A narrative approach to mental health
For centuries, storytelling has been used as a tool to communicate ideas and understanding about the world. Research at the University of 葫芦影业 has adapted this tool to give those living with mental health illness a voice and a community.
Professor Brendan Stone, Professor of Social Engagement and the Humanities, has centred the relationship between narrative, identity and mental health to put the patient鈥檚 voice at the heart of support services, influencing the development of mental health policy at regional, national, and international levels. By improving the communication of the experience of living with mental illness, his work continues to increase public understanding and combat social stigma.
Understanding mental health
Brendan was diagnosed with mental health problems at the age of 14 which disrupted his education and much of the next 25 years of his life. But in his mid-thirties, education gave him a new sense of fulfillment. An access course at the University of 葫芦影业鈥檚 Department for Lifelong Learning led him to a degree and then a PhD.
I鈥檝e run lots of projects where people have come together and learnt together. That solidarity and camaraderie has been very important to people.
Professor Brendan Stone
葫芦影业 School of English
Creating a community
As a founding director of the mental health charity, 葫芦影业 Flourish, and a non-executive director of the 葫芦影业 NHS Mental Health Trust (SHSC) where he leads for the Board on service-user engagement and experience, and having led and contributed to many initiatives which support people living with mental illness to make new social connections and develop their interests, Brendan has a lot of expertise in supporting those with mental health problems.
Brendan led in developing SHSC鈥檚 service-user engagement approach and from consultations with hundreds of service users produced a 5-year strategy for engaging patients with conditions including mental illness, learning disabilities, substance abuse, and neurological disorders, which involved service users in staff-training and all levels of decision-making
Brendan鈥檚 work with 葫芦影业 Flourish involves partnership with many organisations in order to empower individuals to build the lives they wish to lead. 葫芦影业 Flourish works to create peer support movements defined by solidarity, friendship, and hope, and has worked extensively with the NHS to develop more authentic co-production in the planning and delivery of mental health services, especially involving individuals and communities which have historically been marginalised and unheard. On behalf of 葫芦影业 City Council, Flourish runs the which provides comprehensive and updated information and advice, and also - where people who are suicidal can search for appropriate help and support.
Influencing global health policy
Brendan鈥檚 impact on NHS practice and policy extends beyond 葫芦影业. As co-chair of NHS England鈥檚 Reducing Restraint Strategic Oversight Group [RRSOG], he promoted user-voice and experience. Brendan has presented RRSOG鈥檚 work in Finland and was an invited participant at the inaugural Global Ministerial Mental Health Summit: the first meeting of government ministers and clinical leaders from across the world to develop policy and practice. Stone鈥檚 inputs to the subsequent declaration (signed by all 61 countries present) concerned the need to involve people with experience of mental illness and the importance of interventions being locally appropriate.
Supporting medical professionals
Brendan has also developed masterclasses for medical students and professionals, working with service-users and using narrative to deepen understanding of living with mental illness. Representative feedback: 鈥業 have learned more about 鈥渉andling鈥 mental health problems here than anywhere else鈥; 鈥業 have rediscovered what it means to be a good doctor who listens to his patients鈥. Service-users involved also benefitted: 鈥榠t helped me process what has happened with my mental health and experience of health care鈥; 鈥榠t鈥檚 given me faith in medicine鈥. A film of these masterclasses was runner-up in the UK鈥檚 Haelo Film Awards for public sector films.
Brendan鈥檚 work with SHSC led Health Education England to commission him to produce narrative work for Fairhealth: a set of resources to help health professionals 鈥榖etter understand their patients鈥 lives, improve their outcomes, and reduce the health gap [between rich and poor]鈥. Fairhealth won a 2019 Training Journal Gold award for the best Inclusivity and Diversity Programme. These on-line resources are used for training doctors internationally (e.g. University of Western Sydney) and in the UK (e.g. 葫芦影业鈥檚 鈥楧eep End鈥 programme, providing professional development for nine GP practices caring for 63K+ patients in areas of significant multiple deprivation).
Recently Brendan has led in the acquisition for the University Library of the Champernowne Archive. Irene Champernowne was a renowned British psychoanalyst, whose influence and leadership in innovative approaches to art and therapy has been seminal in the development of British Art Therapy. The archive includes many very valuable resources which illuminate the history of our understanding of mental health and illness. An Exhibition of the Archive will be staged at the University in 2023.
Written by Alicia Shephard
Updated by Alina Moore, Research Communications Coordinator
For further information contact:
mediateam@sheffield.ac.uk
Funders
NHS