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Mental health
Mental health: ethnic minority carers’ experiences
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Becoming a carer :
Becoming a mental health carer
Reasons for caring and carers' qualities
How caring affects carers :
Working life and life opportunities
Relationship to the person cared for
Children, family and social life
Stress and carers' health
Negative attitudes to mental health problems
Looking after yourself and getting help :
Getting the balance right
Support from family, friends and community
Support from spirituality and religion
Support from carers' services
Carers' assessments
Caring for someone with a mental health problem :
Giving emotional and practical support
Taking control - difficult situations and medication
Carers' views: mental health problems & causes
Carers' views on treatment and cure
Carers' experiences with mental health services :
Services and minority ethnic communities
Carers' voice and confidentiality issues
Working with GPs and Psychiatric Consultants
Dealing with hospitals
Services in the community
What carers want :
What different cultures can teach us
Carers advice for support and information services
Carers' advice about carer policies
Final advice to other carers
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Mental health: ethnic minority carers’ experiences
Subject index
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Mental health
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Mental health: ethnic minority carers’ experiences
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People caring for other or more than one relative
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Guo - Interview 14
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He thinks the police in the USA are better at helping families affected by mental health problems.
Guo has been caring for two sons with bi-polar disorder for over twenty years. He doesn't think the current services meet the needs of people with mental health problems.
Mental health
>>
Mental health: ethnic minority carers’ experiences
>>
People caring for other or more than one relative
>>
Guo - Interview 14
>>
The CPN helped when Gou's son had trouble with the police.
Guo has been caring for two sons with bi-polar disorder for over twenty years. He doesn't think the current services meet the needs of people with mental health problems.
Mental health
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Mental health: ethnic minority carers’ experiences
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People caring for a son or daughter
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Leah - Interview 28
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Leah was told to ring the police because no one was there to give her son his injection (recording in Chinese).
Leah has been caring for her son Albert with schizophrenia for 17 years.
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