Lifeline Project
11-06-2007

Out of Your Head

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The Out of Your Head Guides are a series of four booklets aimed at people who use drugs and have experienced mental illness.  They are designed to be adaptable enough for workers to use with clients, or to stand alone.  Each story in the lavishly illustrated Guides features a different character. The characters are based on conversations with people receiving psychiatric treatment.  

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View the video clips:

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Story of the Guides
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Dual Diagnosis
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Michael Linnell

 

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The guides look at the role that a range of drugs, and alcohol, play in the characters lives.  The stories are interwoven with information and advice about the effects of drugs on mental illness and provide some practical tips on the safer use of drugs.

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View some sample 'Out of Your head' pages:

David:
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God:
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Jason:
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Martha:
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Drink and Drugs News excerpt:

Mark Holland – Consultant Nurse Dual Diagnosis – Manchester Mental Health and Social Care Trust.
Michael Linnell – Director of Communications – Lifeline

Mark – 10 years ago or so, as a community psychiatric nurse I found myself searching for information and education materials to give clients (and their carers) who experienced concurrent serious mental illness and who also used street drugs or alcohol (often called a dual diagnosis). I found very little and what existed was pretty weak. The reason my clients used drink or drugs was not very clear, the effect drink or drugs had on them was varied and almost always detrimental, and the response from substance misuse and mental health services was often counterproductive; they tended to pass the client on to other services claiming either the mental illness was the cause of drug use or drug use was the cause of mental illness. Clients got passed from pillar to post, to quote MIND.

View the full article here >>

Who do they tell? (A46)
8 page booklet detailing the records that are kept by drug services about their clients and in what circumstances information is shared. Includes information about the National Drug Treatment Monitoring System and the Treatments Outcome Profile.
Alcopops Poster (K1)
The poster and postcards feature information on: drinking, driving and overcrowding cars; advertising; alcohol content; drinking to appear hard, risky situations; drinking alone and helping friends. Space is provided for local information.
Features
Smoking heroin as addictive as injecting?
By all means publicise the dangers of heroin, by all means tell people that smoking often leads to injection. But smoking heroin is safer than injecting it - to say otherwise is dangerous and could lead to more deaths
Dr Russell Newcome on the ACMD report on cannabis
Russell offers a critique of the Home Office report 'Further consideration of the classification of cannabis under the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971' recently published by the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs.
Please note that at this time the website is unable to answer specific queries and requests related to drug use, training or employment. For advice and information please see 'Contact Us' and the Annual Review pages to find your local services or a relevant professional. sitemap >>

Lifeline is a Registered Charity No: 515691 and a Company Registered by Guarantee No: 1842240. Registered Office: 101-103 Oldham St, Manchester, M4 1LA.

www.lifeline.org.uk is edited by Maggie Rogan.