Showing posts with label Mental Health Council of Australia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mental Health Council of Australia. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Recognition and Respect: Report on Mental Health Carers 2012

Related image for 'Report into mental health carers released'


The Mental Health Council of Australia has released its annual report on mental health carers, 'Recognition and Respect: Report on Mental Health Carers 2012'.

The Report surveyed over 500 mental health carers and provides an insight into the lives of of people who regularly care for someone with a mental illness.

You can download the full report here.

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The 14th International Mental Health Conference "OPENING DOORS" will be held at Outrigger Inn, Surfers Paradise on Monday the 5th and Tuesday the 6th of August 2013.  Optional workshops will be held on Wednesday the 7th of August. Call for Abstracts are now open.
Visit the website here

The conference will focus on a range of mental issues including Depression, Schizophrenia, Bipolar Disorder and Dementia.
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Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Drug use soars in aged-care facilities

From: The Australian March 07, 2011 12:00AM

MORE elderly people are being dosed up on powerful mood-altering drugs, according to a study that finds use of the drugs in some nursing homes has soared.

A study of nearly 2500 residents of 44 western Sydney nursing homes shows that nearly a quarter are taking antidepressants almost every day, up from 15 per cent in 1993.

The proportion on antipsychotics -- powerful drugs normally used to treat serious mental illnesses such as schizophrenia -- rose from 22 per cent in 1998 to 28 per cent in 2009.

The expert who conducted the study has described the findings as mostly good news, because doctors had largely shifted to a newer generation of so-called "atypical" antipsychotics, and at lower doses, avoiding the unpleasant side-effects of older drugs, such as muscle stiffness... read the full story here.

The 12th International Mental Health Conference 2011
Radisson Resort, Gold Coast, Australia
Wednesday 24th August – Friday 26th August 2011.
Theme: Personality Disorders "Out if the Darkness"

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Thoughts on Carers & Consumers in Rural & Remote Areas in Australia

Carers - Rural and Remote:

The ongoing impacts on the lives of mental health carers in rural and remote Australia are significant. Services for the consumer are much less available than in the city and the carer becomes a defacto ‘case manager’. The impacts on the carers’ life and health, immediate and long term finances, job and educational prospects form part of their concerns and are quite separate from their concerns about the health and wellbeing of the consumer.

Carer Concerns for the Consumers:
‘Who will look after him when I am gone’ this is the fundamental issue of all mental health carers. How can appropriate supported long term accommodation for the consumer be created and maintained in rural and remote Australia? What effective programs and projects exist both here and overseas? Carers continue to fulfil their role long after retirement age.

Create and Maintain Services:
Both medical and community services lack workforce in rural and remote locations. The community sector (PHAMS and Respite workers etc) may have little training and few career prospects. What incentives are there to keep them within their field of work and provide a career path within the local community? Incentives could include remote access to both the Cert 4 and Diploma in MH, fee payment, etc. Areas of increased productivity and employment prospects (e.g. booming mining areas) are vulnerable to rapidly losing the community workforce.

Innovative Integrated Models of Care in Rural and Remote Locations:
Carers in rural and remote areas can provide comprehensive models of care on a shoestring e.g. Active Minds in rural NSW. Showcasing some of these highly appropriate and successful (in terms of consumer satisfaction) services could encourage replication.

Incidental and Ancillary Workers:
In rural and remote locations it is imperative that the service providers have knowledge of mental illness, the effects on the consumer and carer and knowledge of how to respond. Those workers include all who come into contact with the consumer and carer especially: police, pharmacists, teachers, GP’s, front line Centrelink staff and housing officials. What examples of training exist, what follow up is there, are consumers and carers satisfied with the results?

Linda Rosie

Carer Engagement Project Manager
Mental Health Council of Australia