2nd Edition
Mental Health in a Multi-Ethnic Society A Multidisciplinary Handbook
Introduction. Part I: Current Scene. Fernando, Meanings and Realities. Inyama, Race Relations, Mental Health and Human Rights - The Legal Framework. Fernando, Inequalities and the Politics of ‘Race’ in Mental Health. Kotecha, Black and Minority Ethnic Women. Bennett, Kalathil, Keating, Race Equality Training in the UK: An Historical Overview. Part II: Confronting Issues. Kapasi, Management Approaches to Effecting Change. Ahmed, Jennings, Dhillon, Innovation in the Voluntary Sector. Ferns, The Challenges of Race Equality and Cultural Capability (RECC) Training. Patel, Developing Psychological Services for Refugee Survivors of Torture. Trivedi, Black Service ‘User Involvement’ – Rhetoric or Reality? Griffiths, A Programme for Changing Attitudes in the Statutory Sector: Dialogue is Critical. Part III: Making It Happen. Alleyne, Working Therapeutically with Hidden Dimensions of Racism. Malik, Fateh, Haque, The Marlborough Cultural Therapy Centre. Au, Tang, Mental Health Services for Chinese People. Choudhry, Bakhsh, Counselling and Day Care for South Asian People. Stanley, African and Caribbean Mental Health Service in Manchester. Burnett, The Sanctuary Practice in Hackney. Jones, A Movement Led by Black Service Users in South London. Part IV: Lessons For The Future. Fernando, Keating, The Way Ahead.
Biography
Suman Fernando has been a consultant psychiatrist and an academic in the mental health field for over twenty-five years. He is honorary Senior Lecturer at the European Centre for the Study of Migration & Social Care and honorary Professor in the Department of Applied Social Sciences at London Metropolitan University.
Frank Keating is Senior Lecturer in Health and Social Care at Royal Holloway University of London where he is Programme Director for the MSc in Social Work. His main research focuses on the inequalities in mental health for African and Caribbean communities in the UK.
'This second edition of Suman Fernando's book, now co-edited by Frank Keating, is a must read for those interested in cultural influences on the expression and management of mental distress in diverse societies. Although the book is anchored in British experience there are general propositions which should also be taken up for psychiatric practice the world over.' - Kamaldeep Bhui, Professor of Cultural Psychiatry & Epidemiology, Barts & The London School of Medicine & Dentistry, Honorary Consultant Psychiatrist East London NHS Foundation Trust.






