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Resources

On this page you will find a range of resources related to the Culture of Care programme.

Our programme team and partners have brought these resources together, which align with the Culture of Care standards, to support teams implementing the standards and for interest. They do not necessarily reflect the College's position on any particular topic.

If you would like to suggest any resources to be shared on this page, please email them to cultureofcare@rcpsych.ac.uk

Information for participating organisations:

Question and Answer sessions:

  • - 27 February 2024
  • - 12 March 2024

Foundations of the programme:

  • - NHS England
  • - NHS England
    • Working Well Together - 网曝黑料

    •  - NHS England

    •  - Social Care Institute for Excellence (SCIE) 

    • National Development Team For Inclusion (NDTi)

    • - National Institute for Head and Care Research (NIHR) 

    • - East London Foundation Trust

    • - UK Standards for Public Involvement 

    •  - Applied Resources West, NIHR 

    • - National Mental Health Consumer & Carer Forum

    •  - Fuse, the Centre for Translational Research in Public Health 

    • - Leeds Social Sciences Institute, University of Leeds  

    • Tameside and Glassop Integrated Care NHS Foundation Trust

    • Nordin A, Kjellstrom S, Robert G, Masterson D, Areskoug Josefsson K. . BMJ Open. 2023;13:e073808. 

    • Marsilio M, Fusco F, Gheduzzi E, Guglielmetti C. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021;18:3336. 

    • Faulkner, A., & Thompson, R. (2023). 38(4), 537–560.

    • Lambert, N. and Carr, S. (2018), ‘’: Co-production in UK mental health research, lessons from the field. Int J Mental Health Nurs, 27: 1273-1281

    • (although this relates to people living with HIV it has some helpful well-being tools for people with lived experience involved in co-production e.g., bracketing, grounding and holistic check-ins)

    • - National Survivor User Network

    • - Neurodiverse Connection

    Co-production in mental health:

    •   - Skills for Care

    • a charity that works collaboratively on innovative digital and community projects, recognising the untapped strengths of people who’ve experienced mental health challenges.

    Tools to co-produce

    • Iriss
    •  - Pilotlight, Iriss
    •  - Applied Resources West, NIHR
    • Mind

    Reports

    •  - National Survivor User Network

    Co-production guidance document

    • A guidance document for wards to support meaningful coproduction and develop lived experience roles - NCCMH, NDC, BTG and Trauma-informed Care Collaborative

    Watch a British Sign Language video aims at people with lived experience of inpatient mental health care.

    The video provides information on what the Culture of Care Programme is and how to get involved.

    .

    1. Book: The 15 commitments of conscious leadership: A new paradigm for sustained success. By J. Dither, D Chapman and K. Warner Klemp. 2015 

    1. Book: Intelligent kindness: reforming the culture of healthcare. By J. Ballatt and P. Campling. 2011. 

    1. Book: Community: the structure of belonging. By P.Block. 2008 

    1. Book: Why David sometimes wins: Leadership, Organization, and Strategy in the California Farm Worker Movement. By M.Ganz. 2009.  

    1. Book: Humble inquiry: the gentle art of asking instead of telling. By E. Schein. 2013. 

    1. Book: Impact with integrity: repairing the world without breaking yourself. By B. Margiotta. 2022. 

    1. Book: New Power: How anyone can persuade, mobilise and succeed in our chaotic connected age. By J Hermans and H Timms. 2019. 

    1. Book: The genius zone: the breakthrough processs to end negative thinking and live in true creativity. By G Hendricks. 2021. 

    1. Book: Thinking in systems. By D. Meadows. 2008. 

    1. Book: Made to stick: why some ideas survive and others die. By C. Heath and D. Heath. 2007.  

    1. Book: Scarcity why having so little means so much. By S. Mullainathan and E. Shafr. 2013.  

    1. Worksheet: . Adapted for ACCE from adaptation by Partners for Collaborative Change based on “White Supremacy Culture” By Tema Okun and Kenneth Jones, for large, majority white environmental organisations, using interviews with staff and partners of these organisations.

    • Book: The Body keeps the score, Bessel Van de Kolk (2014) 

    • Angela Sweeney; Danny Taggart  Journal of Mental Health 2018 Vol27, N) 5,383-387 

    • . Elliot et al. Journal of Community Psychology. 2005 

    • Mental Health Review Journal, Sweeney et al (2016)," Vol. 21 Iss 3 pp. 174 - 192

    • Sweeney A, Filson B, Kennedy A, Collinson L, Gillard S. BJPsych Adv. 2018 Sep;24(5):319-333. doi: 10.1192/bja.2018.29. PMID: 30174829; PMCID: PMC6088388. 

    • T, Fallot & Harris (2006)

    • - The Survivors Trust 

    Drayton Park Crisis House as an example of a Trauma informed practice:  

    • . Hannah Prytherch, Anne Cooke & Ian Marsh. 10 Nov 2020

    • Book: Women and Power: The Drayton Park Crisis House, Anne Cooke, Shirley McNicholas and Andie Rose. 

    Animations:  

    •  - Bessel van der Kolk (Youtube)

    •  - NHS Lanarkshire (Vimeo) 

    Further guidance:  

    •  - The University of Manchester
    •  - Data on emergency department presentations for self-harm in Manchester
    •  - Patient, carer partners and public involvement in research

    Report

    •  - National Confidential Inquiry into Suicide and Safety in Mental Health
    • - International Society of Autism Research

    Guidelines

    •  - National Confidential Inquiry into Suicide and Safety in Mental Health
    •  - National Confidential Inquiry into Suicide and Safety in Mental Health

    Publications

    • Carter G, Milner A, McGill K, Pirkis J, Kapur N, Spittal MJ. Predicting suicidal behaviours using clinical instruments: systematic review and meta-analysis of positive predictive values for risk scales. The British Journal of Psychiatry. 2017 Jun;210(6):387-95.
    • Chan MK, Bhatti H, Meader N, Stockton S, Evans J, O'Connor RC, Kapur N, Kendall T. Predicting suicide following self-harm: systematic review of risk factors and risk scales. The British Journal of Psychiatry. 2016 Oct;209(4):277-83.
    • Graney J, Hunt IM, Quinlivan L, Rodway C, Turnbull P, Gianatsi M, Appleby L, Kapur N. Suicide risk assessment in UK mental health services: a national mixed-methods study. The Lancet Psychiatry. 2020 Dec 1;7(12):1046-53.
    • Large MM, Ryan CJ, Carter G, Kapur N. Can we usefully stratify patients according to suicide risk?. Bmj. 2017 Oct 17;359.
    • Morriss R, Kapur N, Byng R. Assessing risk of suicide or self-harm in adults. BMJ. 2013 Jul 25;347.
    • Quinlivan L, Cooper J, Meehan D, Longson D, Potokar J, Hulme T, Marsden J, Brand F, Lange K, Riseborough E, Page L. Predictive accuracy of risk scales following self-harm: multicentre, prospective cohort study. The British Journal of Psychiatry. 2017 Jun;210(6):429-36.
    • Quinlivan L, Cooper J, Steeg S, Davies L, Hawton K, Gunnell D, Kapur N. Scales for predicting risk following self-harm: an observational study in 32 hospitals in England. BMJ open. 2014 Apr 1;4(5):e004732.
    • Quinlivan L, Gorman L, Littlewood DL, Monaghan E, Barlow SJ, Campbell S, Webb RT, Kapur N. ‘Wasn’t offered one, too poorly to ask for one’–Reasons why some patients do not receive a psychosocial assessment following self-harm: Qualitative patient and carer survey. Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry. 2022 Apr;56(4):398-407
    • Quinlivan L, Gorman L, Marks S, Monaghan E, Asmal S, Webb RT, Kapur N. Liaison psychiatry practitioners’ views on accessing aftercare and psychological therapies for patients who present to hospital following self-harm: multi-site interview study. BJPsych open. 2023 Mar;9(2):e34.
    • Quinlivan L, Gorman L, Monaghan E, Asmal S, Webb RT, Kapur N. Accessing psychological therapies following self-harm: qualitative survey of patient experiences and views on improving practice. BJPsych open. 2023 May;9(3):e62.
    • Quinlivan L, Steeg S, Elvidge J, Nowland R, Davies L, Hawton K, Gunnell D, Kapur N. Risk assessment scales to predict risk of hospital treated repeat self-harm: A cost-effectiveness modelling analysis. Journal of affective disorders. 2019 Apr 15;249:208-15.
    • Quinlivan LM, Gorman L, Littlewood DL, Monaghan E, Barlow SJ, Campbell SM, Webb RT, Kapur N. ‘Relieved to be seen’—patient and carer experiences of psychosocial assessment in the emergency department following self-harm: qualitative analysis of 102 free-text survey responses. BMJ open. 2021 May 1;11(5):e044434.
    • Steeg S, Quinlivan L, Nowland R, Carroll R, Casey D, Clements C, Cooper J, Davies L, Knipe D, Ness J, O’connor RC. Accuracy of risk scales for predicting repeat self-harm and suicide: a multicentre, population-level cohort study using routine clinical data. BMC psychiatry. 2018 Dec;18:1-1

    Deconstructing the diagnosis of personality disorder:

    Lived experience-led resources:

    • Watts, Jay. BJPsych International 21, no. 4 (2024) 78-82.
    • Watts, Jay. BMJ Mental Health (2024 Jan); 27 (1)
    • Aves, W. Journal of Psychosocial Studies (2023 Aug); 16(2): 179 - 92.
    • Wildbore E, Bond C, Timmons S, Hui A, Sinclair S. Nursing Open (2024 Nov); 11(11): e70081
    • Wildbore EL. Therapeutic Communities: The International Journal of Therapeutic Communities (2025 May)

    Bruch Tamilson paper:

    • Tamilson B, Eccles JA, Shaw SC. Autism (2025 Feb); 29(2): 504-1

    Data, Research and Reports:

    • - The University of Manchester
    • - The University of Manchester
    • - The University of Manchester
    • Flynn S, Graney J, Nyathi T, Raphael J, Abraham S, Singh-Dernevik S, Williams A, Kapur N, Appleby L, Shaw J. BJPsych Open (2020 Mar); 6(2): e29
    • Flynn S, Raphael J, Graney J, Nyathi T, Williams A, Kapur N, Appleby L, Shaw J. Personality and Mental Health (2019 Aug); 13(3): 134-43
    • - The University of Manchester

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