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Service user involvement in maternity and perinatal mental health research
Service user involvement in maternity and perinatal mental health research
Agnes Agyepong, parent engagement programme manager at Best Beginnings and Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust Maternity Voices Partnership Chair discusses why Black women are not engaging in research and what can be done to change this?
·arc-sl.nihr.ac.uk·
Service user involvement in maternity and perinatal mental health research
BAME and Mental Health
BAME and Mental Health
In England and Wales, nearly a fifth of people come from a BAME (Black, Asian and minority ethnic) background. The mental health of BAME communities is important because people from these communities often face individual and societal challenges that can affect access to healthcare and overall mental and physical health.
·mentalhealth.org.uk·
BAME and Mental Health
Black African migrants: the barriers with accessing and utilizing health promotion services in the UK
Black African migrants: the barriers with accessing and utilizing health promotion services in the UK
The inequalities for different ethnicities and social classes in accessing health services is well documented, but although a number of recent policy developments have aimed to tackle health inequalities, very little is known about the experiences of Black African migrant communities in accessing health promotion information and services. The aim of the study were to examine the experiences of Black African migrant families in accessing health promotion services.
·academic.oup.com·
Black African migrants: the barriers with accessing and utilizing health promotion services in the UK
Inside the ‘Covid Triangle’: a catastrophe years in the making | Free to read
Inside the ‘Covid Triangle’: a catastrophe years in the making | Free to read
High levels of deprivation and job insecurity, vast income inequality, housing discrimination and medical disparities have long had a severe impact on the tangle of communities and ethnic minority populations that live in these boroughs. But when combined with the necessity to go to work, to take public transport and to share space in densely packed housing, they also provided the perfect breeding ground for a deadly virus. The domino effect would prove catastrophic.
·ft.com·
Inside the ‘Covid Triangle’: a catastrophe years in the making | Free to read
Poverty, inequality and COVID-19: the forgotten vulnerable
Poverty, inequality and COVID-19: the forgotten vulnerable
For people of low socio-economic status (SES), a number of factors increase their exposure to COVID-19. Possible causal mechanisms include an increased exposure to the virus, the stress and comorbidities associated with poverty and reduced access to health care. UK policymakers rapidly identified people with multiple comorbidities as particularly vulnerable. However, they must expand their definition of vulnerability to include social factors as risks for COVID-19.
·ncbi.nlm.nih.gov·
Poverty, inequality and COVID-19: the forgotten vulnerable
Medical chatbot using OpenAI’s GPT-3 told a fake patient to kill themselves
Medical chatbot using OpenAI’s GPT-3 told a fake patient to kill themselves
We’re used to medical chatbots giving dangerous advice, but one based on OpenAI’s GPT-3 took it much further. Researchers experimenting with GPT-3, the AI text-generation model, found that it is not ready to replace human respondents in the chatbox. Medical chatbot using OpenAI’s GPT-3 told a fake patient to kill themselves.
·artificialintelligence-news.com·
Medical chatbot using OpenAI’s GPT-3 told a fake patient to kill themselves
The Shuri Network Achievements Summary 2020
The Shuri Network Achievements Summary 2020
How many times have you seen an all-female and black and ethnic minority (BME) panel talking about technology? For many people their first time would have been the Shuri Network launch last July. The Shuri Network was launched in 2019 to support women of colour in NHS digital health develop the skills and confidence to progress into senior leadership positions and help NHS leadership teams more closely represent the diversity of their workforce.
·up.raindrop.io·
The Shuri Network Achievements Summary 2020
Defining racisms, impacts in mental health and ways forward
Defining racisms, impacts in mental health and ways forward
At some level, psychiatry (the discipline not just the profession), politicians and policy-makers believe that there is something biologically and culturally determined behind the gross variations in the uptake of the most coercive and socially controlling aspects of mental health provision by Black and Brown people.
·up.raindrop.io·
Defining racisms, impacts in mental health and ways forward
What are adult mental health services doing to improve the outcomes for Black service users? A mixed method analysis of Black Psychologists’ perspectives and UK mental health Trust data
What are adult mental health services doing to improve the outcomes for Black service users? A mixed method analysis of Black Psychologists’ perspectives and UK mental health Trust data
Within mental health services, Black people tend to have poorer experiences of mental health services, in terms of access, treatment and outcomes. Institutional racism has been cited as one of the main causes for the differences.
·up.raindrop.io·
What are adult mental health services doing to improve the outcomes for Black service users? A mixed method analysis of Black Psychologists’ perspectives and UK mental health Trust data
EIP Race Equality Project
EIP Race Equality Project
People from ethnic minority backgrounds are less likely to access community mental health services but are over represented in acute and more restrictive settings. Their experience of services mirrors that of staff from ethnic minority groups: it is often more negative than their white counterparts and many of them report that they have never been asked about what impact structural racism has had on their mental health and generally on their lives.
·time4recovery.com·
EIP Race Equality Project
The impact of racism on mental health
The impact of racism on mental health
There is much controversy about why some people have poorer life chances, and specifically poorer experiences of health and mental health. One explanation for ethnic inequalities seen in the mental health system, and in society in general, is racism. The place of racism as a cause of mental illness, or factor that leads to poor health, is contested. This is mainly as the evidence is emerging but also as there are strongly held views, both by people who do not want to talk about racism and those that do.
·up.raindrop.io·
The impact of racism on mental health
How Data Can Map and Make Racial Inequality More Visible (If Done Responsibly) | by The GovLab | Data Stewards Network | Medium
How Data Can Map and Make Racial Inequality More Visible (If Done Responsibly) | by The GovLab | Data Stewards Network | Medium
Racism is a systemic issue that pervades every aspect of life in the United States and around the world. In recent months, its corrosive…
·medium.com·
How Data Can Map and Make Racial Inequality More Visible (If Done Responsibly) | by The GovLab | Data Stewards Network | Medium