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Advocacy
An advocate is there to protect your rights as a user of mental health services, and to support you in putting forward your point of view. Advocates can help in the following ways:
Advocacy is confidential. We do not pass on information about you without your permission or discuss your situation with anyone else. For further information, contact advocacy@yorkmind.org.uk
Mental health survivors and users of mental health services are one such group. How an advocate can help? An advocate is there to protect your rights as a user of mental health services, and to support you in putting forward your point of view You may not agree with professional decisions which are being made about you Getting the right kind of support can be confusing and frustrating You may be concerned about your rights and freedom if you approach services for help
empowerment
autonomy
citizenship
inclusion
independence
confidentiality
information
choice
listening and support
reliability The need for advocacy Advocacy in its present form has developed since the 1960s. Advocacy can mean different things to different people but the essential idea is ‘everyone, sooner or later, needs help in making their voice heard - and advocates are people who can provide the time and support to enable this to happen.' (Dorothy Atkinson, in Advocacy, a Review, Pavilion/ JRF, 1999) Survivors and users of mental health services can find their status is devalued through poverty, social exclusion and prejudice. Dependency on services and carers may leave individuals vulnerable to exploitation or abuse. Mental distress may cause difficulties in ascertaining or asserting rights. Contact with mental health services, in particular, is often disempowering. People may be depersonalised through labelling and assumptions. Treatment and care arrangements frequently don't give due regard to the fact that individuals have their own personal history and a right to make their own choices. Services may have a vested interest in minimising risks, but the individual is denied the chance to learn through experience and take risks. Bureaucratic procedures are confusing and often create severe barriers to people's attempts to gain access to support or treatment. Despite attempts to coordinate services through the Care Programme Approach, getting the right kind of support is often confusing and frustrating. the powers of compulsory treatment and detention not only create a need for extra safeguards, but also pose a general background threat which disempowers individuals in their dealings with doctors and other mental health professions.
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