statutory guidance of the Mental Health units (Use of Force) Act 2018 – a tribute to Seni’s law + Aijibola Lewis

Blog by Colin King via NSUN

 

Why don’t they ask us? The role of communities in levelling up – Institute for Community Studies

 

Provide Tapering Strips for People Who Want to Withdraw Safely from Psychotropic Drugs

Petition by James Moore

 

Tapering strips

 

Petition to Scrap Care Charges Inclusion London

 

NSUN side by side fund

 

StopSIM Coalition Petition

Coronavirus and depression in adults, Great Britain: January to March 2021

ONS

Almost 4 in 10 adults earning less than £10,000 a year experienced depressive symptom compared with around 1 in 10 earning £50,000 or more”

The data shows what we know to be true: struggling with your mental health doesn’t happen in a vacuum.

 

New website – For Women

 

Benefits Calculator – Turn2us

 

The state of disability benefit assessments and the urgent need for reform - #peoplebefore process

Write to your MP

 

The Public Law Project

 

The Good Lobby

 

Social Change Initiative

 

Guidance on community mental health services: Promoting person-centred and rights-based approaches

 

World Health Organisation (WHO) – NSUN’s response

 

Lived Experience Practioners Revolution - New Website

 

UNIVERSAL CREDIT: WHAT NEEDS TO CHANGE TO MAKE IT FIT FOR CHILDREN AND FAMILIES?

 

Mental Health Act: Call for "unequivocal commitment " to improve access to advocacy

Disability Benefits Research 2021 - Survey

 

Update on FOI Requests: Who's Ballin' & Who's Stallin?

 

To Solve Britain’s Mental Health Crisis, We Must Fundamentally Change Society

Article by Mark Brown via Novara Media (Listen to the piece here)

I am not your critical friend

Blog by Akiko hart via Charity so White

 

WillWeBeHeard?

 

Why disability justice is a mental health conversation, and mental health is a disability justice conversation

Blog by Ellie Thompson via NSUN

 

Refugee and Migrant Wellbeing with Benny Hunter from Da'aro Youth

Podcast with Benny Hunter via The Eriwellbeing Podcast

 

Against the binary: Trans people of colour shouldn’t have to neglect parts of their identity in therapy

Article by Yas Necati via gal-dem

 

NHS trusts criticised over system that films mental health patients in their bedrooms

Article by David Batty via The Guardian

 

Abolition of State Power, Regardless of the Uniform

Article by Liv Wynter & Ros B via NSUN

 

The impossibility of engaged research: Complicity and accountability between researchers, ‘publics’ and institutions

 

Seni’s Law: Long awaited guidance published on new law to protect mental health patients comes into force 31 March 2022

 

How I learnt of Revolutionary Love

Article by Guppi Kaur Bola via Medium

 

Graceful resolve: Attitudes for navigating a psychological crisis

Article by Amy Pollard via Centre for Mental Health

 

How can I speak up when you can hold me down? Restrictive practice on an acute ward – an inpatient perspective

Blog by MiserySquid via Mad Covid

Patching the Soul

Article by Linda Gask

 

Plural Me

Blog by David Mordecai

 

Open Access workshop: Human rights in children’s inpatient MH services – 16th May +13th July

 

A Little Raw Around the Edges

Podcast with Rai Waddingham via Mad Tunes Podcast

 

Disability strategy is unlawful, court confirms… and denies DWP permission to appeal

Article by John Pring via Disability News Service

 

Sometimes I want to be unreasonable

Blog via Mad Covid

 

My ADHD diagnosis isn’t ‘wrong’ and it isn’t an ‘identity’ for you to challenge

Blog by RoseAnnieFlo via Animated and Excitable

 

Free advice – for upholding adults' Health and Care Act rights

 

Loneliness – themed photo project on show in Wakefield

Article via Amateur Photographer

 

Secret DWP report reveals unmet needs of disability benefit claimants

Article by John Pring via Disability News Service

 

A Philosophy of Madness’ Book Forum: Part One

Book review by Jeremy Spandler via The Polyphony

 

Tokenistic’ service-user involvement must be addressed, says report

Article by John Pring via Disability News Service

 

Caught in a Trap: Psychiatric Sabotage

Article by Liam Kirk via Asylum Magazine

 

Magical thinking and moral injury: exclusion culture in psychiatry

Follow-up blog by Dr Chloe Beale & Ellen Thomas via Cambridge Core Blog

 

Survey – Bipolar UK

 

Shout About Your Data Rights

Article by Jenni Ajderian via Recovery in the Bin

 

New concerns over equality watchdog as it scraps disability committee

Article by John Pring via Disability News Service

 

 

Write to your MP to fix the cost of living

 

Willful Subjects*: Decolonizing the Psychiatric Institution

Panel discussion viaBarnard Center for Research on Women

 

Government bows to pressure over accessible versions of Human Rights Act consultation

Article by John Pring via Disability News Service

 

Report: We're just numbers to them – The DWP failure to investigate death and serious harm

 

Write to your MP to fix the cost of living – turn2us

 

Submissions for a special international edition

 

Recruitment – Experience based investigation and Co-design of approaches to Prevent and reduce Mental Health Act Use

 

Understanding Why Using The 'Real Men..' Approach In Men's Mental Health Is Harmful


NHS trust to stop filming mental health patients in their bedrooms

Please don’t ask me to “distract myself” when I am in crisis

 

Rights + well being (RAW)

 

StopWatch

 

What is trauma and how do we decide to disclose or not disclose?

 

Disabled People, COVID-19 and Independent Living
Film by the Nothing About Us Without Us steering group at the People's History Museum

Disbelief at chancellor’s “appalling” refusal to target support on disabled people (and other articles)
Shaping Our Lives/Disability News Service roundup

The Department for Work and Pensions: Deaths, cover-up, and a toxic 30-year legacy – an investigation

Article via Disability News Service – based on evidence compiled by John Pring and the Deaths by Welfare project

 

Do you know of any groups, networks or individuals who do hospital visits for people on mental health wards?

If you know of anyone, or have any thoughts on this as an idea, please contact Wendy at
wmicklewright@yahoo.co.uk with details (including whether the people you know of are region-/hospital-specific).

Please also copy in info@nsun.org.uk if you wish.


Many thanks

Canerows

 

Evolve

 

Hear us - Croydon

 

Battersea Befriending Network

 

Mosaic

 

Traumascapes -5th May

 

Misery

 

10th + 11th June – Mad Heart

 

Suicide cultures – 28th April

 

Mental Health Act young people's survey

Take part in our project about therapy and counselling – 27th April

 

+ Jobs + Funding + MUCH MUCH MORE

 

Build Back Fairer in Greater Manchester: Health Equity and Dignified Lives

 

Survivor Researcher Network (SRN)

 

Inclusion London

Tell your MP to restore Disabled people’s rights

Protect Everyone Bill – EMAIL MP

Take Action and abolish the tax on disability – EMAIL MP

Government rule changes on social care cap hits poorest hardest – EMAIL MP

 

UNCRDP Westminster Government civil society shadow report sign up

 

URGENT - Email your MP to help avoid catastrophic care costs

 

Shaping our lives

Opportunities for user-led organisations

Tickboxes and tokenism? Our new report

Hear me out

Update

 

Black Thrive

 

Z2K – fighting poverty – EMAIL MP

Z2K has caseworker to help people

#Peoplebeforeprocess

 

We need your help

Nearly half of all people in poverty in the UK are either disabled themselves or live with someone who is disabled

 

Write to your MP – ask them to sign EDM 1126 on Disability Benefit Assessments

 

 

Homelessness + renter organisations

 

Action on empty homes

 

Housing first England

New guidance for housing management teams

Housing First England Newsletter - New Survey Alert

Housing First England Newsletter - Minister responds to funding request

Housing First England Newsletter - Join our call for a national Housing First programme

Housing First England Newsletter - Commissioning Housing First through RSI budgets

Michelle – housing first

Update

 

Groundswell

Michelle – housing first

 

Pavement magazine

 

Shelter

End homelessness – PETITION

Here’s the statistics:

24% of private renters have had to borrow money to pay their rent

18% have cut back on food or skipped meals to pay their rent

12% have cut back on heating their home to pay their rent

 

Our research shows the true scale of the problem.

That 3.2 million people from across the country have been forced to live in dangerous or unhealthy privately rented homes because they fear complaining will trigger a retaliatory eviction.

That's 39% of all private renters.

Too scared to complain for fear of losing their home, the effects of insecure tenancies and 'no-fault' Section 21 evictions hang over every renter's head.

Contact your MP today asking for their support

Social Housing – CONTACT YOUR MP

#EndDSSDiscrimination

Time to open up, OpenRent! – EMAIL

2,688 sleeping rough during the pandemic

Sign to protect renters’ rights – PETITION

Survey

Do you have a renting horror story?

Want to challenge DSS Discrimination?

Eviction ban lifted – INFORMATION

ENOUGH IS ENOUGH: Demand better from renting - PETITION

Meet Krystalrose – she's fighting for change

Shelter’s new campaigns and organising training programme – YOUR IDEAS NEEDED

Today, 1 in every 52 Londoners is living in temporary accommodation.

This is costing huge amounts of money and doesn’t provide the stability or security families need to thrive.

I'm done with renting because…

Let’s build a better future: Call on the government to build social housing - PETITION

What happened to ‘Everyone In’?

23% left without any move on accommodation and may be at risk of returning to the streets or forced to turn to insecure arrangements like sofa surfing 22% remain in emergency accommodation

23% of those still in emergency accommodation have No Recourse to Public Funds and are stuck without access to homelessness assistance or housing benefit, meaning it is hard for them to move on to a secure home

45% of England’s private renting adults – that's 3.7 million people – have been the victim of illegal behaviour from a landlord or letting agent.

Michael Gove: New Housing Secretary of State – SIGN OPEN LETTER

Fix renting

Build social housing

Help people at risk of sleeping rough

 

Are letting agents refusing you for being on benefits?

Next step contact the property ombudsman (TPO)

EMAIL MP

These stats are shocking!

Jenga

Will you help us get council leaders to support renters?

London Assembly Unanimously Passes Motion on Affordable Housing for Care and Support Workers

A good Home is a human right

 

Level Up Housing

On the 2nd Feb 2022, the government released its plans to ‘level up’ the country.

It included three very important announcements on housing:

Build more genuinely affordable social homes

Give tenants of social homes more protection

Bring forward a national landlord registry, improve standards in privately rented homes and strengthen the rights of renters

 

Gove ‘ashamed’ of Social Housing conditions

 

I’m being evicted – EMAIL MINISTER

 

Museum of homelessness

 

Don't leave young people out on the streets – PETITION

 

London Renters Union

Louise

We beat my landlord. Now let’s take on the system.

 

Be a part of challenging 'Right to Rent' in court

Contact rowan@leighday.co.uk

 

We're campaigning to make sure councils #SideWithRenters

 

Evicted after 47 years – PETITION

 

Renters reform coalition


Safe, secure and affordable homes for all: A renters’ blueprint for reform

 

Generation Rent

 

CAMPAIGN UPDATE: National Register of Landlords

 

Private renters in nine London boroughs face paying half of their income or more on rent, analysis by campaign group Generation Rent has found.

Rent on the typical two-bedroom home costs 45% of a full-time salary in London.

Campaigners say this pushes families into poverty and financial stress, and makes it harder to save or to start a family.

Paying more than a third of your income in rent is considered unaffordable.

Generation Rent is calling on the next Mayor of London to lead a campaign to demand powers from the government to reduce rents.

Measures would include freezing rents within tenancies, to give tenants more certainty, a rent control system that aims to reduce rents overall, and tough penalties for landlords who break the rules, overseen by a city-wide Rent Control Board.

In March 2020, the rent on the median 2-bedroom home in London was £1450 and the median full-time salary was £38,592.

That would mean that a single-earner family with a baby would be spending 45% of their earnings on rent.

The situation is worst in inner London, Newham and Haringey where this figure is above 50% and reaches 76% in Westminster.

The most affordable borough is Bexley, with median rent worth 33% of the median full-time salary.

However, affordability has improved over the last five years, with just five boroughs – Camden, Greenwich, Havering, Redbridge, and Westminster – becoming less affordable since 2015.

Alicia Kennedy, Director of Generation Rent, said: “High rents force people into poverty and make it almost impossible to save towards the future.

No one should have to spend more than 30% of their income on rent, yet this is a reality for most Londoners who are stuck in the private rented sector.

Londoners urgently need bold action to make renting more affordable. Investment in housebuilding is needed to make renting more affordable long-term, but rent controls would offer immediate protection and relief.”

Join our Day of Action - #RentersAreWaiting - PETITION

Since March 2020, 8% of private renters who responded to a Survation survey had received a Section 21 notice from their landlord, which would represent 694,000 private renters across England.

Nearly a third of those surveyed (32%) said they were concerned about the possibility of their landlord asking them to move out this year, which would represent 2.78m private renters across England.

The survey was commissioned by Generation Rent, with results published this week.

We need a COVID Rent debt fund - PETITION

Join us in preventing a homelessness crisis – PETITION

A new report, 'A safe place to call home: Ending unfair evictions for good'.

The report sets out the changes the Government must make to ensure every renter has access to a stable home where they can put down roots and thrive.

You can read all about the report here.

We are calling for:

Open ended tenancies

More time to find a new home

Compensation for a blameless move

No excessive rent increases to force an eviction

No mandatory evictions for people in rent debt

We value your opinion

Close the holiday let tax loophole – PETITION

Renters are being forced out of their homes to make way for more lucrative holidaymakers.

We have been able to get the research done to prove it!

In the last two years rental listings in Wales and South West England have halved and rents have gone up by around 25%.

That's one of our findings that have been reported in today's i newspaper

In North Devon there are 2,591 short-term holiday lets but just 21 private rental listings on Rightmove and 30 on Zoopla.

In Gwynnedd, Wales, there are 4,007 holiday lets but just 99 homes for private tenants.

 

The collapse in the supply of homes to rent are pricing renters out of their local communities – away from their family and friends.

Renter reform coalition – EMAIL MP

Tell your MP we need homes not hotels

Parliamentary debate: help us protect vulnerable renters (Content warning: sexual offences) - PETITION

Ask your MP to protect vulnerable renters (Content warning: sexual offences)

Campaign win! Government to require landlords to register

Vent Your Rent

'Sex for rent' public consultation

 

Are you ready to vote on 5 May?

 

Single Homelessness Project

 

Zowie

 

peer mentoring programme

St.Mungo’s

 

Helping rough sleepers – PETITION

 

Close the eviction loophole – PETITION

You can sign a petition without making a donation

 

Cardboard citizen

Cardboard citizen – Writers ‘circle

1st + 3rd Thursday every month

Contact Bonny@cardboardcitizens.org.uk
07421 383 770

Advice about Evictions

Cheap broadband deals

Cardboard Citizens: Survey for Members

 

Cardboard Citizens' Inclusivity & Equality Agenda

In recent years movements such as Black Lives Matter and #metoo have prompted shifts in our society and highlighted the work that needs to be done to address social inequality.

As a result Cardboard Citizens Staff, Board of Trustees and Member Representatives have completed a course of training over the last six months with Fearless Futures

This focused on understanding and unpicking systems of inequity (the behaviours and processes which have a harmful or negative impacts on marginalised groups), reflecting on our own practices as individuals and an organisation.

 

Through these sessions we have explored:

Privilege

Intersectionality

where different categories overlap such as race and gender resulting in multiple forms of oppression

Gender-norms

Racism and Anti-Racism

Colonialism

Calling people in’

i.e., challenge prejudices or narratives that reproduce inequities

Social justice is at the heart to Cardboard Citizens’ work in the theatre and beyond.

We continue to learn, striving to create inclusive environments and challenge oppressions in society.

This is a key area of focus for the company and we would love to involve some more Members in these conversations.

If you’re interested being part of this and for more information, please email Bonny: Bonny@cardboardcitizens.org.uk

Community check-in every Friday

Access Free Energy Bill Support

 

Update

Including workshops

 

Spear

Update

 

WATCH: Eight brand new short films about social housing

Ella shares her story

Freddie shares his story

Read Louisa's story

 

Glassdoor

Just say hello

 

The passage

 

Renters reform coalition

 

 

Creative + nature + advocacy

 

The Poetry Society

 

25th April

 

Dragon Café

 

update

 

Garden organic

 

Groundwork

Groundwork is a federation of charities mobilising practical community action on poverty and the environment across the UK.

We’re passionate about creating a future where every neighbourhood is vibrant and green, every community is strong and able to shape its own destiny and no-one is held back by their background or circumstances.

START THE NEW YEAR WITH A WARMER HOME

Charities unite to urge for a green and resilient response to the gas crisis

Energy price cap announcement is deeply concerning for those already brunt of rising bills and the continuing financial effect of the pandemic

Apply for a One Stop University Scholarship

 

Re:CREATE psychiatry

 

Living with Suicide

 

Stop gambling suicides – publish the gambling act white paper – PETITION

 

No more Gambling Act whitepaper delays. Write to your MPs now!

 

Me and You and a Global Pandemic

 

Medicating Me: Personal Impressions of Psychiatric Medication

 

Speakeasy advocacy

 

The Advocacy Project

culturally sensitive advocacy

preventing abuse

Moving personal stories

impactful video

reflections on advocacy during Covid

 

Hidden addictions: the problem with gambling – 26th April

 

National Development Team for Inclusion

Advocacy Charter

Leeds Autism AIM: #PowerOfPartnership

NAC – Guidance regarding emotional enrichment

Staying mentally well this winter

Quality advocacy

Audit of MH services – PLEASE COMPLETE

Protect Our Human Rights

This resource helps mental health services think about how to provide a good service to autistic people and people with learning disabilities.

There’s more information about it at Green Light Toolkit – NDTi

 

 

People organised + information

 

 

Connected Kingston – including providing information about Legal drop-in clinic + welfare benefits information

 

Wildflower Alliance

Calling the police on someone in distress IS a threat of violence

"How Big Pharma & Psychiatry Gaslight Us"

Man Arrested in Mistaken Identity Case Locked in Hawaii Mental Health Hospital for Two Years

 

November, 2021

Including International Conference on Psychiatric drug withdrawal – May 2022

 

Open Letter Re: Shooting Death of Orlando Taylor

 

What We’re Still Getting Wrong About What Happened to Orlando Taylor III

 

April 2022

 

Justice for Miguel Estrella: Event & Statements + More

 

May 2022 Newsletter, Wildflower Alliance

 

Mad in the Family Monthly Newsletter, March 2022

 

Mad in America

 

This week’s newsletter here

 

IIPDW Conference on Psychiatric Drug Withdrawal – 6th May

 

Social Security and Asylum: How States Produce Negative Affect to Stigmatize and Deter
“From the Victorian workhouse to contemporary welfare reforms, the provision of ‘welfare’ has long coexisted alongside policies and practices that mobilize negative affect to deter specific groups from claiming state support, and to craft public affect (such as fear and disgust) about these target populations.”

 

My Letter to an Advocate for Involuntary Treatment

 

How long would I have to be off meds and still doing well before my story would mean something to you?

 

The WHO Calls for Radical Change in Global Mental Health

 

The Transformational Qualities of Hearing Voices Groups

 

BMJ: 20% of Health Research Is Fraudulent

Robert Whitaker: Anatomy of an Industry: Commerce, Payments to Psychiatrists and Betrayal of the Public Good

Pharmaceutical companies are no longer attempting to hide their financial influence.

The face of commerce is visible at every stage of the process: the biased design of the trials, the spinning of the results, and the subsequent touting of the drugs to prescribers.

 

Antipsychotics Linked to Increased Breast Cancer Risk

 

Coercion and Dehumanization in Mental Healthcare

Combatting Structural Racism and Classism in Psychiatry: An Interview with Helena Hansen

MIA interviews psychiatrist and anthropologist Helena Hansen about bringing structural competency to psychiatry while rebuilding communities through activism and mutual aid.

 

Can Critiques of Psychiatry Help us Imagine a Post-Capitalist Future? An Interview with Hans Skott-Myhre

 

Responsibility Without Blame in Therapeutic Communities: Interview with Philosopher Hanna Pickard

 

Reason and Madness: How Psychiatry Marginalizes Those Who Contradict Western Norms

 

Art, Music, Exercise, and More: What Are the Recommended Doses for Improving Mental Health?

 

How Western Psychology Can Rip Indigenous Families Apart: An Interview with Elisa Lacerda-Vandenborn

 

Research Reveals Mental Health Professionals’ Participation in Rape Culture

 

Emotional CPR: Heart-Centered Peer Support

 

Inside A Forensic Psychiatry Unit: Here’s How to Survive

 

Lithium No Better Than Placebo for Preventing Suicide Attempts

 

Lithium, Antidepressants, Esketamine—All No Better Than Placebo?


Qualitative Evidence Supports the Ban on Conversion Therapy in Canada

Adverse Childhood Experiences Associated with Higher Anxiety in College Students

What Role can the United Nations Play in Rights-Based Global Mental Health?

 

When It Comes to Mental Health Problems, The Disability Framework Fails

 

Mental Health Care Must Support Consent and Basic Human Rights

 

The Psychiatric Hospital Is an Institution of Social Control

 

Common Statistical Method Conflates Withdrawal with Relapse

 

New Review: Antidepressants Come with Minimal Benefits, Several Risks

Family Physicians Must Change Antidepressant Prescribing Practices

Person-Centered Approach to Psychopathology Eschews Diagnosis

 

The Crisis in Psychiatry and The Slow Way Back: Interview with Vincenzo Di Nicola

 

Consumer Regret

 

When Tapering Antidepressants, is Going Slow Always the Best Strategy?

 

Ketamine Withdrawal Has Severe Consequences

 

The Year Of Potentiality

 

Inside A Forensic Psychiatry Unit: The Ground Where Death Meets Life

 

For Life: Opera on Psychiatry and Its Drugs

 

Unscientific Diagnoses Medicalize Normal Human Experiences

 

Can Anything Good Come Out of Therapy?

 

Critical Psychology for a Better Society: An Interview with Sebastienne Grant

 

De-Psychiatrization and the Promise of Open Dialogue

 

Ekaterina Netchitailova: "Mental Health” Is a Euphemism for Policing Social Deviance

Chuck Ruby: When It Comes to Mental Health Problems, The Disability Framework Fails: A Response to Comments

SSRI Antidepressants Do Not Improve Depression After a Stroke

 

Why We Need a Neurodiverse Philosophy of Autistic Happiness

 

Navigating the meaning of psychosis important for recovery

 

Guardianship Destroyed My Family

 

The Other Side of the Cage

 

Fireside Project: Peer Support for Psychedelic Experiences

 

Understanding the Youth Mental Health Crisis: An Interview with Elia Abi-Jaoude

 

No Meaningful Brain Differences in Depression

 

New NICE Guidelines for ECT Are Dangerously Inadequate, Say 50 Patients and Professionals

 

August 20, 1985: The Day My Psychotic Episodes Ended

Grief: A Shamanic Perspective

How Socioeconomic Class Affects Therapy

Clinicians and Patients Often Disagree on Mental Health Outcomes

Psychiatry and Psychology Fail in Response to Farmer Suicides in India

Online Debates on Psychiatric Diagnosis Often Rely on Rhetoric Instead of Facts

 

Home Alone: Finding Connection During the Pandemic

Why Is Child Sexual Abuse So Common in Institutions?

Why Is Psychiatry So Defensive About Criticism?

Did Pharma Companies Hide Failed ADHD Drug Studies From Regulators?

Study Discovers Extensive Undisclosed Conflicts of Interest in Medical Research

 

Roll-out of 988 Threatens Anonymity of Crisis Hotlines

 

 

Johann Hari: Stolen Focus – Why You Can’t Pay Attention

 

Major Review Finds Limited Effectiveness for Medication and Therapy

 

 

Evidence Distortion in Medicine Explained in One Single Chart

Negative Antidepressant Trials Still Unlikely to Be Published

Shifting Away from ECT and Antidepressants for Depression

 

Put Psyche Back Into Psychiatry and Add Psychological Intimacy

 

 

The New DSM Is Coming and That Isn’t Good News

 

 

Michael Hengartner – Evidence-biased Antidepressant Prescription

 

 

Inside a Forensic Psychiatry Unit: Earning the Right to Sleep on the Floor

 

 

Jane Engleman: Consternation of the Bees

Christine Burnett: The Danger of Marginalizing People

Philip Hickey: Why Is Psychiatry So Defensive About Criticism? Part 2

 

Susan Inman Is at It Again

 

Read Rebuts Biased ECT Defenders

 

The Medicalization of Women’s Suffering: An Interview with Dana Becker

 

Can the Psychodynamic Manual Move Therapy Beyond the DSM?

 

How Providers Can Support Psychiatric Drug Discontinuation

 

John Read: Fear and Loathing in the ECT Debate

James Knochel: Malignant Do-Gooderism: The Tragedies of Allopathic Psychiatry

Michael Hengartner: Regulators Are Approving Drugs Without Clear Evidence That They Work

 

Research News: Ketamine No Better Than Placebo for Reducing Suicidal Ideation in Depression

 

I Made It Out Alive

 

Medicating Preschoolers for ADHD: How “Evidence-Based” Psychiatry Has Led to a Tragic End

 

Ibrahim Ba: The Unveiling of the Truth: A Journey Into the Invisible World

Richard Vernall: Collateral Damage: The Negative Impact of Antidepressants on New Zealand Youth

Evidence Lacking for Mobile Mental Health Apps

 

Toxic Marketing: The Business of Selling TMS

 

How Psychiatry Perpetuates a Culture of Exclusion

 

Addressing Cultural Bias in the Treatment of Personality Disorders

 

The Censors Are Coming for Mental Health

 

MIA’s Suicide Hotline Transparency Project

 

Robert Spitzer on DSM-III: A Recently Recovered Interview

 

Official Guidelines on Antidepressant Discontinuation Fail Practitioners and Patients

Sexual Assault at Any Age is a Risk Factor for Psychosis

Dying to Stay Alive: A Ketamine Disaster

 

For the Love and Care of the People: An Interview with Vanessa Green on Call BlackLine Organizing

 

How Effective Are Therapy and Medication, and What Do They Treat?

 

Inside a Forensic Psychiatry Unit: Access to the Courts—A Right and Survival Tool

 

Esketamine: Dangers and Lingering Questions

Pharmaceutical Industry Corruption Goes Beyond Conflicts of Interest

Racism Evident in Patient Health Records

A “Mass Possession” Event in Nicaragua Exposes Inadequacy of Western Mental Health Approaches

 

Desperate Remedies

 

The Looting of “Outsider Art” by Psychiatry Continues Today

 

Anti-Psychiatry, Szasz, Torrey, Biederman & the Death of Freethinking

 

The Social Unconscious and Character Formation in Neoliberal Culture: An Interview with Lynne Layton

 

Jane Engleman: Fifty-Eight Years Beyond the Community Mental Health Act, 1963

Philip Hickey: The ENIGMA-MDD Project: Searching for the Neuropathology of “Major Depressive Disorder”

UK Finds Success with Peer Supported Open Dialogue Program

Democratizing Psychiatric Knowledge Production Through Lived Experience Leadership

Study Investigates Burdens Placed on Survivor Researchers

 

Why Do We Lock People Up?

 

Why Do People Self-Harm, and How Can We Stop It?

 

Antipsychotics Worsen Cognitive Functioning in First-Episode Psychosis

 

Parenting Changed My Perspective on “ADHD”

 

Nature: Brain Imaging Studies Are Most Likely False

How Evidence Based Medicine Became an Illusion

Antipsychotics Often Prescribed Without Informed Consent

Police Killings and the Pseudoscience of “Excited Delirium”

 

Becoming Whole: How a Change in Me Became a Change in My Practice

 

Thomas Jobe: The Legacy of Research He Leaves Behind

 

Former NIMH Director’s New Book: Why, With More Treatment, Have Suicides and Mental Distress Increased?

 

The Functions of the Mental Health System Under Capitalism

 

Inside a Forensic Psychiatry Unit: Calling in AIR Strikes

 

Mental Wellbeing Poorest in English-Speaking Countries of the World

Anesthetized

Trusting People as Experts of Themselves: Sera Davidow on the Wildflower Peer Support Line

The impact DSM has had on us all – podcast

False Positives in Brain Imaging, Unpublished and Missing Trials, and Conflicts of Interest

Many Service Users Interested in Decreasing Antipsychotic Use with Professional Help

Human rights should be central to Global Mental Health approaches

Robert Whitaker Interviewed on The Dhru Purohit Podcast
Does Long-Term Use of Psychiatric Drugs Do More Harm Than Good?

From Labeled to Healer: A Road Less Traveled

Council of Europe Releases Report to Promote Voluntary Mental Health Treatment

Results of the Inpatient Alternative Soteria Model in Israel

Apples and Oranges in Peer Support Research

Saving Lives or Cementing Stigma? A Review of “Just Like You…”

Psych Concepts Creep Into Our Everyday Experiences: An Interview with Nicholas Haslam

Hearing voices network (HVN)

 

Spiritual crisis Network (SCN)

26th April

 

National SCN Community Forum

 

London SCN

 

Social Prescribing Network

update

 

 

Self- development

 

Action for Happiness

happier – kinder – together

 

10 keys to happier living groups

10 days of happiness

How to live mindfully, even in stressful times

How to feel part of something bigger every day

Happy Planet Index

 

Making time to be mindful helps us reduce stress levels,

by turning our focus to the here and now, rather than dwelling on the past or future.

 

Oxford Mindfulness Centre

The qualities of kindness, compassion, joy and equanimity are the attitudinal foundations and qualitative tone of mindfulness.

Cultivating these qualities plays a central role in freeing the mind from patterns that create and recreate distress?”

 

The richest human isn’t the one who has the most, but the one who needs less.

Wealth is a mindset.

Want less and appreciate more today.

 

Latest News from the Coalition for Personalised Care

Including events

 

Angel + Marc

 

5 Quotes for Coping with Things You Can't Control

Today, use frustration and disappointment to motivate you rather than annoy you.

Breathe and be mindful.

You are in control of the way you respond to life.

It’s not what you broadcast to everyone else that determines the trajectory of your life;

it’s what you whisper to yourself behind closed doors that has the greatest power and influence.

Some people will never understand, and it’s not your job to teach or change them.

Prioritize your peace.

Learning to let go of certain expectations and detach from certain people, are two of the great paths to inner peace.

Your worth is not dependent on someone else’s ability to be kind and loving.

Accept this, and start acknowledging your own worth.

Stop waiting for others to tell you how important you are.

Tell yourself today, and believe it.

The goal this year is to gradually change your response to what you can't control.

To grow stronger on the inside, so that almost nothing on the outside can affect your inner peace and wellness without your conscious permission.

 

Our perspective on just about everything comes from the psychological cage we’ve been conditioned to live in.

A cage created by...

A difficult or disappointing experience

A privileged or sheltered life

Social influence

Pop-culture and mass-media stereotyping

And the list goes on.

Gradually, unbeknownst to us, our cage—our conditioning—drains our mental energy, leaving us vulnerable to bad decision making?

 

When we were young, we saw the world through simple, hopeful eyes.

We knew what we wanted and we had no biases or concealed agendas.

We liked people who smiled.

We avoided people who frowned.

We ate when we were hungry, drank when we were thirsty, and slept when we were tired.
As we grew older our minds became gradually disillusioned by negative external influences?

At some point we began to hesitate and question our instincts?

 

Our minds are incredibly powerful.

They can bring us down or lift us up at a moment’s notice.

How we think about things literally changes everything we do on a daily basis!

Whenever I’m coaching someone who’s struggling in the trenches, I gracefully shift their focus from what they don’t want to what they DO want.

I remind them that what you focus on grows stronger in your life, and that the best time to focus on the positive and take responsibility for your happiness is when you don’t feel like it.

Because that’s when doing so can make the biggest difference.

 

Sometimes you simply have to let go and accept the feeling of not knowing exactly where you’re going next, and do your best to appreciate this freedom.

Because it is only when you are suspended in the air, with no destination in sight, that you force your wings to open fully so you can fly.

And as you soar around you still may not know exactly where you’re travelling to.

But that’s not what’s important.

What’s important is the opening of your wings.

You may not know where you’re headed, but you know that so long as your wings are spread, the winds will carry you forward.

 

4 More Relationship Truths for Tough Times

Resentment hurts you, not them

Sometimes walking away is the only path forward

Some relationships will be blessings, others will serve as lessons

Even the best relationships don’t last forever.

 

3 Hidden Behaviours that Harm Your Relationships

Using complaints and disagreements as an opportunity to condemn each other?

Using hateful gestures as a substitute for honest communication?

The silent treatment?

 

Healing in Your Relationships

If you don’t allow yourself to move past what happened, what was said, what was felt, you will look at your present and future through that same dirty lens, and nothing will be able to focus your foggy judgment.

Always be kinder than necessary.

Forgive yourself for the bad decisions you made, for the times you lacked clarity, for the choices that hurt others and yourself.

Some chapters in our lives have to close without closure.

Be careful not to dehumanize people you disagree with.

Being kind to someone you dislike doesn’t mean you’re fake.

People tend to be more thoughtful and kinder when they have found a little happiness and peace of mind.

 

"How can I respond from a place of clarity and strength, rather than continuing to react in anger and frustration to the painful experiences I've been forced to live through?"

Think about that question for a moment.

Read it again, and sit with it.

Every time you are tempted to react in the same old way, pause for a few seconds, take a few deep breaths, and make space for a healthy change of state—for something new to enter...

It's time to consciously redirect your focus by taking it away from something unchangeable that drags you down, and instead zero it in on something small and actionable that moves you forward in the present moment.

 

4 Hard Choices that Make You Happier in the Long Run

You can choose to be present when it would be easier to pick up your phone.

You can choose to do a workout when it would be more comfortable to sit around.

You can choose to create something special when it would be quicker to consume something mediocre.

You can choose to invest in yourself when it would take less effort to procrastinate.

 

New normal’ anxiety: A therapist’s guide

 

A therapist’s guide to self-care

Self-care is the practice of taking action to improve your health.

We can do this regularly or just from time to time, but it’s important to turn this abstract concept into a concrete goal.

I've written a blog on the ‘6 domains of self-care’, including my top tips on how to give yourself a little love.

 

Physical self-care

This is about taking care of our physical body and getting back to basics.

Eat regularly and in a way that nourishes your body

Exercise regularly

Boost your sleep

 

Psychological self-care

We all know it is important to take care of our mind.

This might include seeing mental health professionals or simply doing things to help us recharge.

Turn off phone notifications

Keep scheduled therapy appointments

Take time for reflection

 

Emotional self-care

This involves your relationship with yourself.

Check in with your feelings and see how you’re doing.

Keep a journal

Vent your frustrations

Engage in opportunities to create happiness

 

Physiotherapist – Working from home: 4 health hacks

 

Plump it up

Make your chair more ergonomic.

Add cushions and a foot rest to take care of your lower back.

 

Go for a raise

Try shaking up your desk design.

Raising your laptop will help to protect your posture.

 

Break it down

Take micro-breaks.

Regular movement helps prevent muscular pains.

 

Stretch yourself

That's it.

Stretch.

Stretching at your desk will reduce the risk of muscle strain.

 

3 simple techniques to help improve your breathing

 

Breathing control

This means just breathing easily, using the least effort.

It helps you to relax.

Place your hand on your tummy, below your ribs.

Feel your tummy rise and fall as you breathe gently through your nose.

Let go of any tension, just breathe as you need to

 

Deep breathing

This helps to fill the lower areas of your lungs.

Take a long, slow deep breath in.

At the end of the breath in, hold the air for 2 to 3 seconds before letting the air out gently.

Try to keep your shoulders relaxed.

Repeat for 3 or 4 deep breaths.

 

Huffing

This is a way of clearing mucus from your lungs.

Take a breath in and then breathe it out quickly through your mouth, as if trying to mist up a mirror.

Once any mucus has moved upwards, you should find it easier to cough it out. But there is no need to try and force up mucus.

Always finish with more relaxed breathing control (exercise 1) after the huffing exercise.

 

A to Zzz... our top tips for a good night's sleep

 

Be consistent

Try to go to sleep and wake up at the same time every day – and avoid napping throughout the day, if possible.

 

Create the right environment

When it is time for sleep, make sure your bedroom is quiet, dark and cool

(The NHS recommends 18-24C for adults and 16-20C for children).

 

Have a change of scene

If you find yourself unable to fall asleep, get out of bed and do something relaxing elsewhere.
Try reading or drinking some non-caffeinated herbal tea, and stay off social media and news sites, which can often be anxiety-inducing.

 

Let Your Inner Child Out
Sometimes the grown up in you needs a break.

So, every now and then, release your inner child and enjoy some carefree fun.
See the world with childlike wonder.

Ask lots of questions.

Revisit one of your favourite childhood books or movies.

How will you let your inner child come out to play?

 

All You Need Is Less
If you're wanting more love, more peace, more meaning, more focus, you'll probably find that all you need is, less.

Less expectations, less talk, less buying, less thinking, less stuff, less stress….

Are you ready for less?

 

So Is the Day
Do you find that your mood depends on, 'As is the day, so am I'?

How about changing it to, 'As I am, so is the day'?

Set an intention for how you want to show up for your day.

Meditate to create a calm mood.

Feed your mind some inspiring thoughts.

Start your day with a positive mindset, and you're likely to find that, ‘As is your mindset, so goes your day’.

 

Supporting Others
Supporting others is important but if it leaves you feeling exhausted,

you may need to set boundaries to protect your energy.

Identify and communicate your needs.

Because taking good care of yourself makes you better able to support others.

 

Mind like the Sky
Whenever your perspective becomes narrow or your mind feels constrained, let your mind become like the sky; stretched from horizon to horizon.
Let your thoughts come and go like clouds, resting your awareness in the blue sky of the mind, experiencing the mind to be vast, open and boundless, like the sky.

 

Fast and Slow Problem Solving
Even though every problem requires a different approach,

are you generally a fast problem solver or a slow one?

Fast problem solving allows you to act intuitively and fix things quickly.

But to foster more creative solutions, sometimes it's better to spend some time on the problem and solve it slowly.

 

Self-Care Forum

Pandemic: Changes in Professional's Attitudes & Practice

Newsletter

Including investing in relationships

Research: Consuming fruit and veg and exercising can make you happier
Too much free time may be almost as bad as too little

 

Update

 

Culture, Health & Wellbeing Alliance

Update

 

Economics of happiness – local futures

Beyond Conspiracy: Framing Meaningful Activism

Gabor Maté supports the localization movement

 

Why are we running harder and faster just to keep a roof over our heads?

Why does our food get flown around the world and back again?

Why is the gap between rich and poor widening to obscene levels?

Because nation states are allowing global corporations to run the show.

There is nothing evolutionary or inevitable about our current system; it’s man-made.

And if enough of us come together, we can change it.

Film

 

Values are shifting. Culture is turning

Increasingly, people are seeing through the false promises of the global consumer culture.

They are recognizing the limitations of the rat-race, and the emptiness of conventional ideas about “success” and “progress”.

Not surprisingly, there is a corresponding surge of interest in indigenous knowledge to guide the creation of healthier, more localized futures.

"But what can I do?!" Introducing the Localization Action Guide

 

13th to 20th June

 

 

Intersectionality

 

 

The benefits system in this country is a disgrace

 

How many people are fighting for benefits where you live?

 

get support with your living costs

 

Mencap - Share your experience with us

 

myth busters

 

Royal Association for Deaf people – Well-being workshops – April

 

Alzeimer's society

 

"Upset and disgusted" at Travelodge – PETITION

 

Office for National Statistics - Outcomes for disabled people in the UK

 

Dramatize – newsletter

 

National Autistic Society

 

Mencap - Tell councils: Count Disabled Children In

 

Share community - How to become a better communicator

National Development Team for Inclusion (NDTi)

 

News

Small Supports – Thinking Differently About How We Support People

Protect Our Human Rights

 

Join the NHS Sounding Board for Ageing & Older People

 

Review into advocacy for people with a learning disability and or autistic people who are inpatients in mental health settings

contact advocacy@ndti.org.uk

 

The Training Hub has launched…

 

National Advocacy Conference 2022 – 7-11th November 2022

 

Seni’s Law – Mental Health Units (Use of Force) Act 2018

 

VITAL projects

 

SCIELine: New strengths-based approaches resources and learning

Social care White Paper: News bulletin

Face-to-face care: Social care newsletter

Update on Liberty Protection Safeguards guidance

 

Update

 

Supporting adult carers. From SCIE

 

Disability Rights UK

Disability Right UK has helplines

 

Help us to improve the Disability Rights UK website

 

Tony Hickmott

 

100 people held more than 20 years in ‘institutions’

Beth

Police officer fired for taking photos of people being sectioned

Press coverage for autistic man in isolation prompts Council action

Severely ill inpatient died after DWP forced him to leave hospital to make benefit claim

Disabled woman left begging a bus driver to let her travel home safely

The Mayor's Entrepreneur competition & training

Because we all care – CQC

Government White Paper fails to re-build the care system

Law Commission recommends adding disability to list of hate crimes

DWP refuses to publish report that found Disabled claimants had “unmet needs”

Councils waste £253 million fighting parents at SEND tribunals since 2014

Mental health impact of leaseholder cladding scandal

All PIP claimants to be offered apply online option

End Fuel Poverty Coalition – PETITION

People deprived of liberty due to misapplication of Mental Health + Capacity Acts

Sickle cell patients ‘face racism in NHS’

Share your experiences of seeing or posting online content about suicide or self-harm

Ground-breaking inquiry questions ‘Whose social care is it anyway?’

DWP failures mean dying people are being rejected for PIP

DWP ignoring concerns about Disabled benefit claimants’ deaths

 

The Reason I Jump

Ker Featherstone

Damning new MP report calls for end to long-term incarceration of people with autism and learning disabilities

"Sharp rise" in DWP benefit death reviews "deeply concerning"

DWP to stop ‘cold-calling’ Disabled people to make low benefit ‘offers’

Our work capability assessment factsheet

Poverty Alliance

DWP refuse to publish analysis of £20-week Universal Credit uplift ‘as it is not public interest’

Hate Crime Survey

Universal Credit cuts will come as ‘a shock’

Disabled children face digital divide

Assisted Dying Bill

Health and Disability Green Paper – a cause for concern

Hundreds of thousands “will plunge into poverty” as Minister rejects UK-wide call to keep Universal Credit uplift

New body to tackle health disparities set to launch

Lords: Government failing to implement Equality Act

I would have closed Cawston Hall’ - Norfolk Council care boss – Jeesal Group

A fifth of housing not fit for good health – Good Home Inquiry

Elections Bill bad news for Disabled voters

Austerity cuts killed tens of thousands from 2010 onwards

Over two thirds of Universal Credit claimants currently in arrears while living costs rise

Disabled claimant died underweight, ‘unkempt and dirty’ after ESA and PIP wrongly stopped

Disability Benefits Without the Fight - PETITION

Excluded children put in ‘unsafe’ institutions

Disability Horizons launches new online wellbeing community

Social care plans expose rich vs poor divide in terms of home loss

DWP urged to reveal algorithm that ‘targets’ Disabled people for benefit fraud

Almost £3bn to be awarded to private sector to assess disability benefits

 

Osbornes Law

 

Inquiry sought into deaths of 369 mental distress patients in Sussex Trust’s care

 

High Court rules loss of around £180 a month disability premiums on claiming Universal Credit is unlawful discrimination

 

Covid highlights social security system is “simply unfit for purpose”

DWP blocks publication of research on effectiveness of benefit sanctions

Disabled people’s experiences of the benefits system: Committee publishes withheld Government-commissioned research

Disability strategy ruled unlawful, DWP denied permission to appeal

 

Disabled people five times more likely to experience food poverty, says Food Foundation

 

DWP admits wrongly refusing PIP to record number of Disabled people

 

Two-thirds of NHS Trusts failing to support equal access to care for Disabled patients

 

Citizens Advice energy advice

 

400,000 people could be pulled into poverty by April real-term cuts to benefits

 

Nearly half of people referred to Trussell Trust food banks are in debt to the DWP

 

Jackie Maguire

 

DR UK calls on Home Office to make Disability Hate Crime a specific offence

 

Tip of the Iceberg: Deaths and Serious Harm in the Benefit System

 

Pushed to the Edge: Poverty, food banks and mental health

 

DWP failing to make reasonable adjustments for UC claimants with mental health problems

 

Reasonable adjustment

 

Adult Disability Payment

 

Just Can’t Wait card

 

Extension of terminal illness ‘Special Rules’ for ESA and Universal Credit from April 2022

 

DWP work coaches “bullied” into forcing distressed claimants to attend work-related meetings

 

How bare bones benefits don’t add up

 

Under Pressure campaign

 

Two in five Universal Credit claimants forced into debt, finds the Trussell Trust

 

Pushed to the Edge: Poverty, food banks and mental health

 

Ofcom: telecomms and broadband providers must do more to help vulnerable customers

DWP: deaths, cover-up, and a toxic 30-year legacy

Fast-tracked access to benefits extended to those likely to be in final year of life

Benefits rise does little to ease cost of living crisis

 + lots more!

 

Disability News Service

 

Equality Network

 

Sanctuary, Safety, Solidarity

 

Holyrood Committee report into a ban on Conversion Practices

 

You can watch parliament in action here

 

You can become a member of any NHS foundation trust – just look on their website?

It's LGBT History Month

 

Court upholds Census guidance - trans men and women can self-identify their lived sex

 

There’s still time to fill in the Census!

 

The call for evidence on the Gender Recognition Reform Bill

 

Lesbian Visibility week – 25 April – 1 May

 

Care and Support Alliance - An appeal for your story

Contact csa@nas.org.uk

 

MND Association

Survey

Act now for safer homes for people with MND

 

 

Land + other views

 

Humanists UK

Working to ensure a fairer, kinder, and better society

 

2025 Strategy

 

We must never blame the victims

Exposé: Sexist, homophobic, and violent religious resources

 

We are not a Christian country

Did you know that bishops are speaking and voting for us in the House of Lords?

The only other sovereign state in the world where clerics vote in Parliament is the Islamic Republic of Iran.

Clearly, we’re in need of change.

Majority against bishops in the Lords

How can I be happy?

What should we think about death?

How do we know what’s true?

What makes something right or wrong?

 

Update

 

Important: Our worst fears come true? – ASSAULT ON HUMAN RIGHTS IN UK

An amazing list of people + organisations

 

Ask your MP to close down illegal schools

Compassion wins as Austria legalises assisted dying

Tell the UK Government to support humanist marriages

A big step forward – MPs debate humanist marriage in Westminster

Help us ban 'conversion therapy' right now!

Homes for Ukraine

 

End discriminatory admissions – sign now

 

Nigerian Humanists President sentenced to 24 years in prison – EMAIL MP

 

On the nature of morality’, Tuesday 17 May

28th April

 

Land justice UK – Land and Food

New land report out on land reform in Scotland

police, crime, sentencing and courts bill

You can find a Member of the House of Lords and write to them asking them to review this dangerous bill

 

A win in the fight for land rights – PETITION

 

Land worker’s alliance

 

 

Human rights

 

 

Change The Covid Guidance In Psychiatric Wards

 

The British Institute of Human Rights

Hear from experts on Human Rights reform!

Update

 

The Ethical Dilemma Cafe – 26-27th April

 

Fly the flag for human rights

Update

 

Refugee action

How to build a BÖRDER KRISÍS

Boris, it's time to commit – PETITION

anti-refugee Bill

Stop The #AntiRefugeeBill petition

What do Priti Patel’s constituents want?

Heartbreaking deaths in the Channel: tell your MP enough is enough – EMAIL MP

What exactly is the hostile environment?

Baz

Thank you for seeing the human not the label

 

EMAIL MP: Ukrainian refugees need all the help we can give

 

TELL YOUR MP: vote to lift the ban

You know the facts.

People seeking asylum are banned from working, unable to support themselves and expected to live on just £5.84 a day. It's always been an absurd policy, and soon MPs will have the chance to reassert common sense and lift the ban.

 

Polling from this week shows that an enormous 81% of members of the public surveyed agree that the ban should be lifted.

 

Migrants Organise is taking the Home Office to Court!

New Plan for Immigration is same old Hostile Environment

Your solidarity is working!

This Refugee Week we want to share our New Dreams

Solidarity Knows No Borders

Share our message of dignity and welcome

 

The Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health (RCPCH) has published a statement calling for the abolition of all NHS charging, becoming the first Royal College to call for more than a temporary suspension of these discriminatory and harmful Hostile Environment policies.

 

NEW report: shining a spotlight on the devastating impact of Hostile Environment policies during COVID

2 minute action: The COVID inquiry must not forget migrants

 

What is happening with the anti-refugee Borders Bill?

 

Dismantling the hostile environment - podcasts

 

Hostile – film

 

Solidarity is what connects us – EMAIL MP

 

19th June

 

will you call on the Government to welcome climate activists as refugees?

 

Freedom from Torture – close the barracks

Help with Freedom from Torture’s strategy

Urgent: Stop the UK Decriminalising Torture

New Plan for Immigration - Consultation Guidance

URGENT: Act now to protect refugees from Priti Patel's New Plan.

Dr Waheed Arian

kick out hate

URGENT: if passed into law, Priti Patel's Anti-Refugee Bill will destroy the lives of countless people seeking asylum.

Write to your MP to stop it.

One strong voice

#TogetherWithRefugee

Join a local group

Urgent: shocking news – EMAIL MP

The facts + figures ?

write to your local newspaper against the anti refugee bill

Ukraine

Clause 11 of the anti-refugee bill, which would punish Ukranians and other refugees for the way that they travel to safety – was removed by the Lords

Boris—if you truly support Ukrainian refugees, scrap the anti-refugee billVIDEO

 

A Holocaust survivor just sent this message to Boris Johnson – on the cliffs of Dover

 

£5 a day

 

22nd March

MPs voted to punish refugees who make their own way to safety in the UK as part of the Nationality and Borders Bill.

The bill has now entered a stage called ‘ping pong’, where it bounces back and forth between the House of Lords & the House of Commons.

 

Safe passage – We need your help – write to a Peer today

Write to your MP

Our amazing young leaders

Safe Passage v. the Government

Priti's plan abandons child refugees – TAKE ACTION

Safe Routes Save Lives- EMAIL MP

Borders Bill – EMAIL MP

We need safe routes now - PETITION

 

Support Lord Alf Dubs – EMAIL A PEER

 

UK and Ukraine – LETTER TO PRITI PATEL

 

Over 1,000 Faith Leaders Say No to Anti-Refugee Bill

 

Stop Boris' plans to exile refugees – EMAIL MP

 

Detention Action

Stop Priti Patel’s pre-Brexit race to deport trafficking & torture survivors

What do you most want to fight for in 2021?

This is a humanitarian disaster. Close the detention camps now

Meet with your MP

URGENT: Priti Patel is winding the clock back on women’s rights - PETITION

WE OPPOSE UNJUST DEPORTATIONS - PETITION

URGENT: NO OFFSHORE DETENTION – EMAIL MP

 

Survivors of Napier Barracks beat the Home Office in court

Six men who Priti Patel detained at Napier Barracks have proved in court that she violated their human rights.

 

Stop union busting in Morocco! – PETITION

 

Tell Denmark: Syria is not safe for refugees to return. Reverse your shameful decision.

 

A message from the White Helmets to Ukrainians under attack

As Ukrainians come under brutal attack by Putin, it is chilling to see Russia using the same strategy and playbook in Ukraine as they use in Syria – attacking fleeing civilians, controlling humanitarian corridors, bombing hospitals and spreading disinformation.

 

Our volunteer first responders have saved more than 125,000 civilian lives in Syria since 2014, many from direct Russian attacks, and it’s heartbreaking to witness the same tragedies being repeated over and over again.

We know the scale of horror that Russian bombings can inflict: no one and nothing is off limits.

In Syria, a concerted Russian disinformation campaign spreads fabricated claims attacking White Helmets volunteers to cover up war crimes.

Now Russia is using the same methods to legitimize its attack on the Ukrainian people – using social media to sow doubt about atrocities committed against civilians.

When I saw the aftermath of Russian airstrikes on the maternity hospital in Mariupol last week, including Russia’s immediate disinformation efforts online, it was as if history was repeating itself.

We have witnessed these same horrific scenes and lies during attacks on Syrian hospitals.

It angers me to see companies such as Twitter continue to allow accounts to spread falsehoods – and

I urge you to join me in calling on Twitter to shut down all accounts, including Russian government accounts, being used to spread harmful disinformation

A few days ago I spoke to the Washington Post and shared what we have learnt from our experience in case it can be of any help to our brothers and sisters in Ukraine.

 

I told them that the GoPro camera is the best way to fight Russian disinformation and report the reality on the ground.

 

I also warned against sharing GPS locations of medical facilities with the United Nations.

 

In Syria the Russians used that information to target hospitals.

Ukrainians should also establish small medical and civil defense outposts in secret locations around the city to take the pressure off larger hospitals and mitigate the risk of targeting first responders.

There is no doubt Putin has been emboldened by the impunity he enjoyed in Syria.

If Putin is not held accountable for his invasion of Ukraine the whole story will repeat itself again.

Today, we need actions not words from the international community.

They must pursue justice relentlessly so no dictator can feel able to shamelessly commit such atrocities.

For the last seven years, the Syrian people have stood up to Russia and have yet to be defeated – so we believe Ukrainians can do so as well.

At the end of the day, it is the will of the citizens that is the strongest weapon, even against the mightiest militaries in the world.

In solidarity,

Raed Al Saleh

Your right to know – PETITION

 

 

Third sector + campaigning

 

 

Third Sector – Governance bulletin

Third Sector – weekly

Give communities more power over local assets and a £2bn support fund, report urges

Giving by the super-rich could be perpetuating social inequality, academics conclude

Charities lost almost £8.6m to fraud last year, latest figures show

Top earners at Wellcome Trust paid almost £8m each after investments boomed

 

Adeela Warley: In 2022 let’s make social media a place for hope, not hate

 

Latest accounts for the London Clinic show that the highest earner, who is not identified, received a salary package of between £510,000 and £520,000 in 2020

This is a charity! - Wendy

 

Fifth former Oxfam GB staffer sanctioned after DRC sexual misconduct investigation

 

Why aren’t more charities supporting community building initiatives?

 

NAVCA

Lots of interesting events

 

Fast minds – Kingston

 

Kingston Voluntary Action

 

4 in 10 children in London live in poverty

 

Developing a 2040 Community Vision for Kingston

1 in 4 are living in poverty after housing costs

Source: London’s poverty profile 2021

 

Snapshot of Kingston's Voluntary and Community Activity

 

KVA Spring training programme 2022

 

Opportunity – The Community Space, Royal Exchange, Kingston – by 26th April

 

Ukraine support

 

Update

 

16th May

 

Sheila McKechnie Foundation

We believe that anyone can be a force for change

Together we explore change, share knowledge and learn from change-makers

 

Transforming power for social change

Can get places for free email info@smk.org.uk

 

Worried about the Policing Bill? Wondering what you can do? Find out how to get involved

 

26 April

How do you know when you’re getting there?

26 May

Is involvement without tokenism possible?

21 June

Climbing out of our silos – can we tackle big issues together?


Want to be part of it?

Register and book your free places now.

 

Book now for the April 2022 Campaign Carousel programme

You can ask for a free space

 

The 2021 Campaigner Survey Results are in!

 

The Power Project: transform power, build solidarity, make change

 

Why a voice inside Whitehall matters for campaigners

 

SMK Campaigner Awards 2022 Shortlist

Join us for this year's National Campaigner Awards virtually 19 May at 4pm 💥🌟✨

 

LawWorks

 

 

Support + more ideas!

 

 

Amnesty International

Demand Egyptian authorities immediately release Ramy Shaath!

Boris Johnson needs to hear this

Urgent Action Network Update

 

Patient Safety Learning

 

Mental illness is a lie which causes untold damage

 

Whistleblowing, patient feedback, visiting restrictions + events...

Update

 

The Healthcare Show in 18th + 19th May 2022

 

Latest hub highlights: Misogyny, crosswords, Ockenden...

 

Patient association

Loneliness – Age UK

Loneliness – MIND

Loneliness – NHS

Campaign to end loneliness

PHSO seeks patients views on new strategy

Every Mind Matters

 

Published guidance for Integrated Care Systems (ICSs) teams

Start engagement early

Provide clear and accessible public information

Build relationships with excluded groups

Co-produce and redesign services and tackle system priorities in partnership with people and communities.

 

Nutrition Checklist

 

The NHS Constitution for England

 

Call for Welsh Government apology after failings at Ysbyty Gwynedd mental health unit

 

Vulnerable man Clive Treacey 'failed in life and death'

 

Share your story with the BBC

Contactjulie.ball@bbc.co.uk

 

Opportunity to shape national audit

contact Kim Rezel onkim.rezel@hqip.org.uk

 

Why asylum seekers deserve better healthcare, and how we can give it to them

 

HM Government Public Appointments – Patient Safety Commissioner

 

Government launches cancer consultation

 

From Patient association helpline – change in staff results in long-awaited apology

 

Muriel* called our helpline recently to update our advisers on a complaint they had supported her with in the past, which finally had a good outcome.

Muriel had made a formal complaint about a hospital.

She wasn't t happy with the final response she'd received from the hospital and, so, contacted the Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman (PHSO).

The PHSO failed to uphold Muriel's complaint.

The Ombudsman could find no fault in the hospital's response and said Muriel wouldn’t achieve anything by taking the complaint further.

At this point, the complaint had been going on about three years.

The PHSO refused to accept any evidence from Muriel.

But recently Muriel saw that the hospital had appointed a new complaint manager.

Muriel contacted the manager who offered to meet her to find more about the complaint.

After the meeting, the new manager apologised to Muriel and accepted that the hospital had been in the wrong.

Muriel told our advisers she was happy to see the positive approach from the new complaints manager at the hospital.

However, Muriel is very disappointed with the PHSO and plans to take her concerns further to help other patients.

*Name changed to protect privacy.

 

To contact our helpline team, call 0800 3457115 between 9.30am and 5pm on weekdays or email helpline@patients-association.org.uk.

See our website for more ways to get in touch.

And remember, we have a
range of information on our website from our very popular nutrition checklist right through to understanding your medicines.

Collaboration must be at the heart of the future of health and care

Share your experience of A+E

Share your ideas on how patient data is used

Review highlights stark ethnic healthcare inequalities in the UK

 

Maternity Scandal: Fighting for the Truth

 

Mental health problems cost UK economy at least £118 billion a year – new research

 

We want your views on patients’ rights to choose where they have treatment

contact hannah.verghese@patients-association.org.uk

 

Have your say on national standard for shared decision making

 

The illusion of evidence based medicine

 

'Words will not be enough' say grieving families of Shropshire's maternity scandal

 

Integration white paper loses sight of active, engaged patients

 

Ockenden report: the refusal of our healthcare service to take patient experience seriously

 

AGM 26th May

contact mailbox@patients-association.org.uk

 

Help shape the digital health + care plan – 26th April

 

paid 28th April

 

Apply for peer leadership academy

 

Just Treatment – Rich countries protecting pharma monopolies

 

26th April

 

Engage Britain

Making the country work for all of us

 

ZERO SUICIDE ALLIANCE – FREE TRAINING

NEW suicide awareness training for university students

 

Suicide + co

 

Citizen UK

Living Wage for care workers – EMAIL MP

 

Kings Fund

 

What can be done to tackle LGBTQ+ health inequalities?

 

Health Management and Policy Alert: 20 July 2021

Including reforming the MHA: government response to consultation

Not listening to us? – Wendy

 

Understanding integration: how to listen to and learn from people and communities

 

Health and Wellbeing Bulletin

Including poor health + housing + obesity + bad roads

 

Health Management and Policy Alert: 10 September 2021

Including Home for all

 

What is needed to reduce ethnic minority health inequalities?

 

The pandemic has further opened up deep health inequalities

 

Kerslake Commission on Homelessness and Rough Sleeping

 

Good homes for all: a proposal to fix England's housing

 

The Health and Care Bill: six key questions

 

Read our updated position on integrated care

 

Reflections on the Health and Care Bill

 

Integrated care systems highlights

 

How much longer and further are health inequalities set to rise?

 

Health and Wellbeing Bulletin

 

How will integrated care systems work under the Health and Care Bill?

Including details of a free course “an introduction to leading with kindness and compassion in health + social care

 

The power of those small acts of kindness

The WHO Prison Health Framework: a framework for assessment of prison health system performance

within local communities

How does the UK's health care performance compare internationally?

Anchor institutions must re-imagine how public bodies immerse themselves within local communities + partnering is a verb

The cost of poor housing in England

Integrated care systems highlights

Left behind: a decade of intergenerational unfairness

Invisible women: understanding women’s experiences of long-term imprisonment

Care Quality Commission's reply to the Joint Committee on Human Rights about protecting human rights in care settings

 

What does successful adult social care reform look like?

 

Listen: Tackling health inequalities head on through integrated care

Your health and care explained update

New podcast: What is the Health and Care Bill and why does it matter?

Restraint, segregation and seclusion review: progress report

Digital Health Digest

From harm to hope: a 10-year drugs plan to cut crime and save lives

Integrated care systems and social care: the opportunities and challenges

Integrated care systems highlights

 

Updated: Key facts and figures about the NHS

 

New explainer: How does the system hear from communities?

 

Health and Wellbeing Bulletin

 

Robot performs first laparoscopic surgery without human help

 

Health and social care integration: joining up care for people, places and populations

 

Health Management and Policy Alert: 22 February 2022

 

Improving decision-making through connected intelligence: leveraging new capabilities to help life sciences companies advance health

 

Improving direct payments oversight

 

Governing the health and care system in England: creating the conditions for success

 

23rd – 26th May – integrated care in practice: ensuring systems deliver for people, place + population

 

Social care 360

 

Community is the best medicine – 6th – 9th June

 

Thinking differently about commissioning – 11th – 14th July

 

Local government public health funding: putting the jigsaw together without the picture on the box

 

General practice in-person conference – 28th June

 

Kings fund survey on digital equity

 

Health and Wellbeing Bulletin

 

Digital health and care congress 2022 – 11th October

Integrated care systems highlights

What could provider collaboratives look like?

Not really outcome based commissioning? Certainly not people commissioning - Wendy

 

 

Westminster Health Forum (WHF) policy conference – PROVIDE FREE SPACES – JUST APPLY?

 

New developments and speakers - keynotes: NHS England, BHF & NIHR-BHF Cardiovascular Partnership - WHF policy conference – 28th April 2022 – cardiovascular research, prevention and care in England

 

Who cares 4 the carers

A relaxation technique to help you

 

Carers UK

Survey

 

 

People’s theatre

 

 

Degenerate Fox Theatre

 

Auditions – 7th + 12th May

 

Underground lights

Streams of Consciousness

Book your free tickets…

 

Brixton House - Meet our new Associate Artists!

 

Somerset House

 

We Are History: Race, Colonialism & Climate Change

 

Announcing the launch of Morgan Stanley Lates at Somerset House with The Courtauld

 

Our latest podcast episode + celebrating creative rebellion

 

Weekend listening, experimental games + world-class photography

 

Go under the bonnet of creative process

 

Upgrade Yourself with new events and opportunities

 

Somerset House Studios

Grounding Practice

AGM returns, plus new residents and commissions this autumn

More beautiful stuff!

Exploring interactive fiction in gaming, plus new exhibitions

Strategies for Making Music + Artist Opportunities

New residency exploring artificial intelligence

 

Autograph - New Online Events: Collective Approaches to Art Making / Rotimi Fani-Kayode: Tranquility of Communion / Exhibition Videos / Art, Activism, Archive

 

Brent in the 80s and 90s / John Akomfrah commission on display / Inequality, Social Change and Marginalisation / Final week of our Open Call

 

Watermans – events

 

Exchange – twickenham

 

MAIA

Marsh Farm Outreach

Locality

Common Wealth

 

More incredible speaker announcements

 

Fantastic for Families – Spring fun for families

 

 

Justice

 

 

Law centre Network

South West London Law centre

 

Law for life

 

High pay centre

 

4 day working week

 

video explaining 4-day week

 

PETITION

 

Conference for the European Network for the Fair Sharing of Working Time – 20th + 21st October

 

Platform London

 

Basic Income UK

 

Every step we take towards a Basic Income will liberate power in the hands of the citizen

Paddy Ashdown

 

Welsh basic income pilot have been published

In a statement from Jane Hutt, Minister for Social Justice

The pilot will be targeted at care leavers

All young people leaving care that turn 18 over a 12 month period starting this summer will be invited to participate

That is expected to be about 500 people

Participants will receive the payments for 24 months starting from the month after their 18th birthday

A £1,600 a month basic income will be paid each month

Universal basic income motion passed by Richmond Council

69% of people in Wales support basic income pilots

Stockton, California who released incredible results from the experiment there!

Start your own Basic Income Conversation today – TOOLKIT

Is Biden leading the United States towards a basic income?

 

We've urged ministers to back basic income for mental health – Peace of mind project

 

Let's make Basic Income a reality - PETITION

 

The Basic Income Conversation is growing... here's how

 

Universal Credit cut: now is the time for basic income

Last week the £20 Universal Credit uplift was cut.

5.8 million people claim Universal Credit in England, Scotland and Wales. Overnight, their incomes fell by £1,000 a year.

If they’d had a basic income, they wouldn’t have been plunged into precarity.

Now is the time for a basic income.

There are thousands of people across the UK working to make that clear.

How do we pay for a basic income?

 

Email mp asking them to join CPPLG

 

1st June

 

NEW REPORT: Results of our Basic Income Month

 

 

Newsletter of the European Network for the Fair Sharing of Working Time

 

 

Invite your MP to the #FlexforAll briefing

 

Universal Credit

 

PACE

Parents against child exploitation

Watch our new film about spotting the signs of child exploitation

Safeguarding training – perhaps ask for a free space?

Video – towards hope

update

 

Transform Justice

Prosecuting mental health – accountability or criminalisation?

A different understanding? How the CJS discriminates against those with autism

When should a family dispute end up in court?

Barely legal? The experience of remote tribunal hearings

The forgotten people? Prisoners on remand in the pandemic

Does L&D stop the revolving door of police custody?

Does diversion from court have an image problem?

Computer says yes – you will pay a fine and get a criminal record

Swipe right to plead guilty

Covid justice – how not to do it?

Altruistic up-tariffing? The pitfalls of more rehabilitative police cautions

Children imprisoned on remand – the stark reality of racial bias

Survey for magistrates

Only by radically shrinking the magistrates’ court can the Crown Court backlog be reduced

Is justice for victims always criminal justice?

Does the defendant in the magistrates’ court get a fair hearing?

Want to build trust in the police? Detain less

Making child remand a last resort

Do people who get in trouble with the law deserve double punishment?

Independent domestic violence advocates in specialist courts – a backfire effect?

Is imprisonment before trial the result of poor risk assessment?

 

Keeping the wheels of justice turning – magistrates’ views on justice in the pandemic

 

Equal Justice USA

Sign the petition and tell President Biden to fulfill his promise to clear the federal death row.

How This Minneapolis Man Is Healing Collective Trauma Through Creative Counseling and Mentoring

Trauma informed training attempts to bridge gap between Newark residents + cops

A model for police + community relations

An up-close portrait of the people doing violence intervention work

New nonprofit uses yoga to address Black men’s mental health

When You Hear Me, You Hear Us

An amazing kind video

Community-based violence prevention works, but it needs sustained support

Trauma to trust programme

 

Remarkable Women

 

Trauma to trust

 

INQUEST

Truth, justice + accountability

Progress on the legal aid for inquests campaign

 

Watch & share our new video demanding access to justice for bereaved families

 

Update

Leon – Nadia – Sam – Matthew -Zoe – Marshall – Jane – Sammy – Coco – Trevor – Shane – Abdul – Lamont – Andrew – Steven – Gavin – Jason – Micheal – Jack – Alex

including connection cafes

 

Justice – EVENTS

 

Restorative justice 4 all

 

The Howard League

 

Less crime, safer communities, fewer people in prison

 

Punished when they should have been helped

 

Stop building women's prisons – EMAIL MP

focussed on reducing the unnecessary arrests of women, reducing child arrests and ending the criminalisation of children in care

 

Changing outcomes for Black people in the criminal justice system

 

"Nobody really cares about prisons"

Arrests of children have been reduced by 74% over the last decade, in another major step forward for our successful campaign.

 

Since 2010, the Howard League for Penal Reform has been working with police forces across England and Wales to reduce child arrests, helping to ensure that hundreds of thousands of boys and girls do not have their lives blighted by a criminal record.

 

We campaign on a wide range of issues including children in the criminal justice system, change inside prisons, community sentencing + policing

We have an in-house expert legal team who represent children in custody.

We strive to minimise the human suffering and social harms that are both causes of crime and consequences of punishment.

We stand for constructive forms of justice that contribute to building a safer, fairer society.

We stand against abuse and mistreatment and all forms of discrimination in the criminal justice system.

 

Prisons create conflict, put a strain on the police and hospitals and thwart human potential – they simply do not work.

Sadly, the government are planning on expanding our already over-crowded prison population.

The recently published Prisons strategy white paper has dedicated £4 billion to new prions places, with the Ministry of Justice’s own projections predicting the population to reach almost 99,000 over the next five years.

 

International Women’s Day

A day in the community where we celebrate and empower women.

 

Unfortunately, for women in prison, today won’t be a day for celebrations.

 

There were almost 5,000 receptions of women into prison last year, and more than half of them were for women on remand.

Too many women are being swept up into the justice system when it is not necessary or appropriate.

Most women in prison have a history of childhood abuse or trauma, they need a safe space and support.

 

12th May

 

17th May

 

19th May

 

Spark Inside

 

update

 

User Voice

 

Max

 

Koestler Arts

 

Being creative has helped me survive my prison sentence”

 

It's going to be a good one! - including Ai Weiwei

 

Dates and Deadlines in the Koestler Arts Diary!

 

Reprieve

You can email + sign petitions without donating to anything

MoD document approves British troops for illegal bombing, charity claims

Urgent: Egypt

Saifullah Paracha

Saudi Arabia

Ahmed Rabbani

Ravil Mingazov

Hassan al Maliki

Abdullah's torture

Jagtar Singh Johal

US drone strikes – SEND A MESSAGE

Dr. Osama Yassin

I’m still in Guantánamo - TWEET

Ministers are deciding whether to save a life

North-East Syria – ACTION

 

Bahrain

 

81 men executed in Saudi Arabia – ACTION

 

Salina and Joey – EMAIL LIZ TRUSS

 

Merri Utami – PETITION

 

Allout

 

Emergency in Hungary – PLEASE SIGN

 

EU: take action against Hungary’s anti- LGBT+ law

 

Stop homophobia, transphobia and misogyny in Italy

 

China: WeChat bans LGBT+ students – PETITION

 

S.O.S. from Ghana

 

"Fists bumping into my face and body" – PETITION

 

No more "conversion therapies" in Colombia – PETITION

 

Bulgaria must prosecute this homophobic presidential candidate! – PETITION

 

Make online spaces safe for LGBT+ people

 

Rek It, Raven’s petition

 

Arcigay’s petition

 

Stana’s petition

 

We need to talk about Russia, again – PETITION

 

Take action on today's Trans Day of Remembrance

 

Viki's speech at the 2021 MTV EMA

 

Coca-Cola, Starbucks, and H&M: Protect your LGBT+ staff in China!

 

Your signature could save Salman's life

 

Salekh + Ismail

 

Emergency: Afghan LGBT+ people in danger

 

Anti-Trans Bill in Guatemala Must Be Stopped

 

Doski Azad

 

Russia: They’re shutting us down

 

Behind the scenes of China's queer community

 

Help ban "conversion therapy" in the Netherlands

 

A giant flag that says: support trans visibility

 

Russian LGBT Network under attack

Lesbian activist attacked in Ukraine

 

Equality act Japan

 

Liberty – know your rights

police facial recognition is unlawful – PETITION

New poll calls for rights-respecting pandemic response – PETITION

Quiz!

Scrap the Coronavirus Act – end human rights lockdown

DON’T DECRIMINALISE TORTURE – email your MP

Our ability to hold Gov to account is under threat

Safeguard our rights and access to justice – PETITION

Take our survey

The Protect Everyone Bill – EMAIL MP

NO MORE POLICE POWERS – PETITION

I stood up to power. Sign the petition so you can too

Government must not be untouchable – PETITION

Liberty Investigates: Our biggest story yet – Esparto 11

Tell your MP to protect our right to protest

Don’t let the Government become untouchable - PETITION

Facial recognition: A year since world-first legal challenge

Stop the Policing Bill - PETITION

Liberty Investigates reveals police 'fail' hate crime victims

Stop the Government becoming untouchable - PETITION

WATCH our new protest videos – EMAIL MP

URGENT: protect protest rights – EMAIL MP

Don’t let Gov hide from accountability – PETITION

 

You do not have to donate when signing a petition – petitions are free to sign

 

On Thursday 22 February 1934,

Liberty was founded to defend “the whole spirit of British freedom”

Now, on our 88th anniversary, our fight is more important than ever as the Government attempts to shut down the ways people can hold it to account.
We won’t let the Government become untouchable.

Democratic crisis

In a democratic society, people must be able to hold the powerful to account – but the Government is trying to rewrite the rules.

It wants to ‘overhaul’ the Human Rights Act. The HRA forces public authorities to respect rights and enables people to enforce their rights in court if they fall short.

But the Government wants to remove this obligation on public authorities and make it near-impossible for anyone to get to court and see justice.

Similarly, its Judicial Review Bill will change judges’ powers so challenging the Government’s action in court won’t be worthwhile.

Plans for mandatory voter ID which could prevent millions of people having their say in elections.

And the Government is sidelining MPs when making laws, giving them little time to scrutinise proposals.

Alongside these attacks, the anti-protest Policing Bill is back in Parliament next week.

Last month the House of Lords dealt a major blow to the Government’s plans by ripping out some of the worst proposals.

But ministers are now trying to get some back in – including criminalising noisy protests.

Noise is at the very heart of protest.

It is literally how we make our voices heard.

Liberty was founded following the oppressive treatment of protesters on the National Hunger March, and we will always work to protect this key pillar of democracy.

Together we can stop this democratic crisis in its tracks.

 

Email MP to protect our rights

 

URGENT PETITION: save the Human Rights Act

 

TELL THE GOVERNMENT TO STOP THE ATTACKS ON OUR DEMOCRATIC RIGHTS

 

FACIAL RECOGNITION – PETITION

 

Liberty Shared

 

Fighting NHS Charging – What can you do now?

 

Big brother watch

We need civil liberties defenders like you

Find the secret algorithms YOUR council is using...

Unparalleled State Powers as Covid Cases Plummet

Mass surveillance found *unlawful* by Europe's highest human rights court

Stop Thermal Surveillance

Vaccine passes to be mandatory! – ACTION

Exposed: The Poverty Panopticon

NEW: Government & big tech censorship EXPOSED

We’ve been censored by YouTube

'Vaccine passports, a solution looking for a problem' - David Davis MP

From citizen scores to facial recognition - we're fighting back!

Authoritarianism is on the rise

No to COVID passports

We've launched a legal challenge against Johnson's Covid IDs

Victory for civil liberties in the UK

Covid passes DITCHED

The Chinese state owned CCTV watching you – PETITION

Welsh Covid passes have "unmeasurable" impact

Covid passes in Wales & Northern Ireland scrapped

UK = Mandatory Covid ID free!

 

The censors become the censored

 

The censor’s charter has landed – PETITION

 

Pandemic Police State – The Rise of Authoritarianism in the UK

 

Covid pass guidance change ALERT…

 

Have the courage to hold the powerful to account?

 

Urgent action needed! - PETITION

 

NETPOL – the network for police monitoring

 

Black Lives Matter protest – VIDEO

 

new report condemns "revenge policing" and calls for scrapping new police powers

 

Good Law project

Government’s costs

They want to silence criticism

Boris Johnson misled Parliament

Misuse of public money

They want to silence dissent

What have they got to hide?

They want to block public interest

This is not the Britain we should be

 

 

Other information sources

 

 

Declassified UK

 

The Democracy Collaborative

Sanders and McDonnell on community wealth

The “Preston model”

Land banks and community land trusts

 

Parkdale People’s Economy

Community wealth building comes to Scotland

How to Make a Democracy Economy

South Korea explores community wealth building

How NY can enter ‘a new era of public power’

 

D@W

Cooperatives and socialism

Ask Prof Wolff: Is Nordic Socialism a Progressive Step?

How Capitalism Shapes our Food

The Challenge of China - New Global Capitalism Lecture

Recommended Reading list on Cooperatives.

Economic Update: Germany Shifts Left

Ask Prof Wolff: Taxing Billionaires

Wolff Responds: Capitalism's False Defenses

All Things Co-op: Cuba's New Cooperative Legislation

Global Capitalism: The Problems with China's Economy

we learn about the psychology of control and domination

understand our personal connections to capitalism’s structure

All Things Co-op: Lessons from Venezuela’s Social Economy

Ask Prof Wolff: From Capitalism to Co-op

All Things Co-op: Blockchain and Cryptocurrency

The Ukraine Crisis

Ukraine, Sanctions and Rising Inflation

technology under capitalism

 

Economic Update: Unaffordable Housing

 

The popular movement for peace needs to be rekindled”

 

All Things Co-op: There Is An Alternative To Capitalism

 

Tax Justice Network

Casino Capitalism and a just transition: the Taxcast podcast

A tide-turning moment in the global struggle for tax justice

Including an item about UK care homes

How economics ruins economies: PODCAST

Where does your country rank on the Corporate Tax Haven Index 2021?

The Whiteness of Wealth: podcast with Prof Dorothy Brown

Podcast: From an uncaring to a caring economy + global minimum corporate tax plan

The Real American Dream – in Scandinavia: PODCAST

Podcast: The capture of Malta and the fight for justice

 

"You need to be very strong.

To do the job that she did you really have to be your own person.

You couldn’t be the kind of person who worries what people might think of you, and you really have to say, no, I’m not going to adapt, I’m not going to fall into that mould.

I’m going to break it and keep breaking.”

Paul Caruana Galizia

 

Podcast: Degrowth: liberation from ‘growthism’

Podcast: rethinking economies

Pandora Papers shows transparency failure is an accountability failure

 

Podcast: Tax Haven Ireland

Losses to OECD tax havens could vaccinate global population three times over, study reveals

Jersey’s Pandora’s Boxes: The Tax Justice Network podcast

Losses to OECD tax havens could vaccinate global population three times over, study reveals

PODCAST: 2022, hopes and fears

Podcast: Stolen Dreams

The Swiss banking clean-up is a mirage

Butler Britain: PODCAST

 

10 measures to expose sanctioned Russian oligarchs’ hidden assets

 

Our tax system is broken – EMAIL MP

 

Tax Justice UK

Support President Biden’s proposal to stop global tax dodging - PETITION

Pandora Papers shows transparency failure is an accountability failure

 

Tax Watch UK

 

Open Democracy

 

Save FOI – PETITION

Say her name: Breonna Taylor

Women disproportionately affected by soaring Mental Health Act detentions

How the UK government is undermining the Freedom of Information Act

 

There are many reasons to hate what Putin has done to Russia.

He has given its riches to his friends, who are now billionaires many times over; he has destroyed its political parties, used its courts as weapons, imprisoned activists, forced honourable patriots to flee their own country; he has used its money to support vile political causes in other countries, and used its media to spread lies and misinformation worldwide.

But few things have ever touched me as much as the fate of Yanayev.

It is the sign of a true tyranny when murder is so commonplace and happens so openly, as it did on 28 December 2004, when police officers just took him away from a crowded airport and killed him.

I have no idea what he had done to upset them.

He wasn’t famous or outspoken, perhaps it was a case of mistaken identity. It felt like this could have happened to anyone.

We know about his murder thanks to a strange anomaly, which is that Russia has – despite Putin having destroyed every other vestige of its shaky 1990s democracy – remained subject to the European Court of Human Rights.

According to the court’s judgements, Russia has violated Article Two of the European Convention – i.e. it has committed murder –349 times since signing up in 1996.

That is more than 13 murders a year.

It is incredibly hard to bring a case to the ECHR, and triply so when the case is against a government that murders witnesses.

 

Sanctioned Russian oligarch still controls London property firm

 

UK’s website for Ukrainian refugees is not available in Ukrainian

 

90% of Met officers disciplined for racism still work for force

 

I was forcibly evacuated from Mariupol to Russia’

 

Child workers speak: will anybody listen?

 

UK law is masking corruption. Why is the government delaying its reform?

 

They steal our children and beat their parents’: a story of anti-trafficking in Ghana

 

The Home Office seized refugees’ phones illegally. It should be dismantled

 

Does facial recognition tech in Ukraine’s war bring killer robots nearer?

 

Why did a popular UK news site run anonymous propaganda about Russian oil?

 

Western hypocrisy: What Joe Biden gets wrong about Russia

 

MPs claimed £420,000 on expenses for their energy bills

 

Arms firms spent €6m lobbying Germany ahead of defence budget hike

 

MPs launch inquiry into UK government’s ‘opaque’ handling of FOI requests

 

Open Democracy report: ‘Art of Darkness: How the Government is undermining Freedom Of Information’

 

Costa Rica’s new president threatens women’s and LGBTIQ rights

 

Tories attacking trans rights to court transphobic votes says ex-adviser

 

What Russian students being sentenced for their activism want you to know

 

Russia’s elite wants to f*** the West. This journalist is chronicling it

28th April – Can we stop Big Tech getting inside our heads?

Russia funds Europe’s far Right

Rwandan LGBTIQ people warn: It’s unsafe to send queer asylum seekers here

The Elections Bill is about undermining democracy, not shoring it up

Suspicious algorithms

The solutions to the global inflation crisis are blindingly obvious

Police drug-testing pilot disproportionately targets Black people

The Rwanda deal is yet another act of colonial violence

Starmer’s car industry funding revealed as he backs action on oil protests

The Online Safety Bill endangers us by ignoring digital threats to democracy

To achieve racial justice we must rebuild the world – and save the planet

 

Foxglove

 

Why Facebook can’t fix itself

Hey, YouTube – leave our kids alone

A lot more to do on government algorithms

Support Facebook content moderators in calling for fair treatment!

Taking on the tech giants: the lawyer fighting the power of algorithmic systems

Join us - tell Sadiq Khan to take action against Uber!

Matt Hancock: Drop your plan to put NHS patients' health data into one massive database - PETITION

We are going to court

fresh evidence: disappearing messages and "government by WhatsApp"

"this algorithm decides who eats and who goes hungry"

Daniel Motaung

 

1st day in court

 

Government by WhatsApp – email your MP

 

Facebook on notice of legal action – SIGN LETTER

 

 

Article 11 trust

 

 

Campaign for freedom of information

 

Call for tougher FOI enforcement and other news

 

 

Article 19 – defending freedom of expression + information

What does misinformation smell like?

Speaking out on social media takedowns – YOUR HELP NEEDED

#ChallengeHate

update

 

 

Younger people

 

 

NSPCC

Nobody is normal

How to keep children safe online

mental health – SUPPORT INFORMATION

Together we're helping children to report abuse

email the new Minister in charge

 

#ProudToBe

 

Safer Internet Day 2022

PETITION

 

A Life More Wild - Dr Alex George & Brook House Woods

 

Young Minds

Society needs to change. Have your say on how

Supporting your child with anxiety

Anxiety

Tips for coping with peer pressure

Toxic masculinity and mental health

 

Malala – Assembly – How you can stand up to anti-Asian racism

Are streets safe for girls?

Malala: I Fear for My Afghan Sisters

Amplifying the voices of Afghan girls and women

 

Completing my education with elephantiasis”

 

Girls & the climate crisis

 

My life before and after the Taliban takeover”

 

We want to publish you!

What is the best form of activism for you?

What this intern learned about how to get scouted on TikTok

Polaroids from Guinea

The career advice you need to read

Afghan girls and women are making brave decisions every day.”

 

A brighter future for Chilean students

Why Egypt’s football clubs are losing female players

How to help Ukrainian refugees

 

Girls like me are taking action – EMAIL MP

 

Girls forced to marry – PETITION

 

Coram’s Young Citizens

The Stranger Series with Coram’s Young Citizens

 

Young Women's Trust - 3 ways we’ve already made a difference in 2021

 

We see you; we hear you and we care about you SUPPORT LINES INFORMATION

 

One in five young women have lost work or future work

57% say they have been affected financially

One in four have taken on extra caring responsibilities

83% said that their mental health had suffered

1 in 10 they have been unable to afford food or other essentials

 

Ask your MP to do more to prevent online hate speech

Act now: support young women this winter

New report reveals one size fits no one

Including peer researchers

Support

Speaking truth to power

can you help make equality a reality for young women?

 

Peer Research: The Power of Shared Experience

 

Lucy’s story: coaching helped me believe in myself

 

#CrimeNotCompliment

 

Video

 

Woman’s Aid

 

Maternal Mental Health Alliance

 

Maternity Action

A step in the right direction for pregnant women's safety at work - EMAIL MP

 

Are you on maternity leave? Take our survey!

 

We're calling for maternity pay to be increased – will you help us?

 

Tips for coping in these anxious times

Worksheet

Read our tips and advice for supporting a friend

new resource on panic attacks

Free online training

Activities

 

Off the record - BRISTOL

If you are in crisis and need immediate support, you can access help from these organisations:

 

Samaritans

available 24/7 for listening support on 116 123.

 

Shout

text ‘SHOUT’ to 85258 to speak to a crisis counsellor.

 

HOPELINEUK

open 9am-midnight, call 0800 068 41 41 for support around suicidal thoughts and feelings.

 

CAMHS Crisis Line

a free confidential NHS helpline offering support for young people aged 17 and under in crisis on 0300 303 1320

24/7 Support & Connect

a free confidential NHS helpline offering support for adults aged 18+ on 0800 012 6549

Self-care plan

 

Kooth

real-time, online support

Childline

0800 1111. 7:30am – 3.30am

 

CALM

0800 58 58 58

 

The Mix

0808 808 4994 3pm – 12am everyday

 

The Purple Elephant Project

 

Arts Emergency

Mentor training

Help to get into art

 

Child poverty action group

 

Free benefits training

contact uc-london@cpag.org.uk

 

Family Lives Newsletter April 2022

 

 

Government bodies

 

 

Mental Health Act Statistics, Annual Figures – 2020-21

Still, we suffer – Wendy

 

Mental health and well-being plan: discussion paper and call for evidence

By 5th July

 

 

NHS confederation – 15th + 16th June 2022

 

Proposed NHS mental health access standards for patients

 

Upcoming events delivered by the NHS Confederation

 

Agenda now live!

 

Care quality commission

 

Share your views

 

Our equality objectives 2021-2025

 

Now available: State of Care – CQC's annual assessment of health care and social care in England

 

From Paternalism to human rights

 

Restraint, segregation and seclusion review: progress report

 

Out of sight- who cares?

 

Monitoring the Mental Health Act

 

Maternity survey results

 

HSE Stress eBulletin: Working Minds campaign launches

 

Pop up care homes

 

National Audit office

 

Office for National Statistics

A report from the Office of National Statistics revealed an estimated 778 people died in England and Wales while homeless in 2019an annual increase of7%

This is the fifth year in a row that the number of people who have died has increased.

It is the highest number since records began.

ONS blog - good data from any source can help us report on the global goals to the UN

ONS blog - Unlocking the power of data to better understand private rents

ONS blog - Far from average: How COVID-19 has impacted the Average Weekly Earnings data

How many people fund their own care?

ONS blog - Violence against women and girls: Helping to understand the scale and impact of the problem

The lasting impact of violence against women and girls

Beneath our feet: improving estimates of UK land value

 

DHSC Voluntary Sector Newsletter – INCLUDING HELPLINE FOR SUPPORTING + BEHAVIOUR

Launch of new autism strategy to help autistic people live more independent and fulfilled lives

Revisiting safeguarding practice

Vaccination as a condition of deployment to be revoked

 

Government to improve protections for people deprived of their liberty – consultation – by 7th July

 

Health and Care Bill: launch of new white paper

 

LGA Events bulletin April 2022

 

Including 28th to 30th June event

 

Inclusive economies and healthy futures: Supporting place-based action to reduce health inequalities

 

Update

 

London Assembly

 

Public meetings

Including monthly Mayor’s Question time

 

London Youth assembly

27% of schools are exposed to dangerous levels of air pollution.

It took decades to protect our children from cigarette smoke.

We can’t make that mistake again; we must tackle toxic air pollution right now.

That’s why we introduced the Ultra-Low Emission Zone, cleaned up our buses and taxis and tackled emissions from construction sites.

But we must go further to protect the health of Londoners across our city.

My number one priority is to protect the health of Londoners, and the life chances of future generations.

I will do all I can to ensure that every Londoner can breathe clean air.

Clearing the air: pollution in London

 

My society – including support with FOI requests

 

PETITION – Vital information hidden

 

NIHR – Lockdown raised anxiety in people with anorexia and their carers, but online resources helped

Transforming out-of-hospital care for people who are homeless

Together in research – Spring 2021

Caring for older people at home can be just as good, or even better, than hospital care

Vegan diet could control blood sugar for people with type 2 diabetes

Together in research – Summer 2021

seeking views on ways to substantially reduce research bureaucracy

Opportunities for involvement in NIHR ARC South London

Together in research – Autumn 2021

Together in research – Winter 2021/22

Including paid involvement

 

Free bus travel keeps young Londoners socially connected

 

Together in research – Spring 2022

 

 

Health and Social Care Committee

 

Local Government Authority – Update

 

Would you like to shape the future of Patient Safety within the local NHS?

 

Complete our NHS and ICS websites survey for a chance to win £100 vouchers

 

 

Wandsworth

 

 

Healthwatch Wandsworth

 

Wandsworth Community Empowerment Network (WCEN)

In the UK, people with brown skin are being denied equal and compassionate mental health care.

They are more likely to be brought to and kept in hospital without their consent.

They are more likely to access mental health services through the police and criminal justice systems, and to find themselves unwell and back again once released.

People with brown skin, particularly men, are more likely to be forcibly restrained and given more than the recommended amount of medication.

WCEN 2021

 

SoundMinds

 

Canerows

 

Share

 

POhWER

If you are unhappy with the care or treatment you have received from the NHS, and would like help to make a complaint, POhWER can help.

They provide guidance, information and advocacy to help people get matters put right.

Telephone: 0203 553 5960

Email: LondonIHCAS@pohwer.net

Letter: London IHCAS Advocacy Hub, POhWER, Hertlands House, Primett Road, Stevenage, Hertfordshire, SG1 3EE

 

VoiceAbility

If you live in Wandsworth and need support to tell people what you want, and to understand your rights, you can contact VoiceAbility.

They provide advocacy for people who may be vulnerable and need support to speak up about their care needs.

Telephone: 020 7924 7772

Email: wandsworth@voiceability.org

Letter: VoiceAbility, Unit B102, Trident Business Centre, 89 Bickersteth Road, Tooting, London, SW17 9SH

 

Rethink Advocacy

If you are unhappy with the care or treatment you have received from an NHS or social care service, and would like help to make a complaint, Rethink could help. They provide guidance, information and advocacy to help people get matters put right.

 

Telephone: 300 7900 559

Email: wandradvocacy@rethink.org

Web address: Rethink Advocacy Independent Service in Wandsworth and Richmond leaflet 2.pdf

 

Wandsworth Wellbeing Hub

For guidance and help to find organisations and services to support your health and wellbeing needs, you can contact the Wandsworth Wellbeing Hub.

Telephone: 020 3880 0366 (Monday to Friday, 9am to 5pm)

Email: waccg.wandsworthhub@nhs.net

Letter: Wandsworth Wellbeing Hub, 120 The Broadway, Wimbledon, London, SW19 1RH

 

Wandsworth Adult social care

If you, or someone you know, have / has care and support needs, and you need information and help, you can speak to Wandsworth Adult Social Services. Adult social services provide information and help to adults who have difficulty with everyday things.

Telephone: 020 8871 7707 (Monday to Friday, 9am to 5pm)

Email: accessteam@wandsworth.gov.uk

Letter: Adult Social Care and Public Health, The Town Hall, Wandsworth High Street, London, SW18 2PU

Emergency out of hours

Please contact the switchboard on 020 8871 6000 and ask for the emergency social worker.

 

Children and families

If you need information on the activities and support services that may be available to you and your family, you can contact THRIVE Online (previously known as the Family Information Service).

THRIVE Online provides information and assistance to parents, children, young people and professionals on support services and activities for the 0-19 years’ age group (25 if the young person has a special need).

Telephone: 020 8871 7899 (Monday to Friday, 9am to 5pm)

Email:thriveonline@richmondandwandsworth.gov.uk

Letter: THRIVE Online, THE 4, Wandsworth Town Hall, Wandsworth High Street, London, SW18 2PU

 

 

Richmond

 

 

Richmond MIND

The Hearing Voices Group is a Peer Support group run by our service users and supported by Wellbeing Centre staff.

It will take place on the first and second Tuesday of each month, 2-3pm and new people can join after being referred to our Wellbeing Centre.

The group is blended, online and face-to-face (the number of clients is restricted to three)

 

Ruils

update

 

Together as one

 

Richmond Aid

 

Dose of Nature

 

Rape crisis

 

Off the record – Twickenham

 

Look ahead

 

United response

New Easy News story: Russia attacks Ukraine

 

Update

 

Choice support

 

Update

 

Healthwatch Richmond

 

Preventing suicide – providing individual support; and an invitation to join a CQC panel advising on improving mental health services. Look here!

 

Guide to Richmond’s NHS, Care & Support

Free home sensors for unpaid carers in Richmond; Richmond Aid is recruiting for a digital training co-ordinator. Read about both here.

useful advice about dealing with sleep problems?

 

Special Educational Needs & Disability service provision – further consultation; and Chickenpox – easy to catch but very treatable. Look here!

 

Richmond CVS

Including Directory of services

 

free 1-2-1 digital support

 

Talking Bubble – Telephone Befriending with Language Options

 

e-News – October 2021

including digital inclusion fund

 

RCVS Children and Young Peoples Digest April 2022

 

e-News – April 2022

including Local Mental Health needs analysis

 

Richmond's Volunteer Fair 2022 - 26th May

Free home sensors for unpaid carers in Richmond

27th April

Centre for Governance + Scrutiny

Including Anticipating, managing + adapting framework

Special newsletter on council finances

governance & scrutiny newsletter

 

April with Richmond upon Thames Library Service

including make do + mend sessions

 

Richmond council – LBRUT – EVENTS+

 

Community hub – a dedicated helpline to deal with local enquiries and help signpost people to the right support at this difficult time.

The helpline number is 020 8871 6555.

 

Please visit the council’s website for the most up to date information: www.richmond.gov.uk or phone 0208 891 1411

 

Find out more here: www.richmond.gov.uk/community_hub

 

Advertise your event / activity on LBRUT website

 

Mental Health support

 

Funds

 

Got a good idea – get community funding?

 

Clean air petition

 

Do you know of someone who might benefit from a video Carephone?

 

Starting Up: How to become a charity or social enterprise

 

Richmond Green Home Grants

 

Home Start Richmond

 

Support – Cash grants +

 

I need help finding food or essential home items

 

Richmond aid – information

 

Careplace – Richmond

Careplace are promoting – Free Community Counselling Service – Available online or over the phone

 

Struggling to pay your fuel bills? The Council can help

 

Richmond Furniture Scheme

 

Fuel Grant Scheme

 

£150 Energy Offer| Flooding | Youth Mental Health

 

Additional grants are also available from the Household Support Fund for food, bills and other essential items, via Citizens Advice Richmond and Richmond AID.

See more information on this here.

 

Claim £150 towards your energy bills

 

Easter Waste Collections | Register to Vote | World Record Smashed

 

Free home sensors for unpaid carers in Richmond

 

Tell the council your ideas regarding local housing - Stag brewery development by 15th May

 

 

Centre for Governance + Scrutiny (CfGS)

 

Bolstering scrutiny / scrutiny frontiers / guest blogs / Health & Care Bill update

 

September

Including anticipate – manage – adapt idea

 

Health & Care – special newsletter

 

Governance and scrutiny news from CfGS

 

From MP

 

Talk Richmond – PODCASTS

Good thinking

Air pollution petition

Afghanistan & Central Asian Association

Stop Levelling Down London’s Transport

Update on proposed SWR service reduction

Space2grieve

The good food co-op

#againsthate

Pressing Government for Zero Carbon Homes

Munira – stop levelling down London’s transport

 

Twickenham repair cafe -3rd Saturday of each month 10:30 to 13:30

Next dates

21st May

18th June

16th July

 

Sarah Olney – 4th May

 

40.000 deaths per year – Air pollution - EMAIL BORIS

 

The listening circle

 

My life films charity

 

Inspired Hub

 

Update

 

Help with bills + …

 

Hampton Fuel

 

RPLC

 

Barnes workhouse fund

 

Update

 

 

Hounslow

 

 

Hounslow Healthwatch

You can find details of health services in your area from NHS Choices

Call 999 for emergency services

Emergency and urgent care health services – 111

Hounslow Council: Out of hours social care support – 020 8583 2222 For more information please click here.

 

Hounslow Council: For more information on Adult social care, please click here.

 

Hounslow Council: For more information on Children and families, please click here.

 

CarePlace: Provides a Directory of Services, Information and Guidance enabling direct access to local care and community services. For more information, please click here.

 

West London NHS Trust – Mental health crisis: 24-hour helpline 0800 328 4444. For more information, please click here.

 

Hounslow Council

 

downloading the free NHS weight loss plan

 

Learn new gardening skills

 

Hampton Kempton waterworks railway +

 

Anyone can struggle to maintain good mental health from, no matter who they are.

Whilst there's no permanent fix, these 5 free things can help to lighten the load.

 

1 – Talk to someone.

If you’re not in the place for extra support like therapy this is one of the best things you can do to take care of yourself and others. Or use the power of talking for even more good and become a Community Champion.

 

2 – Get out in nature.

There are lots of gorgeous green spaces in Hounslow, and across London.

Check out what's going on outdoors this season at in Hounslow.

 

3 – Set aside time for yourself.

Self-care doesn’t need to mean spending on bath bombs.

Dedicate time to something you love – cooking, reading, gaming, drawing, journaling, watching movies, playing an instrument and more can all help you destress.

 

4 – Gentle exercise.

You don’t need to do HIIT workouts at the gym to benefit from exercise.

As little as 15-30 minutes of walking can give you a serotonin boost. Looking for something more serious?

Try the free NHS Couch to 5K app or find free classes

 

5 – Visit

hounslow.gov.uk/takecare

Our Take Care, Take 5 hub offers accessible solutions for mental health concerns.

Find support on physical health, COVID-19 concerns, financial worries, and employment skills here too.

 

Fly Tipping is a problem, not only in Hounslow, but across London and the country.

In 2021, Hounslow Council received over 24,000 reports of fly tips across the borough which cost us over £1.3m.

We are determined to reduce the incidents of fly tipping which will make our borough cleaner and greener.

 

Hounslow council update

 

Bell Square – what’s on

 

Wecoproduce

The Art of Coproduction - A Guerrilla Guide

 

Or ask for one for free?

 

#WeCoBlogs

 

Caring in the Community” – Really? by Steph de la Haye

 

Hounslow Wellbeing network

 

 

Sutton +

 

 

Sutton Healthwatch - Mental Well Being

 

Mental Health Foundation

The economic case for investing in the prevention of mental health conditions in the UK

 

Sutton Mental Health Foundation – Sutton Wellbeing Line

We all get more forgetful as we get older, but there are things you can do about it.

The way you live your life, and in particular the way in which you eat,

can make a huge difference to your memory, slowing down cognitive decline or even reversing it.

 

Update

 

 

Westminster Drug project (WDP)

13 May Loneliness-Busting event for Mental Health Awareness Week (WDP/Uplift)

11am to 4pm – Vestry Hall 336-338 London Road – Mitcham CR4 3UD

 

Mental Health Mates

 

The Health Foundation

 

How less pay has affected people's mental health and wellbeing

New podcast: Do we care enough?

New analysis: Care home residents hard hit by reduced hospital care

New report – Unequal pandemic, fairer recovery

What does our ageing population mean for health and social care demand?

Action as an antidote to despair

Do patients prefer online consultations in general practice?

 

Funding available for new research programme: Emotional Support for Young People by 6th June 2022

 

ROTA

Everyday Racism: How racist is Britain?

CRÈME project - stands for Communicating the Race Equality Message Effectively

ROTA Policy E-Newsletter issue 76 – February 2022

 

ROTA AGM 2020/21 and "Excluding Racism from our Education System" Conference – 5th July

 

Good things Foundation

 

#FixTheDigitalDivide

Let’s solve data poverty with people – not for them

 

Digital inclusion as a basic human right

9 million people struggle to use the internet independently and 7 million people

(11% of the UK's adult population)

are still offline

(Digital Nation UK, 2020)

 

National device bank

 

Reconome

 

News

 

Think Ahead

 

Last few places – deadline extended – 25th April

 

PCCS Books – Including Joanna Moncrieff’s book A straight talking introduction to psychiatric drugs – the truth about how they work + how to come off them

Black Identities - Student Discount – Hearing Voices - Wild Therapy

 

Likewise

 

 

Camden +

 

 

Side by side

 

[OPPORTUNITY] Eating disorders of all kinds – focus group on 4 May

contact sidebysidenetwork@gmail.com

 

[FUNDING] Green grants for Islington

 

Camden + Islington recovery college

 

oxevision

 

Oxevision cameras and the Trust now in the Independent

 

Conversations Around Loneliness & Mental Health booklet

 

[OPPORTUNITY] PPI in Commissioning

There is a researcher looking to interview service users and carers who have experience on being involved with commissioning or working with commissioners.

The interview takes about 40 minutes and will be recorded but your name will not appear in the final paper against any quotes they use.

Let me know if you are interested and I will pass on your email address.

This is external to the trust.

There is a small payment for the interview depending how long it takes – probably £20 or so. paid by BACS.

contact TheSidebySideNetwork@gmail.com

 

Are you on a waiting list for your mental health?

Contact Ray.Dunne@rcpsych.ac.uk

 

Does anyone have experience of calling 111 for help with their mental health?

Any thoughts please contact TheSidebySideNetwork@gmail.com

 

Wanted - Coproduction anecdotes

contact TheSidebySideNetwork@gmail.com

 

Hand in Hand peer buddy – feedback requested

Any thoughts please contact TheSidebySideNetwork@gmail.com

 

Learn something new in 22 for free!

 

FREE IT SUPPORT AT HOME

 

New Peer Buddy Scheme - Hand in Hand Islington

 

Body worn cameras

Any thoughts please contact TheSidebySideNetwork@gmail.com

 

Free Community Research online course launches | Co-Production Collective

 

Second independent audit of ECT published finds patient safety is being put at risk

A second audit of NHS mental health Trusts, using Freedom of Information Act requests has confirmed that both the administration and monitoring of Electroconvulsive Treatment (ECT) in England are failing to guarantee the safety of patients.

 

ECT involves the passing of sufficient electricity through the brain, under general anaesthesia, to cause a seizure.

Some claim it is a safe and effective treatment for severe depression.

But a recent review found little evidence that it is any better than placebo and concluded that it causes persistent or permanent memory loss in 12% to 55% of patients.1

The largest study to date has just confirmed that it does not, as claimed, prevent suicide.2

 

The audit confirmed that about 2,500 people are given ECT annually in England.

The majority continue to be women (67%), and over 60 (58%).

More than one in three (37%) are being forcibly given ECT against their will, and 18% of Trusts are not complying with the law regarding second opinions relating to compulsory treatment.

 

There were slight declines, compared to a previous audit,3 in the use of appropriate measures to assess efficacy, down to 30%, and standardised measures of memory loss, down to 24%.

 

There was a 47-fold difference between the two Trusts with the highest (Avon & Wiltshire, and North Staffordshire) and the lowest (Mersey Care) rates per capita.

Thus, the probability of getting ECT seems to be a postcode lottery based on the opinions of local psychiatrists.

 

The majority of Trusts were unable to provide any data for positive outcomes or for adverse effects during treatment (usually a 3-week period involving about 10 electroshocks).

None provided data on efficacy or adverse effects beyond end of treatment.

 

ECT in England is supposed to be monitored by the Royal College of Psychiatrists via their ‘ECT Accreditation Service’ (ECTAS).

But ECTAS does not monitor some of the issues addressed by this independent audit, such as how many Trusts are using proper assessment measures, how many are complying with the Mental Health Act regarding second opinions for forced treatment, and how many ECT patients had first been offered psychological treatment – in compliance with N.I.C.E. guidelines.

ECTAS has no powers to sanction ECT clinics that fail to meet even their limited set of standards, and has never disaccredited an ECT clinic.

About 10% of ECT clinics do not bother to sign up to the ECTAS process at all.

 

The audit concluded:

'Given the apparent failure of current monitoring and accrediting ECT clinics in England, by the Royal College of Psychiatrists’ ECT Accreditation Service (ECTAS), an independent government sponsored review is urgently needed.'

 

[RESOURCE] Recovery After Rape

We have obtained a copy of the workbook "Recovery After Rape".

As it can be triggering, I won't send it out indiscriminately but if you want a pdf of it for yourself or someone else, just say.

Contact thesidebysidenetwork@gmail.com

 

[EVENTS] Wednesday workshops for young black men aged 18-25

 

Find a balance

 

Stress Project

 

[RESOURCE] Mental Health and Debt booklet

 

StopSIM Coalition Petition

 

Click here for the write to your MP template

 

Mental Health collective

Self- defence through humour

 

Mutual Aid, volunteering and helping in the community. - Time to Spare

 

www.westeustonpartnership.org

 

Naylor Review