Draft In Progress Gone away A similar concern is what to do about those with schizophrenia who have left home and gone out of touch, One recent review of old practice {Schizophrenia Bulletin 2009 2009;35(6):1057-1058 ] of the care outcome between day care and transitional [ immediately after discharge from inpatient care ] day centre features found that 1/3 to 1/2 were lost to contact at 6-12 months. Here it's the family job: the family must persevere, go to any lengths, use every resource, to find somebody who will have some knowledge of where sufferer is, and what is happening, who can be persuaded to keep an eye open and keep in touch with family. More usually to engage with the local services. Write that they are to inform you of any proposed intervention so that you can be a part of that intervention in an appropriate capacity. It is helpful to those in the uncomfortable position of having to apply coercion to a family member to have been in touch with family about what is going to have to be done currently, then afterwards. Still in the local sevice At the heart of an area service is a census of all that the NHS in the area have on record as people affected by schizophrenia: held in a protected Area NHS website page, accessible by password just to those who need to know, and checked by whoever is visiting the File to be registered as having done done so: what is listed is the whereabouts and the circumstances of those people affected by continuing schizophrenia; and how to resume contact with them in some way that will be there for any future change of behaviour or circumstance. Within the list will be a clear marking of separation between those who have a level of sufficiency in personal care and a directed life - that is they are taken up with a programme of activities in the week that makes a sustainable routine for them. Then an assessment of the degree to which this is dependent upon support from others.
Family should be prepared to be active and assertive themselves, without shyness or embarrassment, or leaving things alone, believing that all is well as the professional people have it in hand. Your family member deserves that. If you feel left out of what is happening, feel that more needs to be done, are unable to get your point across, write to the local community team area consultant, copying to the Mental Health Trust Chief Executive with your facts; askthe Local Authority Social Service to arrange for a carer assessment and register your concerns in that.
| B | The matter of Mr Coomeraswamy should make us persist in reviewing the predicament of the brother What was there left for him to do ? Access the local MP, and the local counsellor? I suggest put everything in writing to who ever might be concerned; keeping copies. Seeing the GP, insisting they see for themselves along with family, and directly requesting a second opinion ? Might asking for a Carer assessment have enabled his concerns to be taken up by the local Authority Social Services. The route for a carer to complain is to write to the chief Executive of the Trust concerned, copying the letter to the General Practotioner might push somebody else to think they have some responsibility to intervene. An appeal to Judicial Review against the negative decision - the Trust decision not to intervene. If I successfully got a Charity going, that would be one of the aims- to help with such access to legal support Who was doing the shopping for something to eat and drink ? Anybody ? Whoever was visiting did they look in the fridge - look out for food ? Still it comes down to how do you make someone intervene ? Who has the power to do so, but says they must not, cannot or won't ? If he could have got the police to do anything their involvement might have woken up others. It would have been kicking up a stink - maybe asking the neighbours to do the same - and the landlord. Just the fact of stirring the pot in any way possible, can be a resort. Making a nuisance of your self everywhere you can - in writing as well as orally - in these circumstances. Some serendipity might come up. It all seems inadequate. There is a gap somewhere in the system of care. perhaps PALS would have been helpful
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