Factstories and Other Adolescent Unit Games: Assembling Disorder and Therapy Factories

£19.99

About the Author

Dr Dean-David Holyoake has spent 100 years of his life devoted to the pursuit of nursing and researching in CAMHS (UK) and Europe and will probably continue to do so until his mother tells him to ‘grow up!’ He lives in Dudley most of the time and occasionally loiters in Berlin. He is the author of many books and articles about CAMHS and solution focused living. This book is one of three research ethnographies exploring CAMHS issues and is a play on words and the oral traditions that we tell ourselves as fact in the assembling of disorder, therapy FACTories and attempts at live-method research. There is no doubt that structures create factuality, determine reality and the stories we appreciate as gospel.

 

 

CONTENTS

Acknowledgments:

Forward:

About this book….

Act 2: a hero’s story begins

Episode 8: A sense of self is a way to do Salvation®

Episode 9: Salvation: Toying with Authenticity

Episode 10: Therapy-itus is used to do Salvation®

Episode 11: …the one about Community…

Episode 12: Marianne is ‘admitted & committed’ for Salvation®

Episode 13: Thank God for Slow Vegetarian Pasta

Episode 14: Visual Individualism is Identity®

Episode 15: falling in love: giving advice @ DAN.com

Episode 16: Assembling Individualities is an attribute of Identity®

Episode 17: No Room for Individuals

Episode 18: Being Visual is a way to do Identity®

Episode 19: Do You Think In German?

Episode 20: Post-modern Children are a reason for Identity®

Episode 21: (Ssssssh) Sex is an attribute of Identity®

Episode 22: logo U™ is an attribute of Identity®

Episode 23: The U you are effects the Category

Episode 24: On with it in the middle

Episode 25: Mental disorders is used to do Psychiatry®

Episode 26: Symbolism (Image and Depth): Valuing experience

Episode 27: CAMHS Psychiatry is a way to do Psychiatry®

Episode 28: Freud, Jung, Klein, Winnicott r u online?

Episode 29: MDT is just 1 way to do Psychiatry®

Episode 30: The decades of the brain

Episode 31: Medical Surveillance is used to do Psychiatry®

Episode 32: Psycho-babble, Bodies and Stupid Men

Episode 33: Value

Episode 34: Politico Notes is a result of Psychiatry®

Episode 35: Professional Boundaries

Episode 36: The 4th Domain: (New & Modern®)

Episode 37: the strategist’s bigger picture

Episode 38: CAMHS Nurses are a result of New & Modern®

Episode 39: Techno-Modern-Progress

Episode 40: Conflict and Expertness is a reason for New & Modern®

Episode 41: Staff

Episode 42: Quality of life and expectations

Episode 43: Evolution and Things

Episode 44: Unit Considerations

Episode 45: The Next Domain: is a kind of Child Industry®

Episode 46: the Child Industry™

Episode 47: Ways to do the Child Industry®

Episode 48: More about Child Industry™

Episode 49: Education & Acts of Parliament

Act 3: the homecoming

Episode 50: paedophile

Episode 51: Personal Development Industry (Brandtopia®)

Episode 52: Peer Brandtopia™

Episode 53: 2012+ Consumers

References

Description

Part of a 6-year revision of Tier 4

Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS)in the UK.

Practically speaking, this ethnography uses the portmanteau: FACTSTORY as a play on two words. 1. Fact as in evidentially true and 2. Story as something told and probably less factual. Its emergence came about as a result of the word Factory as a place of industry, monotonous isolation and toil. Somewhere apathetic of permutation and difference.

This auto-ethnography with its fancy sounding and meaningless post-modern bravado is a performance where the hero parallels the alienating culture experienced by most ‘crazy kidz’. The writing is mostly vain and ugly gonzo but recognisable to anyone who has encountered CAMHS and the locked doors of the post Utting age (with its extra bolt reserved for protectionist and liberationist ideals).3 It criticises identifiable child welfare and how every young person is squeezed into a limited model of service delivery perfected for the strap line: there are over fifteen varieties of broken adolescent in the UK, but only one type of adolescent unit in which to fix them!

This is a book written for and by hundreds of service users, their families and professionals experiencing the systemic structure known as Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS). As a ‘performative-auto-ethnography’ it employs episodes to examine how, as a single service model CAMHS is a symbolic fiction, genealogical typology and signifying discourse. How its storied archaeology is worthy of scrutiny and a parody of idealised modernist projects confronting children and families who find themselves experiencing unfit services and left wondering how a nation of our wealth has let down its kidz for the past 30 years? How admission to a 21st Century adolescent unit means enduring months of waiting, ill-defined treatment regimens and make-do facilities to undergo ‘salvation’. A redemptive end point whereby young people and their loved ones are supposedly equipped to face an increasingly uncertain world alongside professionals who fair no better. Low morale, crashing resilience and mental exhaustion constant reminders that CAMHS, as a Cinderella service in the economics of child-health care has always been an analogue single model service unable to meet the demands of an increasingly digital age. A tired tiered service easily outperformed by the new units and their semantics devised by the young people in this book.

This is a book written for and by hundreds of service users, their families and professionals experiencing the systemic structure known as Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS). As a ‘performative-auto-ethnography’ it employs episodes to examine how, as a single service model CAMHS is a symbolic fiction, genealogical typology and signifying discourse. How its storied archaeology is worthy of scrutiny and a parody of idealised modernist projects confronting children and families who find themselves experiencing unfit services and left wondering how a nation of our wealth has let down its kidz for the past 30 years?1 How admission to a 21st Century adolescent unit means enduring months of waiting, ill-defined treatment regimens and make-do facilities to undergo ‘salvation’. A redemptive end point whereby young people and their loved ones are supposedly equipped to face an increasingly uncertain world alongside professionals who fair no better. Low morale, crashing resilience and mental exhaustion constant reminders that CAMHS, as a Cinderella service in the

economics of child-health care has always been an analogue single model service unable to meet the demands of an increasingly digital age. A tired tiered service easily outperformed by the new units and 1 Kidz, I have an allergy to the word kidz because of its misspelling but force myself to use it out of ethnographic respect. In addition, I dislike the term crazy, but once again find strength in the generations of kidz who have insisted they ‘appear different’, ‘feel different’ and are ‘treated different’ because of their admission to Tier 4 CAMHS. This is a story of 15 young people who informed my practice and instructed me on the sensibilities of playing the game of CAMHS in-patient culture.

As metaphor for production, consumption and monotony the ‘Therapy Factory’ and its variations form the basis of my exploration about what CAMHS represented between 2002 – 2012 and now in August 2022. Yet even further back in 1986 when I was starting my nursing career Steinberg published his edited book about adolescent

units and it represented a first pre-CAMHS attempt at establishing and identifying adolescent inpatient mental health as a unique and unifiable culture. At the time, as a student nurse, I devoured its wise words and still have my treasured original edition, but it no longer embodies the values necessary to contend with an unforeseen digital

onslaught. Its tone unable to predict new child-focused practices relevant for kidz experiencing an algorithmic holocaust accounting for increasing schema of disappointed parents, inescapable digital parading and a media pointlessness dominating the mental welfare of most young people. My metaphoric storying of these new self-diagnosing ‘crazy kidz’ and their Therapy Factories represents a kickback against Planning Minister’s oversights, irrelevant Service Director’s and entangling yet, accepted techniques of underfunded social control. These kidz have learned that salvation is readily replaced by apathy, dignity by self-harm and morality by routine. In places like CAMHS, salvation becomes questionably more mysterious than any adult psychiatry and only brought home when families seek help and if lucky, admitted.

This is an unusual book based on over 6 years of auto-ethnographic research by the author and as such, could be of interest to anthropological type researchers, practitioners and professionals working within therapeutic residential settings. It offers a unique and personal insight into the strains of fixing an increasing number of young people who are finding themselves confronted by a hyper- digitalised moment of alienation. A perfect motif for assembling cultural data of 21st Century freakiness, ordering it into playful semiotic frames and offering an alternative ethnographic insight about the universal structures determining the performance of youthful madness.

Additional information

Weight 0.3 kg

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