Engage Aotearoa

Category Archives: Online Resources

Information and news about mental-health resources that can be found online.

New Open Access Articles from BMC Psychiatry

Research article
Role of the police in linking individuals experiencing mental health crises with mental health services
van den Brink RH, Broer J, Tholen AJ, Winthorst WH, Visser E, Wiersma D

BMC Psychiatry 2012, 12:171 (17 October 2012)
[Provisional PDF]

Technical advance
The feasibility and validity of ambulatory self-report of psychotic symptoms using a smartphone software application
Palmier-Claus JE, Ainsworth J, Machin M, Barrowclough C, Dunn G, Barkus E, Rogers A, Wykes T, Kapur S, Buchan I, Salter E, Lewis SW

BMC Psychiatry 2012, 12:172 (17 October 2012)
[Provisional PDF]

Research article
Hikikomori as a possible clinical term in psychiatry: a questionnaire survey
Tateno M, Park TW, Kato TA, Umene-Nakano W, Saito T

BMC Psychiatry 2012, 12:169 (15 October 2012)
[Provisional PDF]

Study protocol
Comparison of the effectiveness of trauma-focused cognitive behavioral therapy and paroxetine treatment in PTSD patients: Design of a randomized controlled trial
Polak A, Witteveen AB, Visser RS, Opmeer BC, Vulink N, Figee M, Denys D, Olff M

BMC Psychiatry 2012, 12:166 (9 October 2012)
[Provisional PDF]

Access 80 Free Articles on Depression during October 2012

Free Articles from Routledge Mental Health

Celebrate World Mental Health Day for the entire month with over 80 FREE articles on Depression from Routledge Mental Health available until October 26, 2012 at: http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/access/free-articles-world-mental-health-day-2012.pdf

Online Suicide Prevention Training Available!

QPR Online TrainingFoundations in Suicide Prevention

Ask a Question –   Save a Life

Fee $50 including GST

Worried about someone? 

Learn what to look for, when to be concerned and what to say to save a life!

Click here to Purchase QPR Online Suicide Prevention Training

The training programme includes:

  • Risk factors for suicide
  • How to get help for someone in crisis
  • The warning signs of a suicide crisis
  • The common causes of suicidal behaviour
  • Relationship of mental illness to suicide
  • When and how to Question suicidal people
  • How to Persuade people to accept help
  • How to Refer people to resources

QPR New Zealand on-line Suicide Prevention Training

Learn to save a life in as little as two hours, anywhere, anytime.QPR New Zealand offers a comprehensive online training programme, using the latest in educational web technology.  This training will arm you with the skills you need to help prevent suicide today.

QPR stands for Question, Persuade, and Refer – 3 simple steps that anyone can learn to help save a life from suicide. Just as people are trained in CPR to help save thousands of lives each year, people trained in QPR learn how to recognize the warning signs of suicide and how to question, persuade, and refer someone for help.

Heyday Issue #2 Out Now from Youthline

Issue#2 of Youthline’s online youth magazine, ‘Heyday’ is out now!!!

It’s jam-packed with inspirational articles about young people achieving great things, celebrity Q/A’s, career profiles, an ‘unzipped’ section and a whole heap more!

Please click here to read it.

If you have Facebook please visit Youthline here and help promote the magazine by sharing it with your friends.

If you are interested in contributing to Heyday please email Amanda: awatson@youthline.co.nz

SPINZ Newsletter August 2012

The latest issue of the SPINZ Newsletter is now available in PDF or web page format. This issue focuses on diverse communities, and we bring you a range of stories about initiatives, services and research supporting suicide prevention across New Zealand.

Links in this contents list take you to their web pages:

Let’s talk about inclusion – Sam Orchard is Rainbow Champion at Affinity Services – find out what that means and why it’s important.

A farmer’s story – After losing a friend to suicide, farmer Stu Richards opens up about loneliness and farming pressures. We talk to three agencies working to make sure guns in rural communities are used safely.

Computer game as good as counselling for depressed youth – A team of Auckland University experts is finding success in its SPARX e-therapy for depressed teens.

Reporting Suicide: avoid simple explanations – We encourage journalists to put suicide stories in context and educate the public about how to help.

Everyone has a role in Asian suicide prevention – Malaysian-born Ivan Yeo explains how we can all take part in reducing suicide risk in our communities, and we profile our Chinese-language resources.

Watering the young taro shoots – Cook Islands Māori psychologist Dr Evangelene Daniela describes her four-part approach to working with Pacific families.

Māori experts speak – We profile a collaborative project that collected the kōrero of experts in Māori suicide prevention.

New books & research – Latest research and books available from the Mental Health Foundation Resource & Information Service.

Latest RCNet Update is Live Online

Click here to read the latest update from RCNet (Soon to be Changing Minds).

New Open-Access Research Online in BMC Psychiatry

The following new articles have just been published in BMC Psychiatry

Research article
Common stressful life events and difficulties are associated with mental health symptoms and substance use in young adolescents
Low NC, Dugas E, O’Loughlin E, Rodriguez D, Contreras G, Chaiton M, O’Loughlin J
BMC Psychiatry 2012, 12:116 (17 August 2012)
Research article
Mental health of asylum seekers: a cross-sectional study of psychiatric disorders
Heeren M, Mueller J, Ehlert U, Schnyder U, Copiery N, Maier T
BMC Psychiatry 2012, 12:114 (17 August 2012)
Research article
Patient-reported outcome data generated in a clinical intervention in community mental health care – psychometric properties
Priebe S, Golden E, McCabe R, Reininghaus U
BMC Psychiatry 2012, 12:113 (17 August 2012)
Research article
Cannabis use and depression: a longitudinal study of a national cohort of Swedish conscripts
Manrique-Garcia E, Zammit S, Dalman C, Hemmingsson T, Allebeck P
BMC Psychiatry 2012, 12:112 (16 August 2012)

What is Good Medical Practice to you?

Under section 118 of the Health Practitioners Competence Assurance Act 2003 the Medical Council of New Zealand (the Council) is responsible for setting “standards of clinical competence, cultural competence and ethical conduct” for doctors.  In 1998 the Medical Council developed Good Medical Practice to be the foundation document for the standards they set…

Good Medical Practice aims to outline the duties of a good doctor in a simple and direct manner. It is intended to help doctors to monitor their own conduct and the conduct of their colleagues. It is also intended to serve as a source of education and reflection for medical students. The Council are also aware that it is often referred to by patients who are uncertain about the quality of care they have received. They have tried to make the resource accessible to all of these groups, and endeavoured to ensure that the standards outlined are clear and easy to follow.

Good Medical Practice also has another important function.  It is often used as a standard against which professional conduct is measured. It is used by the Health Practitioners’ Disciplinary Tribunal, the Council’s Professional Conduct Committees and the Health and Disability Commissioner in determining whether a doctor has acted appropriately or not.  The advice it contains therefore needs to establish a clear line in the sand against which conduct can be measured.

Good Medical Practice was last reviewed in 2006. The Council is seeking feedback from doctors, patients and other agencies engaged in the regulation and practise of medicine on this resource, and on changes that they are proposing to make.

While the Council believes that Good Medical Practice remains useful and relevant, they also think that it could be improved in a number of ways. They are seeking your comments on the proposed changes, and also your responses to a number of specific questions.

Quite a few of these changes they propose are minor, but a number outline new or different standards. The Council appreciates that your time is precious, so have tried to summarise the most important changes in a consultation paper.  However, if you do have the time they would also encourage you to review both the consultation paper and a complete copy of the draft Good Medical Practice that includes details of all of the suggested changes.

Download Good Medical Practice Consultation paper

Download draft Good Medical Practice

Please send your comments to Michael Thorn, the Council’s senior policy adviser and researcher by 12 October 2012. You can either complete the questions in the consultation paper or in the complete copy of the draft Good Medical Practice and send your responses to Michael at mthorn@mcnz.org.nz or post it to:

Michael Thorn
Senior Policy Adviser and Researcher
Medical Council of New Zealand
PO Box 11-649
Willis Street
Wellington 6011

Please also feel free to send Michael any other comments or suggestions you have about Good Medical Practice.

Engage Aotearoa Reviews Blueprint II

Blueprint II was launched on the 13th of June and the mental-health sector has been largely silent in response. This is likely because Blueprint II is an epic 52-page document.

An Executive Summary on pages 6 and 7 of Blueprint II provides a summary of what goals need to be achieved, but does not outline how to achieve them. This leaves the reader with a lofty set of ideals and little practical perspective of what implementation involves.

In order to get the full picture of Blueprint II, one must read the entire document and it’s 102 page companion document. Notably, the assertions likely to make the most significant impact on service delivery are saved for the final chapter and the appendices of the companion document.

While Blueprint I set out to clearly define what was needed in the mental-health service sector and how to get there, Blueprint II makes calls for better, more effective services while supporting a drive for reduced funding and greater efficiency.

Oddly, the Blueprint II Companion Document makes the assertion that problems of inaccessible and under-resourced services have been resolved and that the future strategy should be focused on efficiency and productivity.

The document provides no evidence to back up this assertion that services have improved and can now focus on efficiency and cost-cutting. Presumably the authors have simply believed the marketing material of mental-health services without establishing whether their rhetoric is realised in action.

Blueprint II is a missed opportunity for the Mental Health Commission to influence government to increase the resources available to the mental-health sector and prevent further cuts to a sector that can ill afford them.

Staff at Engage Aotearoa have been supporting individuals currently residing in Auckland’s acute psychiatric wards across the previous two weeks and can confirm that although the Blueprint II authors state that services are now accessible, family-focused and person centred, this is not the case. Family members are currently left without information, nursing staff do not have time to talk to service-users, service-users are given extended periods of unsupervised leave without a single member of their family being informed, service-users have no access to the clinical psychologist on staff, even when specifically requested. There is clearly no room at the acute service for any form of budget cuts or loss of FTEs.  Anecdotes from service users in the community suggest waiting times for a funded therapist can extend upwards of six months. In our community mental-health centres, only those in the top 3% of severity can be seen. At Engage Aotearoa we have heard stories about suicidal people seeking access to a key worker to keep themselves safe and being turned away.   We have heard stories about service-users being discharged from their community mental-health centre over the phone without being reviewed due to demands on the service. Access to unfunded therapy is limited to those who can afford the fees.

A number of NZ newspapers recently ran a story about an unwell man who murdered his flatmate: while many people were worried about him in the days leading up to the incident, no one knew to call the Crisis Team or police to get him help. Everyone knows where they can buy an iPhone, but no one knows where to go when someone is a risk to themselves or others.

It seems clear that mental-health services in NZ continue to be under-resourced and difficult to access. Some of the most crucial services are so under-resourced that they cannot even make the public aware that they exist, let alone actually provide their service to all who need it.

Despite its push for better, more effective services, Blueprint II advocates reducing the number of services and making those services do more with less. An environment of competition for scarce resources pits services against each other at the same time that they are asked to work together in collaboration.

This is unlikely to result in positive changes for New Zealanders seeking improved wellbeing, the people they live with or the professionals who work to help them.

Free access to building accessibility standards

The best advice on how to make buildings accessible for disabled people is now available online for free. As the result of advocacy by the Barrier Free Trust, CCS Disability Action and DPA, eleven organisations have joined together to fund public access to New Zealand Standard 4121: Design for access and mobility: Buildings and associated facilities (NZS4121) over the next two years.

NZS4121 covers public buildings such as government offices, commercial buildings, police stations, hospitals, schools, theatres, shops, petrol stations and public toilets. It provides detailed technical guidance for design and building industry professionals on how to achieve the minimum level of accessibility in the built environment, as required under the Building Act 2004.

The Department of Building and Housing (now part of the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment) has agreed to fund fifty percent of the cost, with the remaining fifty percent being met by:

  • Wellington City Council
  • Auckland Council
  • Christchurch City Council
  • Selwyn District Council
  • Building Officials Institute of New Zealand
  • Barrier Free New Zealand Trust
  • CCS Disability Action
  • Be. Institute
  • Royal New Zealand Foundation of the Blind (RNZFB)
  • National Foundation for the Deaf (NFD)
  • Deaf Aotearoa.

This is a great achievement. It will promote greater knowledge of practical changes that can be made to improve access for all.

The Barrier Free Trust and the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment are planning a series of seminars to inform the disability and construction sectors on the importance of NZS4121 in the design and building process. These seminars will help to spread the news about the free availability of NZS4121.

You can access NZS4121 at: http://www.standards.co.nz/4121+access+mobility+design