Well what a week! Tuesday I was up
at 4.30am to drive to the airport en route to Croatia. I normally use a ‘meet
and greet’ service to park my car. However, J had secured a deal on Groupon
which reduced the cost of parking a car at the airport. Now then sometimes
getting a cheap deal is not always the best deal. I had to ring the firm up
when I was 20 minutes away from the airport (difficult to do on a motorway even
with a hands free phone). Sure enough there was a man waiting for me at the
drop off point, who asked for the car keys and before I knew it, had driven off
with my car. I have only had it for six weeks, so I was a little perturbed. I
had been told to go to level three on my return and I wondered if I would ever
see the car again. However, when I came back and got to level three, after a
wait of 45 minutes, my car appeared. It seemed to be undamaged, but perhaps
somewhat sadly there was no apology for the delay in returning it to me.
I was in Croatia to present a
couple of papers with my friend and long term collaborator Professor Sue McAndrew.
This was the 7th European Conference of Mental Health. We have been
to all but one of the conferences. Up until this conference, it was Tallinn,
Estonia that had been my favourite venue. Split, Croatia, was something else.
The city is wrapped around the coast and is nestled under huge, imposing
mountains. The old town was medieval, beautifully preserved and full of tiny
narrow winding streets. There are pavement cafes at every turn, and fish of all
sorts appeared to feature heavily. The streets were thronged with folk, day and
night. Everyone appeared to be making the most of the fabulously hot weather. We
joined in and explored the city, and the coast (although it was burning hot
when out in the sun) before the conference programme got started.
The conference programme was full
on, with some cracking keynote speakers at the start of each session. These featured
talks on human rights and mental health; violence prediction; pragmatic
psychology (my favourite); and the co-production of mental health policy. The
concurrent sessions were also fabulous. There was a mixture of papers presented
by academics, practitioners and service users. I enjoyed hearing of the use of dogs in therapeutic
work with children and young people; the very difficult job of working on a
small island in the Caribbean (there is a vacancy for one more nurse:- DM me if
you want details); how to balance the impact on sexual function and sexual
desire with the benefits of prescribing psychotropic medication; and the use of
‘serious games’ and gaming in facilitating nurse education.
Sue and I had two papers to
present. The first one, which was presented in the first session on the first
day, was a paper that had been co-produced with one of our PhD students, Dr Gareth
Lyons. Unfortunately, despite trying hard we could not secure the funding for Gareth
to join us in Split, so we presented his work on his behalf. His PhD study had
focused on men with eating disorders and the way they can get lost in services which
usually cater almost exclusively for women. It’s estimated that 1.25 million
people in the UK live with an eating disorder. Whilst it’s true that many more
women than men have an eating disorder, between ten and 25% of all those with
an eating disorder are believed to be men. Gareth’s work was well received. We
have sent a joint authored paper off for publication, watch this space.
Our second paper was a ‘work in progress’
paper that considered the relationship between ‘doing therapy and doing research’.
Mental health nurses in particular have the skills to do both although this is
not something always appreciated and accepted. Sue and I have been interested
in identifying what these skills are, but have also been interested in why
people either want to participate in research or undertake research. We based
our conference paper on some 26 PhD students we have supervised over the years.
Drawing upon an auto-ethnographic approach we reviewed and analysed our supervision
records and notes. Four emergent themes came to the fore. These were: Doing research ‘on’ or ‘with’ participants
- the ethics of a symbiotic encounter; I’m
just a researcher who can’t say no – the tensions in being a nurse with
professional obligations and being a researcher; Transfer of feelings – developing both a sensitivity towards others
and using this appropriately in recognising the presence of transference and
counter transference present in all relationship encounters; Having no control, not being responsible
– so is research as therapy so wrong?
These were questions we
explored in our paper. The audience were kind, but equally they challenged us. Together we explored the similarities of being a nurse and being a researcher,
or being both. There lies a paper waiting to be written. In a week that began
by saying goodbye to Neil, my friend, colleague and fellow NED at his funeral, a
funeral celebrating his life, (and Christopher, you are not forgotten either) it was great to meet so many other old friends. The
conference goes from strength to strength – next year we are in Belfast, and
whilst the weather is unlikely to be as good as Split, it’s reassuring to know
that there will be many good folk there all #makingadifference to the lives of
others.
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