Archive for the ‘Perspective’ Category

Bold Merger

May 5, 2010
Framework Trust and Richmond New Zealand have been delivering services to New Zealanders for many years and from November this year they will be doing it together. The recently announced merger of these two significant organisations is the latest collaborative venture that is reshaping the mental health and addiction NGO sector.
 
They have much in common, as both provide community mental health services, disability support services and supported employment. Framework has always had a strong role in the Auckland area and Richmond is active nationally, including Auckland and Waikato, so the merger known as “Framework Richmond” will create a strengthened agency bringing together about 220 staff. With multiple government contracts, Framework Richmond will be well positioned to provide an extended range of services, reduce transaction costs and achieve economies of scale and efficiencies.

Dr Colin Hayes who will head Framework Richmond operations says:

“this merger will enhance consumer choice through the development of well-integrated services focusing on the strengths of both organisations. Framework Board and staff are enthusiastic about being a part of this farsighted initiative”.
 

 Kath Fox Chief Executive Richmond New Zealand says:

 ”both organisations see this as a proactive and strategic initiative which will enhance the range of frontline services we have available, promote further collaboration and integration, and encourage efficiency gains”.
 

Richmond and Framework are leading organisations and long-term, active members of Platform. This bold initiative demonstrates a proactive approach that will sustain NGO activity in the current environment.

Congratulations and best wishes for a smooth merger

NGOs’ key role in New Zealand’s evolving mental health services

February 4, 2010

We thank Dr John Read, Associate Professor in the Psychology Department of the University of Auckland for this contribution.

In New Zealand, as in many other countries, voluntary organisations and NGOs are absolutely key to providing effective mental health services.

People working with NGOs often have more time than doctors and nurses do to talk with people. Support workers have the flexibility to develop the kind of relationships that people really need – and that is often what makes the difference to people’s lives.

This role will become increasingly vital as New Zealand’s approach to mental health evolves. Currently our mental health services are a little too wedded to simplistic medical type approaches to human distress -   based on the ‘label and drug’ approach and the view that the best way to assist people is to count the symptoms, apply a diagnostic label and pick the appropriate medication.

However, there is a gradual move towards wider recognition that the most sensible approach is to start with the person’s own understanding of their difficulties, what has caused it and what their needs are and to tailor treatment around that.

New Zealand is currently progressing in the right direction at about the same pace as Australia and the UK. Scandinavia, the Netherlands and Italy are more advanced in their understanding but the US still has a horrifically biological approach.

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Why Mental Health Support Work Needs Research

January 21, 2010

We thank contributor : Barnaby Pace MNZPsS, Assoc.MNZCMHN, BSocSc(Hons), MSocSc(Hons), PGDipCBT, PGDipEd(EdAd)

Over the course of the past year I have been asked the question ‘why does mental health support work need research?’ on several occasions, and answer is quite simple: To grow as a healthcare discipline.

Research to date suggests that mental health support work is viewed as caregiving of the mentally ill or the poor cousins of social work. I believe neither to be the case.

I propose that support work is a separate discipline, utilising theoretical constructs and techniques from a range of disciplines in a unique manner under the overarching banner of the recovery principles in order to best serve service users.

However, in order to strengthen this opinion, research is required for the empirical support needed to forge ahead and mould mental health support work into a fully recognised healthcare profession. Exploratory research needs to be conducted to investigate the role and function of support work; analysis needs to be carried out to determine the skills and knowledge required; philosophy discussions need to take place to determine best models of practice, and this is just scratching the surface.

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Schizophrenia – a poem by Glenn Colquhoun

December 10, 2009

Schizophrenia turns
off the television,
gets up from the couch,
puts on his coat,
opens the door,
walks down the road,
and buys a postcard
of New Zealand.
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