home
a-z of conditions
forums
news
about us
See all conditions
Mental health
Mental health: ethnic minority carers’ experiences
Forum
Resources & Information
Subject index
Credits
Full list of topics
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
Search the whole site
Search in this condition
Mental health: ethnic minority carers’ experiences
Subject index
Clip
Mental health
>>
Mental health: ethnic minority carers’ experiences
>>
People caring for a parent
>>
Nita - Interview 12
>>
Nita's mother's manic depression came as a shock to her.
Nita cares for her mother who is diagnosed with manic depression. She thinks it is essential that carers have their own needs met and that they get support to come to terms with the loss and hurt they may feel.
Mental health
>>
Mental health: ethnic minority carers’ experiences
>>
People caring for a son or daughter
>>
Jane - Interview 22
>>
Jane thought the early signs of her daughter's mental health problem were normal 'teenage stuff' (played by an actor).
For the last 20 years Jane and her husband has cared for their daughter Sarah, who has schizophrenia. She worries about what will happen to their daughter when they are not around anymore.
Mental health
>>
Mental health: ethnic minority carers’ experiences
>>
People caring for a son or daughter
>>
Miriam - Interview 05
>>
Miriam says services need to understand that mental health problems means different things in different cultures. She thinks it is about 'thinking out
Miriam carers for her son who is in his late twenties. He has been diagnosed with schizophrenia but she thinks what he has is drugs infused psychosis.
Mental health
>>
Mental health: ethnic minority carers’ experiences
>>
People caring for a parent
>>
Amar - Interview 01
>>
Amar thinks more resources are needed to help people avoid getting mental health problems caused by the stresses and strains of life.
Amar's mother got a schizophrenic disorder around the time the family moved from Kenya via India to England. Over forty years later, Amar is her mother's main carer, on top of a full time job and being a parent.
Mental health
>>
Mental health: ethnic minority carers’ experiences
>>
People caring for a son or daughter
>>
Nick - Interview 02
>>
Nick was worried about his son's behaviour, but was told by doctors it was normal.
Nick and his wife have cared for their son with paranoid schizophrenia for almost 12 years. In the beginning Nick didn't feel heard by health professionals, but today he is a very involved.
Mental health
>>
Mental health: ethnic minority carers’ experiences
>>
People caring for a son or daughter
>>
Jane - Interview 22
>>
Jane thinks different things in a social environment can trigger mental health problems (played by an actor).
For the last 20 years Jane and her husband has cared for their daughter Sarah, who has schizophrenia. She worries about what will happen to their daughter when they are not around anymore.
Mental health
>>
Mental health: ethnic minority carers’ experiences
>>
People caring for a son or daughter
>>
Jane - Interview 22
>>
She believes that negative social pressure directed at Black people can dampen the spirit and make people ill (played by an actor).
For the last 20 years Jane and her husband has cared for their daughter Sarah, who has schizophrenia. She worries about what will happen to their daughter when they are not around anymore.
Mental health
>>
Mental health: ethnic minority carers’ experiences
>>
People caring for a sister or brother
>>
Ramila - Interview 13
>>
Ramila says her brother was vulnerable and had a hard time adjusting in the UK.
Ramila has been caring for her brother who is diagnosed with schizophrenia for ten years. She thinks carers and service users deserve to be treated with more respect.
Mental health
>>
Mental health: ethnic minority carers’ experiences
>>
People caring for their husband, wife or partner
>>
Aiko - Interview 17
>>
Aiko only learnt about her new husband's mental health problems after she moved to the UK.
Aiko has been caring for her husband who suffers from complex post traumatic stress syndrome, bi-polar disorder and severe depression for seven years. She believes mental health services should address the needs of the whole family.
Mental health
>>
Mental health: ethnic minority carers’ experiences
>>
People caring for their husband, wife or partner
>>
Aiko - Interview 17
>>
Aiko thinks stress at work was the trigger for her husband's mental health problems, but that a traumatic childhood was the underlying reason.
Aiko has been caring for her husband who suffers from complex post traumatic stress syndrome, bi-polar disorder and severe depression for seven years. She believes mental health services should address the needs of the whole family.
Mental health
>>
Mental health: ethnic minority carers’ experiences
>>
People caring for their husband, wife or partner
>>
Rani - Interview 07
>>
Rani says we can't know who will fall ill, it is up to Allah and we should not worry about it.
Rani cares for her husband who has depression and he is very much dependent on her. She finds it hard, especially since she suffers from ill health herself.
Mental health
>>
Mental health: ethnic minority carers’ experiences
>>
People caring for other or more than one relative
>>
Guo - Interview 14
>>
Gou was unprepared when his two sons developed bi-polar disorder partly related to drug use.
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 a son or daughter
>>
Tina - Interview 18
>>
Instead of offering friendliness and support, Tina says, people sometimes act as if mental health problems are contagious (played by an actor).
Tina cares for her son who suffers from mental health problems and she is also working as a carer for people with mental health problems at an Asian community centre.
Mental health
>>
Mental health: ethnic minority carers’ experiences
>>
People caring for other or more than one relative
>>
Raye - Interview 30
>>
She thinks a mix of genetic and environmental factors caused the mental health problems her father, brother and sister are experiencing.
Raye grew up with mental health problems in the family. Today, she is the main carer for her father (paranoid schizophrenia), her sister (schizophrenia) and her brother (manic depression). She now feels she needs to let go of some of the responsibilities and focus on her own life.
Mental health
>>
Mental health: ethnic minority carers’ experiences
>>
People caring for a sister or brother
>>
Angela - Interview 15
>>
Her brother got mental illness from smoking marijuana, but she thinks his addiction was caused by his enemy.
Angela cared for her brother with mental health problems for much of her adult life. Once her brother was cured, she was finally able to get married and have a family, the absence of which had been as source of great pain for her.
Mental health
>>
Mental health: ethnic minority carers’ experiences
>>
People caring for a sister or brother
>>
Angela - Interview 15
>>
Angela says people in hospitals don't get the care, support and empathy which they need and which helped her brother to recover.
Angela cared for her brother with mental health problems for much of her adult life. Once her brother was cured, she was finally able to get married and have a family, the absence of which had been as source of great pain for her.
Mail to a friend