Dare
you view the Masked AMHP’s latest YouTube video: A Halloween MHA Assessment?
It’s Halloween. You get a request to assess an elderly man living alone in a remote ancient cottage. What can go wrong?
Dare
you view the Masked AMHP’s latest YouTube video: A Halloween MHA Assessment?
It’s Halloween. You get a request to assess an elderly man living alone in a remote ancient cottage. What can go wrong?
Back in the days when the Masked AMHP had long hair and a beard, and wore flared jeans...
I doubt that
anyone has ever asked a child or even a teenager what they’d like to be when
they grew up and the answer has been: “social worker”. A fireman. An engine
driver. An astronaut. Maybe even a nurse. But never a social worker.
Vanessa was a woman in her late 20’s, who lived on a social housing estate with her two sons, aged 6 and 8. Vanessa had bipolar affective disorder. Over a two year period, I had had to assess her under the Mental Health Act on 8 separate occasions, invariably during a hypomanic episode.
I thought I
knew Vanessa well. And that was my mistake.
Warning: Contains swearing. And arrows.
The Mental Health Act 1959 was the first “modern” Act
designed to deal with people with mental disorders. It replaced frankly archaic
Acts such as the Lunacy Act 1890 and the Mental Deficiency Acts of 1913 and
1938. This was replaced in turn by the Mental Health Act 1983, which was
further amended by the Mental Health Act 2007, which radically modified the
definition of “mental disorder”.