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In this episode, Jane talks with Dr Navina Evans, Chief Executive of Health Education England since October 2020. She was previously Chief Executive of East London NHS Foundation Trust. Navina also held a number of positions across the Trust including Director of Operations & Deputy CEO, Director for Mental Health, Lead Clinician Newham CAMHS and Clinical Director for Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services. Navina discusses her personal journey as a doctor and the challenges she faced, including gender biases and self-doubt. Jane and Navina both highlight the need for more women in leadership positions and the importance of mentorship, structures, and processes to support career advancement.Transcript: https://www.ucl.ac.uk/medical-sciences/campaigns/medical-women-talking-podcast Date of episode recording: 2024-05-28T00:00:00Z Duration: 00:31:24 Language of episode: English Presenter:Professor Dame Jane Dacre Guests: Dr Navina Evans Producer: Matt Aucott
Mental health illnesses that occur during pregnancy or in the first year following the birth of a child, affect 27% of new and expectant mothers in the UK. Common negative stigmatising perceptions are often what prevent people from speaking out and seeking help. Dr Kate Adlington is an Academic Clinical Fellow at Queen Mary University London and a Higher Trainee in General Adult Psychiatry in the East London NHS Foundation Trust. In this month's episode, Shakira and Iman talk to Kate about perinatal mental health, the pressures of being a new mother (including feeling lonely and the social detriments of pregnancy), the healthcare inequalities faced by black and ethnic minority women, plus more. Presented by Shakira Crawford & Iman Issa-Ismail. Guest: Dr Kate Adlington. Producer: Shakira Crawford. Podcast Research: Kyron James. Project Mentors: Marie Horner & Kaveh Rahnama. Filmed By: Mike Wornell. Led By: Dr Rupy Kaur Matharu & Dr Shoba Poduval. In collaboration with Future Formed and UCL. Funded by the UCL East Community Engagement Seed Fund 2022/23 and Future Formed.
What place does quality improvement have in the NHS during the coronavirus pandemic, and what do we need from our healthcare leaders right now? Dr Amar Shah, Chief Quality Officer at the East London NHS Foundation Trust shares his thoughts on our live #Quality2020 podcast.
This week we dig into shame in medicine - how students are taught using shame, how shame affects patients, and why the phrase "we ask this question to everyone" might not be the most useful way of signposting in a conversation between a doctor and patient. You can read Lucia's six-part series for the Wellcome Trust about shame here: https://wellcomecollection.org/series/XnIR1BIAACoAdpbI Our expert guests: Lucia Osborne-Crowley is a writer and journalist. Her news reporting and literary work has appeared in Granta, GQ, The Sunday Times, HuffPost UK, the Guardian, ABC News, Meanjin, The Lifted Brow and others. I Choose Elena is her first book. Her second book, My Body Keeps Your Secrets, will be published in February 2021. Dr Chloe Beale is a consultant liaison psychiatrist and the suicide prevention lead for East London NHS Foundation Trust.
Dr Trevor Turner, Consultant Psychiatrist from the East London NHS Foundation Trust talks to Mark Brown about the past, present and future of mental health community care.
Bailey Mitchell and Dean Henderson from East London NHS Foundation Trust tells how quality improvement work has led to huge reductions in violence on their mental health wards.
Consultant Forensic Psychiatrist and Chief Quality Officer at the East London NHS Foundation Trust talks about creating Joy in Work.
Welcome back to Episode #5 Charmaine was born in London where she remained until she was 7 years old. She spent the remainder of her childhood and adolescent years growing up in parts of Manchester and Essex before returning to live in London as an adult. After spending most of her life battling with her own mental health illness she decided to pursue a career in training in Mental Health Recovery and Social Inclusion. Charmaine now specialises in areas related to organisational change structures and the implementation of peer involvement and peer development, co-production and user-led delivery of mental health services. She has a passion for creative arts and loves mindfulness, body movement, performance and her new found joy training in trauma-sensitive yoga. She is a mother, a poet, a thinker, a doer, an independent trainer and peer consultant with over ten years of experience of working with people suffering from chronic and enduring mental health conditions. Charmaine works between East London NHS Foundation Trust and North East London NHS Foundation Trust, she also works within the charity sector and currently manages projects for Redbridge Disability Consortium One Place East funded by the big lottery and LBR. She is an Open Dialogue practitioner, a member of the teaching team working as a part-time trainer on the postgraduate certificate in peer-supported open dialogue, social network and relationship skills (POD) Charmaine is also the founder of Peer Dialogue. This podcast we discuss and reflect on the Mental Health Conversations Seminar she hosted and the importance of working together as collectives to shape change. I hope you enjoy the feedback and knowledge from the guests and guest speakers from this Conference, some very passionate and inspiring women sharing there knowledge and information on how we can work together to form change. Peace.
WIHI - A Podcast from the Institute for Healthcare Improvement
Amar Shah, Consultant Forensic Psychiatrist & Chief Quality Officer, East London NHS Foundation Trust Lindsey Bourne, Director of Education, PFCCpartners Barbara Grey, Director SLaM Partners & Quality Improvement (QI), South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust Sarah Davenport, Service User Consultant, South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust Gabrielle Richards, Head of Inclusion, Recovery, Occupational Therapy, and Allied Health Professionals, South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust Patients and families are playing a greater role in health care quality improvement. Over the last decade participation has grown to include serving on Patient and Family Advisory Committees, or PFACs; regularly meeting with hospital board safety and quality committees; joining co-design and co-production initiatives; and speaking or leading sessions at QI conferences. Along the way, there's been some exposure to QI principles and methods, but now some organizations believe it's essential for patients and families to have training in basic improvement to enhance their influence and involvement. On the May 17 episode of WIHI, Giving Patients and Families the Tools to Be Health Care Improvers, we discussed getting improvement basics into the hands of patients and their families with East London NHS Foundation Trust and South London and Maudsley Trust and how "service users" have become involved in nearly half the improvement projects happening at their organizations.
Luke Annesley talks to Julian O’Kelly about his current research, as well as his doctoral studies at Aalborg University with people with severe head injuries. Julian has published widely on music therapy in palliative care and neuro-disability, and has now ventured in to mental health, co-ordinating a major NHS funded feasibility study on music therapy for chronic depression with East London NHS Foundation Trust. There’s a chance coming up to hear Julian explore the challenges and opportunities for music therapy offered by neuroscience in his forthcoming open lecture at the Royal Hospital for Neuro-disability on Thursday 14 September 2017, 4.30-5.30pm, and he has recently co-edited an ebook, that’s free to download, on the same subject, which you can find here.