15 February 2013

Personal Independant Payments replaces DLA April 2013

We are advising folk to take a good look at the link below to get some insight into the Personal Independence Payment which will replace Disabled Living Allowance from April 2013

The toolkit offers information / guidance to individuals, and organisations directly supporting people claiming DLA, by providing initial advice on PIP &/or directing folk to other sources of information & help. There is a easy-read link...

http://www.dwp.gov.uk/policy/disability/personal-independence-payment/pip-toolkit/

19 October 2012

MSM service users, members, workers, & friends...

Service User Locality Meetings

It's been a taxing 18 month journey for MSM: dead in the water when we 'lost' funding; changing direction as we sought to become community orientated, accessible, & offer more personal contacts; encouraging the maintenance & development of some highly valued activities (Badminton Club, Music Group, Stafford Women's Group, Wombourne peer support), whilst seeing the successful launch of more (Work Clubs, Arts & Drama, the WISH Project, Cannock Women's Group).

But it ain't all plain sailing... Change hasn't proved universally acceptable, & some felt unable to join us on this latter leg of our travels. Some funding bids were turned down, & we have seek a cash injection to fuel the engines that drive our organisation.

We have positive aspirations, some great ideas & plans for the development of MSM. Given change & flexibility are central to this future, we have plenty to talk about, so we are holding a series of Service User Locality Meetings for folk to meet with Trustees of the Charity to chat about risks, hopes, & fears.

Saturday 20th October 11.00am @ Quest, Tipping St, Stafford

Monday 22nd October 11.30am @ Mind, Manor Ave, Cannock

Wednesday 31st October 2.00pm @ Community Fire Station, Wombourne

If you want to come along, attend to suit your availability, it doesn't have to be the meeting in the MSM locality within which you live.  

12 October 2012

MSM opening times

Monday:
Stafford - WorkClub @ Signpost Centre: 10am - 1pm
Cannock - 'Creativity' Drama & Music: 1pm - 4pm
Cannock - Out of Hours: 5pm - 8pm

Tuesday:
Stafford - 'Creativity' Arts & Crafts @ Trinity Church: 10am - 1pm
Cannock - Badminton @ Leisure Centre: 2pm - 4pm

Wednesday:
Cannock - WorkClub @ Cannock Library: 10am - 1pm
Wombourne - Peer Support: 1pm - 4pm

Thursday:
Cannock: Out of Hours: 5pm - 8pm

Friday:
Cannock - Women’s Group: 1pm -4pm

Saturday:
Stafford - Out of Hours @ Quest:10am - 4pm 

for more info ring (01543) 462907 or email midstaffsmind@gmail.com 

 

30 September 2012

Language & Stigma

Everyday language is peppered with amusing, ironic, pejorative, abusive words & phrases about mental illness and the mentally ill. Those who experience psychological & emotional distress are amongst the few societal 'groups' still deemed acceptable targets as the butt of joke, disrespect, & exclusion.

A recent, if wordy, guest blog by David Steele in the Guardian online raises some very interesting discussion points (click here). In light of MSM's re-commitment to the Time to Change agenda, this is a conversation we may well be having in our groups & localities.

Check out the Time to Change website to explore ideas / activities of destigmatisation & inclusion of the 'mental health community'.

  

12 April 2012

You just might LOL!


A researcher in the US found texting has a mental health application: as a form of treatment or support for people experiencing mental health issues.

Prof. Adrian Aguilera, clinical psychologist at the University of California, Berkeley, has devised a text messaging service for patients with depression & other mental disorders. People are sent automated messages asking them to think & reply about their mood, about their responses to both positive & negative daily interactions, as well as reminding them to take their medication.

When the service was stopped after a few weeks, 75% of the recipients requested they continue to receive messages; one person reported the service made them feel 'cared for & supported' when stressed or in difficulty.

Aguilera's patients are mainly low-income Latinos, who experience significant challenges in their daily lives, & often lack ready access to alternatives. He says the texting concept was mix of technology and therapy; many of his patients had a mobile phone on a prepaid monthly plan, & many had trouble translating the lessons of therapy into their daily lives. In addition, finances denied a lot of patients regular internet access... 'so I thought about using mobile phones to send text messages to remind them to practice the skills covered in therapy sessions'.

The psychologist added the patient response demonstrates the positive impact of regular contact with their support team - even if it’s nothing more than a 140-character hello: 'we are harnessing a technology that people use in their everyday lives to improve mental health in low-income, under-served communities'. 
 

Mind CEO quits Government panel

Paul Farmer, Chief Executive of Mind, quit his government role in protest against the flawed Dept for Work & Pensions reforms in assessing benefit claimants fitness to work. Farmer, Mind's representative on the 4-man panel appointed to improve the Work Capability Assessment, said his position was 'no longer tenable' (Guardian article).

In a blog outlining his reasons for resigning, Paul writes... In July 2010, I joined a the Harrington Scrutiny Panel, set up to oversee the work of the WCA Independent Review team. My role was to give advice & criticism regarding the areas the review was looking at & the changes they are recommending.

The DWP has committed to making some changes arising from the Independent Review, but these will take time, & some fundamental changes required haven’t even started to be addressed. Meanwhile, tens of thousands of people are being reassessed using a test which is still not fit for purpose. Around 50% of people are appealing against the decision, & a remarkable half of those appeals are being upheld, meaning as many as one in four tests are wrong. The cost to the taxpayer of the tribunal system alone is £50m, around a half of the £100m a year being spent on reassessment.

I spent some time last week at Mind’s InfoLine. Call after call was coming in from individuals with a mental health problem, or a member of their family, anxious about the reassessment letter, concerned about having to appeal & the potential impact on their lives. We’ve heard about Job Centres who are shocked when someone who is clearly unwell turns up having been told they are fit for work.

The callers to our line were not benefit scroungers - they were ordinary people whose health had put them in a very vulnerable state. Ordinary people desperate to recover & be able to work, but who just weren’t yet well enough. Instead of offering support & help to recover, then find & stay in work, the WCA process is making their health worse & so, ironically, the prospect of a job even less likely.

We at MSM meet a lot of folk who are truly fearful of the threat these reforms might bring to their lives, if you have such concerns, or just want to know a little more, the Mind website goes into why the WCA isn't working.

11 March 2012

British Summer Time

 “Spring forward, Fall back.”

British Summer Time (BST) starts each year on the last Sunday in March & ends on the last Sunday in October. In 2012, on Sunday 25th March the clocks will go forward at 1.00am, meaning we lose an hour; BST ends on Sunday 28th October. 

Summer time changes on standard dates throughout the EU, so Britain & Ireland constantly remain an hour behind most of Central Europe.

In 1907, Englishman William Willett, campaigned to advance clocks by 80 minutes. He wanted to see four moves of 20 minutes at the beginning of the spring & summer months, with a return to Greenwich Mean Time in a similar manner each autumn. The following year, the House of Commons rejected a Bill to advance the clocks by one hour during the spring & summer months.
 

Summer time was first defined by Act of Parliament in 1916: clocks were moved one hour ahead of GMT from the spring to the autumn.  During the Second World War, double summer time - two hours in advance of GMT - was introduced & lasted until July 1945.  Since the 1980s all of western & central Europe co-ordinate the date & time of their clock changes; accounting for Britain & Ireland maintaining their hour behind.

2012: 25th March & 28th October. 
2013: 31st March & 27th Oct. 
2014: 30th March & 26th Oct