Challenging ideas in mental health

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Acknowledgements

The content acknowledged below is Proprietary (see terms and conditions) and is used under licence.

Grateful acknowledgement is made to the following sources for permission to reproduce material in this unit:

Text

Reading 1: Perkins, R. (1999) ‘Madness, distress and the language of inclusion, Openmind, Vol 98, Jul/Aug 1999, © 1999 Mind (National Association for Mental Health).

Reading 2: Rose, D (2001) ‘Terms of engagement?, Openmind, Vol.108, Mar/Apr 2001. pp. 16?17 © 2001 Mind (National Association for Mental Health).

Reading 3: Kemshall, H. (2002) ‘Mental health, mental disorder, risk and public protection? pp. 90?99 from Risk, Social Policy and Welfare, Buckingham, Open University Press. Reproduced with the kind permission of Open University Press. McGraw-Hill.

Artwork

Please Note: the use of the following advertisements are for the purposes of educational/academic analysis and fulfilling the learning outcomes of the unit. No endorsement or approval by The Open University or OpenLearn of these or any other advertisements which may be used in an educational teaching and learning context should be construed. See Terms and Conditions.

‘Let me eat my peas?: Mellaril advertisement from American Journal of Psychiatry, Vol. 117 (1960-61), pp. xii?xiii;

Valium advertisement from American Journal of Psychiatry, Vol. 121 (1965), pp. xxii?xiii;

Valium advertisement from Archives of General Psychiatry, Vol. 22 (1970), p. 481;

Prozac advertisement from Self, March 1998, p. 19.

Audio and visual materials

The extracts are taken from course K272 Challenging ideas in mental health Copyright © 2004 The Open University.

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Taken from Challenging ideas in mental health Copyright © 2004 The Open University.

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Original Copyright © 2004 The Open University. Now made available within the Creative Commons framework under the CC Attribution – Non-commercial licence (see http://creativecommons.org/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/).