Cognitive Behavioural Therapies in Britain: Welfare, Society and the Individual since 1948
Lead Research Organisation:
Birkbeck, University of London
Department Name: History Classics and Archaeology
Abstract
Cognitive Behavioural Therapy is the most widely-used talking treatment in the contemporary world, with significant political and economic backing within the UK health service. Its techniques are also widely influential in private psychotherapeutic practice, self-help, social work, educational, occupational and criminal justice contexts. It is also one of the most controversial treatments, widely discussed in the public sphere, with some clinicians and service users arguing it is a "quick fix" that fails to address individuals' complex emotional, social and economic needs. Others, by contrast, campaign vehemently for its expansion. These contemporary debates lack a historical background - and professional politics often obscure the experiences of patients themselves. This research project addresses this gap. The adoption and development of behaviour therapies since the 1950s, and CBT in recent years, has been closely bound up with the history of the NHS, the rise of evidence-based medicine, and changing understandings of the individual and the welfare state. This research will result in a book, along with peer-reviewed research papers, based on archival sources from key research hospitals, the Wellcome Archives, universities' special collections, professional societies and mental health charities, and advocacy and service-user organisations. In addition, it will draw from a substantial printed literature including psychological research publications, specialised journals, clinical trials, professional memoirs, and policy and campaign literature from government, political parties, the third sector and patient groups. It will also use oral history interviews with clinicians, service-users, and policy-makers.
Placing cognitive and behavioural approaches centre-stage challenges the continued over-representation of psychoanalysis in the historical writing on 20th century psychotherapeutics. Given the prominence of cognitive and behavioural approaches in contemporary society, a critical eye needs to be cast upon the history of its emergence and justifications for its use. Crucially, the experiences of service users needs to be written into the story, which I will do through extensive oral history interviews. This project will uncover the intertwined relationship between innovations in therapeutics and the rise of evidence-based research and governance, within an economically rationed National Health Service. It explores the development of new forms of service delivery, from specially-trained nurses and clinical psychologists, through to self-help books, 1970s innovations in computer programmes and later internet- and telephone-based services, examining the implications of these for patient experience. It also interrogates the clinical and cultural controversies surrounding its use in non-western and lower-income settings, in light of the increasingly influential Global Mental Health movement. Finally, I trace how CBT has become a cypher in wider cultural discussions about the relationship between the individual and the welfare state, the governance of labour and employment, and controversies around the psychological professions and coercion. Cognitive and behavioural therapies have long been the focus of vociferous debates about the nature of mind, rationality and personal responsibility, offering a prism through which we can better understand contested visions of human nature and agency since the Second World War. I also explore the cultural and political reasons why these approaches came to be so dominant in Britain in particular, by comparison with other European countries where it has not been so widely influential in policy.
The finding of this research will offer new insights for contemporary debates about the use of cognitive and behavioural interventions in health, and in broader governance. In turn, it will be used to inform clinical training, and will have implications for clinical practice and policy.
Placing cognitive and behavioural approaches centre-stage challenges the continued over-representation of psychoanalysis in the historical writing on 20th century psychotherapeutics. Given the prominence of cognitive and behavioural approaches in contemporary society, a critical eye needs to be cast upon the history of its emergence and justifications for its use. Crucially, the experiences of service users needs to be written into the story, which I will do through extensive oral history interviews. This project will uncover the intertwined relationship between innovations in therapeutics and the rise of evidence-based research and governance, within an economically rationed National Health Service. It explores the development of new forms of service delivery, from specially-trained nurses and clinical psychologists, through to self-help books, 1970s innovations in computer programmes and later internet- and telephone-based services, examining the implications of these for patient experience. It also interrogates the clinical and cultural controversies surrounding its use in non-western and lower-income settings, in light of the increasingly influential Global Mental Health movement. Finally, I trace how CBT has become a cypher in wider cultural discussions about the relationship between the individual and the welfare state, the governance of labour and employment, and controversies around the psychological professions and coercion. Cognitive and behavioural therapies have long been the focus of vociferous debates about the nature of mind, rationality and personal responsibility, offering a prism through which we can better understand contested visions of human nature and agency since the Second World War. I also explore the cultural and political reasons why these approaches came to be so dominant in Britain in particular, by comparison with other European countries where it has not been so widely influential in policy.
The finding of this research will offer new insights for contemporary debates about the use of cognitive and behavioural interventions in health, and in broader governance. In turn, it will be used to inform clinical training, and will have implications for clinical practice and policy.
Planned Impact
This project is designed to be of benefit to a range of stakeholders and beneficiaries. It aims to impact upon understanding of contemporary practices and policies and how these have been shaped culturally, politically, economically and scientifically in the longer term. It will also improve understanding of service user experience of CBT interventions, and the methods by which historical experiences of psychotherapeutic treatment can be captured, using approaches from the humanities and social sciences. In turn, this research is intended to facilitate reflection on practice and policy in clinical settings relating to mental health, as well as other arenas where CBT interventions play an influential role, including criminal justice, social work, pedagogical and occupational contexts. It is also specifically intended to shape the training and reflexive practice of clinicians and others who use these interventions in their work. This research adds an important historical dimension to the ESRC's cross-council mental health network, particularly complementing work by Rob Ellis, Felicity Thomas, Eleanor Bradley, Konstantina Poursanidu, and Ian Tucker in relation to service user experience, with whom I will look to collaborate.
Cognitive and behavioural therapies are not only the most widespread talking treatment in the contemporary world - they are also one of the most controversial, with vociferous debates playing out in the public sphere and the clinical world. This research will enable target audiences to engage in better informed debate by providing the historical background. It also looks to give, as far as possible, an impartial voice to service user experiences, distilled from the professional politics and political ideologies which often shape the public and media coverage of CBT in polarising ways.
In addition to publications in a broad range of academic and non-academic publications, blogs and magazines, the project will generate an oral history resource with recordings and transcripts of interviews with clinicians, service-users and policy-makers. Where participants have given their consent, these will be made available online and, in the long term, in a national repository (such as the British Library's National Life Stories or Wellcome Library repositories). They will be publicised through social media and relevant mailing lists, publications and newsletters. These can act as a resource for opening up more in-depth public debate, mobilising changes or improvement in clinical practice and service delivery, training students and trainees in mental health related roles, as material to support service user and advocacy campaigns, or to provide service users and the public with a more informed understanding of these practices and individuals' experiences of them.
I will engage with key stakeholders from mental health service user and professional organisations, clinical educational directors and policy think tanks early in the research process to best identify how collaboration and facilitation could be developed. I will present research at stakeholder conferences and will invite stakeholders to attend two interdisciplinary conferences hosted at Birkbeck. A cafe-style public engagement event with service users will invite responses to the oral history testimony. This will explore how these resources could be adapted for use in information presented to service users on CBT to enable more informed choices about treatment, and how they might be used for campaigns to mobilise changes in policy or service delivery.
I will work closely with directors of clinical training programmes to develop pedagogical material drawing on the research for use in reflexive clinical education and disseminate the research widely at a range of disciplinary and interdisciplinary conferences and seminars nationally and internationally, and will draw on my existing networks to explore a radio documentary, and use within exhibitions.
Cognitive and behavioural therapies are not only the most widespread talking treatment in the contemporary world - they are also one of the most controversial, with vociferous debates playing out in the public sphere and the clinical world. This research will enable target audiences to engage in better informed debate by providing the historical background. It also looks to give, as far as possible, an impartial voice to service user experiences, distilled from the professional politics and political ideologies which often shape the public and media coverage of CBT in polarising ways.
In addition to publications in a broad range of academic and non-academic publications, blogs and magazines, the project will generate an oral history resource with recordings and transcripts of interviews with clinicians, service-users and policy-makers. Where participants have given their consent, these will be made available online and, in the long term, in a national repository (such as the British Library's National Life Stories or Wellcome Library repositories). They will be publicised through social media and relevant mailing lists, publications and newsletters. These can act as a resource for opening up more in-depth public debate, mobilising changes or improvement in clinical practice and service delivery, training students and trainees in mental health related roles, as material to support service user and advocacy campaigns, or to provide service users and the public with a more informed understanding of these practices and individuals' experiences of them.
I will engage with key stakeholders from mental health service user and professional organisations, clinical educational directors and policy think tanks early in the research process to best identify how collaboration and facilitation could be developed. I will present research at stakeholder conferences and will invite stakeholders to attend two interdisciplinary conferences hosted at Birkbeck. A cafe-style public engagement event with service users will invite responses to the oral history testimony. This will explore how these resources could be adapted for use in information presented to service users on CBT to enable more informed choices about treatment, and how they might be used for campaigns to mobilise changes in policy or service delivery.
I will work closely with directors of clinical training programmes to develop pedagogical material drawing on the research for use in reflexive clinical education and disseminate the research widely at a range of disciplinary and interdisciplinary conferences and seminars nationally and internationally, and will draw on my existing networks to explore a radio documentary, and use within exhibitions.
Organisations
- Birkbeck, University of London (Fellow, Lead Research Organisation)
- University of Lausanne (Collaboration)
- University College London (Collaboration)
- University of Surrey (Collaboration)
- Wellcome Trust (Collaboration)
- Oswaldo Cruz Foundation (Fiocruz) (Collaboration)
- Birkbeck, University of London (Collaboration)
- University of East Anglia (Collaboration)
- UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE (Collaboration)
- UNIVERSITY OF EXETER (Collaboration)
- British Association for Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapies (Collaboration)
- University of Sheffield (Collaboration)
- National Autonomous University of Mexico (Collaboration)
- UNIVERSITY OF GHANA (Collaboration)
- University of Central Lancashire (Collaboration)
- London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM) (Collaboration)
- UNIVERSITY OF BIRMINGHAM (Collaboration)
- UNIVERSITY OF KENT (Collaboration)
- KING'S COLLEGE LONDON (Collaboration)
Publications
Callard F
(2022)
Freud in Cambridge Review Symposium
in History of the Human Sciences
Marks, S.
(2020)
An Introduction to Mental Health and Illness: Critical Perspectives
Marks, S.
(2020)
Understanding Mental Health and Counselling
Pick D
(2021)
Hidden persuaders on film: Exploring young people's lived experience through visual essays
in Research for All
Title | Psychotechne: Assessment, Testing, Categorisation |
Description | Curated an exhibition of artworks (by artists Sasha Bergstrom-Katz and Tomas Percival) along with historical documents on the history of psychology and psychotherapy and its involvement in assessment and categorisation processes in different institutional contexts at the Peltz Gallery, 43 Gordon Square, Bloomsbury, London March to May 2023 https://www.bbk.ac.uk/research/centres/peltz-gallery/current-exhibition |
Type Of Art | Artistic/Creative Exhibition |
Year Produced | 2023 |
Impact | A request from the Wellcome Trust Mental Health Team for a curatorial tour of the exhibition on 14th March 2023 to discuss the content and implications of the material Two public engagement workshops in March 2023 - one with learning disability groups (UEL Inclusive Research and Sunderland People First), and another with the Association of Prison Lawyers, JENGbA and UNGRIPP prison reform organisations. Coverage in |
URL | http://cirmh.bbk.ac.uk/psychotechne |
Description | I have carried out substantial research on archival and printed sources to trace the clinical and intellectual development of behaviour therapy and behaviour modification since the 1950s, along with cognitive behaviour therapy since the 1960s and associated therapeutic methods. I have also carried out oral history interviews with key clinicians and policy makers to discuss the particular reasons why CBT and related approaches have been influential in Britain in particular, to map the wider international networks at play in shaping theory and practice, and to trace the specific political context in which the Increasing Access to Psychological Therapies initiative was developed under New Labour. This research is still underway and will contribute towards an academic monograph and peer-reviewed journal articles, and has already informed a commissioned textbook chapter for the Open Univeristy's module on psychotherapy and counselling. I now have a book proposal under review with Oxford University Press and am in discussion with them about publishing it within their new History of Psychology series; and am working with Dr Remy Amouroux on a co-edited book for UCL Press on CBT in Global Perspective. As a result of further GCRF funding I also had the opportunity to examine a case study of the use of cognitive behaviour therapies in the Global South, uncovering the long history of CBT in Ghanaian clinical psychology since the 1970s, and the way it has been adapted for use in culturally specific contexts, with a focus on how the client's belief system is conceptualised in the therapeutic relationship. An oral history witness seminar and series of interviews with mental health practitioners in Ghana also yielded findings about the role of CBT and other therapeutic interventions in community mental health in recent years and debates about their implementation and regulation. A policy briefing is currently being reviewed by WHO in Ghana for publication in 2022. Further archival research and oral history interviews with clinicians, researchers and service-users are planned for the coming year and I have established partnerships with key stakeholders (including the British Association for Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapies and OCD Action) to facilitate engagement and impact activities going forward. There have been some delays to the project research, especially interviews with patient and service-user groups, due to the cessation of in-person participatory research as a result of the pandemic. However, I have spent some of this time collaboratively working with other scholars on approaches to methodology in relation to researching lived experience and mental health - particularly in terms of the applications of phenomenological interpretative and qualitative methods to historical contexts - and this will lead to methodologically informed outputs. The lifting of restrictions in 2022 is now enabling archival research and oral history interviews and I'm confident that the key research will be completed this year, even if published outputs will be delayed. |
Exploitation Route | The Open University commissioned a chapter for their Mental Health and Counselling module drawing from the research undertaken in this fellowship, which is now accepted and in press. I am in discussion with Dr Sally-Ann Ohene of the WHO in Ghana and members of the Ghana Health Service about dissemination of a policy briefing on community mental health in Ghana as a result of the GCRF funded research. I am collaborating with Professor Paul Salkovkis, current president of the British Association for Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotheraies about how the findings of this project can be used by their clinical and student membership, inlcuding planned events reflecting on what can be learned from the history of the profession at their 50th anniversary conference in 2022. I also have a planned meeting with Dr Juliet Foster of the British Psychological Society (and dean of education for the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience at KCL) to discuss how the research could be made available to the wider psychology community in Britain, along with trainees at the IoP. I have had initial stakeholder meetings with service-user organisations to discuss how the planned research could be used by the service-user community (in terms of service-user testimony as an information resource and potentially to inform campaign material), and plan to hold further meetings as the research progresses further and covid restrictions abate. One of the key aspects of this research is also to reflect on sensitive research in the medical humanities, particularly in relation to lived experience and mental health, which I have been working on with colleagues across disciplines, including the Challenging Research Network. As such, I co-hosted a 3-day AHRC CHASE funded doctoral training event in June 2021 to embed the findings of these meetings and experiences into doctoral research training, which we will then embed into longer-term training for students at Birkbeck and our AHRC CHASE partner institutions. I am working with Dr Anne Hanley (FLF at Birmingham) to develop a UKRI FLF Plusfunds application to develop training for fellow researchers on these themes. |
Sectors | Education Healthcare |
Description | I was asked to contribute a chapter for the compulsory module textbook for the Open University's Exploring Mental Health and Counselling Module D241. Primarily aimed at trainee practitioners, the editors wanted me to communicate my findings on the history of psychotherapy, and particularly of CBT to ensure trainees were aware of the ethical, political and historical aspects of these practices. I have been invited to contribute to BBC Radio 4's D for Diagnosis, a Cambridge Fesitval podcast on the history of psychotherapy, and the Maudsley Psychedelic Society's public lecture series. My GCRF funded collaboration 'Oral Histories of Psychotherapy and Community Mental Health in Ghana' will lead to a policy briefing currently under review with the WHO in Ghana for co-publication. Myself and collaborators will be presenting findings at the Ghana Studies Association on 18th July 2022 along with clinicians and policy-makers. I am currently collaborating with the British Association for Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapies on a witness seminar, and a panel at their 50th Anniversary Conference in 22nd July 2023, reflecting on the relevance of the history of CBT for current clinical professionals and trainees. As a result of my work in this area I was invited to take part in a panel event at the University of Birmingham in June 2022 in relation to the launch of their report on the use of behaviour therapy in the coercive 'treatment' of LGBTQ people. This led to an invitation to lead an application for a Wellcome/SSHM networking grant to expand this work for impact activities with clinical organisations. The grant was successful and we have established links with the BABCP, BPS and Royal College of Psychiatrists going forwards in the hope that they will respond to our research and issue a formal apology to the LGBTQ community for these historical activities. I was invited to the convening group of the Mindscapes Wellcome Trust engagement/arts programme, which informed the content of the Gropius Bau exhibition YOYI! Care and Repair, Autumn 2022. I was also invited to a research consultation to inform the content of BBC Radio 4's series 'Is Psychiatry Working?' broadcast in 2023. |
First Year Of Impact | 2019 |
Sector | Education,Healthcare,Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections |
Impact Types | Cultural Societal Policy & public services |
Description | Invited chapter in OU textbook for mental health and counselling module |
Geographic Reach | Multiple continents/international |
Policy Influence Type | Influenced training of practitioners or researchers |
Description | AHRC CHASE funding for doctoral training 3-day course 'Ethics, Reflexivity and the Medical Humanities' |
Amount | £7,080 (GBP) |
Organisation | Arts & Humanities Research Council (AHRC) |
Sector | Public |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 05/2021 |
End | 06/2021 |
Description | Birkbeck Institute for Social Research Conference funding 'Supporting Researchers Working with Sensitive Sources'' |
Amount | £1,408 (GBP) |
Organisation | Birkbeck, University of London |
Sector | Academic/University |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 01/2019 |
End | 02/2020 |
Description | Birkbeck School of Social Sciences, History & Philosophy Research Fund |
Amount | £2,347 (GBP) |
Organisation | Birkbeck, University of London |
Sector | Academic/University |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 03/2021 |
End | 07/2021 |
Description | Engaging Clinicians with the History of Aversion Therapy |
Amount | £6,000 (GBP) |
Organisation | Society for the Social History of Medicine (SSHM) |
Sector | Learned Society |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 03/2023 |
End | 07/2024 |
Description | GCRF QR fund small grant 'Oral History of Psychotherapies and Community Mental Health in Ghana' |
Amount | £4,190 (GBP) |
Organisation | Birkbeck, University of London |
Sector | Academic/University |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 12/2019 |
End | 07/2020 |
Description | Mapping critical psychiatry: a transnational study of critical psychiatry's reception in Western Europe and the US, 1965-today |
Amount | £97,554 (GBP) |
Funding ID | 221155/Z/20/Z |
Organisation | Wellcome Trust |
Sector | Charity/Non Profit |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 08/2020 |
End | 09/2023 |
Description | Prison Categories & Punitive Calculations - Wellcome Institutional Strategic Support Fund Public Engagement Award |
Amount | £2,440 (GBP) |
Organisation | Wellcome Trust |
Sector | Charity/Non Profit |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 12/2022 |
End | 03/2023 |
Description | The Subject of Tests - Institutional Strategic Support Public Engagement Award |
Amount | £2,450 (GBP) |
Organisation | Wellcome Trust |
Sector | Charity/Non Profit |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 08/2022 |
End | 03/2023 |
Description | Wellcome Collaborative Award: 'Connecting Three Worlds: Socialism, Medicine & Global Health after WWII' |
Amount | £1,560,998 (GBP) |
Funding ID | 221321/Z/20/Z |
Organisation | Wellcome Trust |
Sector | Charity/Non Profit |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 01/2021 |
End | 12/2025 |
Description | Wellcome ISSF Conference grant: Connections and Exchange: Rewriting African Healthcare Histories |
Amount | £1,980 (GBP) |
Organisation | Birkbeck, University of London |
Sector | Academic/University |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 06/2022 |
End | 03/2023 |
Description | Wellcome Institutional Strategic Support Fund Career Development Award for Language Training |
Amount | £940 (GBP) |
Organisation | Wellcome Trust |
Sector | Charity/Non Profit |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 08/2022 |
End | 03/2023 |
Description | 'Recovery, Rehabilitation and Remission in Mental Health: Historical Perspectives' |
Organisation | University of Cambridge |
Department | Trinity Hall, Cambridge |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Private |
PI Contribution | Hosting 2 workshops and co-editing a forthcoming special issue of History of the Human Sciences - supporting two ECRs to develop their workshop organising and editing experience |
Collaborator Contribution | Hannah Blythe (doctoral candidate, University of Cambridge) is co-leading these workshops and the co-editing of a special issue. The introductory article will be co-authored by Hannah and myself |
Impact | April 26th 2022 - initial workshop for special issue authors, Boston Massachussets, US 3rd November 2022 hybrid conference at Birkbeck Centre for Interdisciplinary Research on Mental Health Special Issue proposal accepted for History of the Human Sciences, articles under review, publication expected winter 2024 |
Start Year | 2022 |
Description | Birkbeck Centre for Interdisciplinary Research on Mental Health |
Organisation | Birkbeck, University of London |
Department | Department of Psychological Sciences |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | In February 2021 we received approval from Birkbeck's College Research Committee for the establishment of the Birkbeck Centre for Interdisciplinary Research on Mental Health. I led the proposal and application process, liaising with colleagues from across 9 departments. I act as Director of the Centre. We are supporting a number of early career researchers through training and collaboration opportunities, and supporting funding applications. We successfully supported Dr Joanna Farr's application to the Birkbeck Wellcome Institutional Strategic Support Fund for a Career Development Award for the project 'Capturing and expressing adolescent girls' everyday experience of managing emotional wellbeing' - Farr has employed a researcher Rachel Starr to help lead this project. I act as a formal mentor for the project (attending monthly meetings) and have facilitated the collaboration with the Derek Jarman Lab for support with visual research methods. |
Collaborator Contribution | we have steering group members from across the Schools of Arts; Social Sciences, History and Philosophy; Science; Law and Business, Economics and Informatics, all of whom have collaborated on organising events - but this has primarily been a partnership with Birkbeck's Department of Psychological Sciences, with Prof Jonathan Smith taking on the role of Deputy Director. We have co-hosted (and continue to organise) events with Department of History and Philosophy of Science, University of Cambridge; London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. We currently run an online seminar series on Researching Lived Experience, and will be posting the recordings online as a resource in 2024. |
Impact | This is a multidisciplinary collaboration with the steering group including members from Psychosocial Studies, Counselling, Philosophy, Organizational Psychology, Linguistics, Psychological Sciences, History, History of Art, English and Criminology. We have hosted/co-hosted a range of major events (I have taken a leading role in organising or overseeing all of the following): Seminar Series: Researching Lived Experience in Mental Health Psychotechne: Assessment, Testing, Categorisation exhibition, Peltz Gallery, Spring 2023 (curated by Sarah Marks) - including walk-through events with Wellcome's Mental Health Team, Organizational Psychology and Psychosocial Studies Students, and engagement events with The Big Ideas learning disabilities group, the Association of Prison Lawyers, and criminal justice reform organisations Ungripp and JENgBA The Material Force of Categories: Assessments, Algorithms & Infrastructures of Categorisation, 1-day symposium, 11th March 2022 - part of the Psychotechne events programme Innovation & Inclusion in Digital Mental Health, Online symposium co-hosted with the Centre for Global Mental Health at LSHTM, 17th November 2022, Recovery, Rehabilitation and Remission in Mental Health: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives, Conference 3rd November 2022 Film Screening: Nkabom: A Little Medicine, A Little Prayer, jointly hosted with KCL ESRC Centre for Society & Mental Health, 12th October 2022 'Art and Psychotherapy: A Critical Workshop' 16th-17th June 2022 Coffee with Clinicians with Dr Claire Hilton, Historian in Residence at the Royal College of Psychiatrists. Seminar co-hosted with Dept of History & Philosophy of Science, University of Cambridge, 29th April 2022 'The Distance Cure: A History of Teletherapy' - Hannah Zeavin in Conversation with Stephen Frosh, 10th March 2022 'Open Dialogue in an Inner London NHS Mental Health Service: An Anthropological Investigation' Hybrid Seminar with Dr Ruth Kloocke (Barnet Enfield and Haringey Mental Health NHS Trust) and Kiara Wickremasinghe (SOAS University of London) 29th October 2021 (in partnership with Department of History and Philosophy of Science, University of Cambridge) 'Dangerous Liaisons: Mental Health, Qu'ranic Healing, and the Meeting of Cultures' Online Seminar with Prof Werdie van Staden (Nelson Mandela Professor of Philosophy & Psychiatry, Pretoria Medical School) and Dr Mohammed Aboulleil Rashed (Department of Philosophy, Birkbeck, University of London), 5th July 2021 'Global Mental Health and Decolonization' Seminar with Dr China Mills (City, University of London) and Dr Harry Yi-Jui Wu (National Cheng Kung University, Taiwan), 9th June, 11am-12.30pm 'The Spaces We Are Reduced To' Professor Leslie Topp, online lecture, 7th June 2021 'Researching Lived Experience in the History of Mental Health' online workshop, 27th-28th April 2021 'Symposium: Old Age Care in Times of Crisis, Past and Present' co-hosted with LSHTM, 8th-9th April 2021 'Art and Psychotherapy: A Critical Workshop' with Prof Suzanne Hudson (University of Southern California), June 2022. Generated collaborative book proposal submitted to Sternberg Press |
Start Year | 2021 |
Description | CBT: A Global History |
Organisation | University of Lausanne |
Country | Switzerland |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | Co-editing an edited book 'CBT: A Global History' for submission to UCL Press |
Collaborator Contribution | Dr Remy Amouroux, Institut du Psychologie, University of Lausanne is co-editing the volume with me, and we will co-host workshops in Autumn 2022 to develop the chapter contributions |
Impact | Book proposal in preparation for UCL Press |
Start Year | 2021 |
Description | Challenging Research Network |
Organisation | University of East Anglia |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | I am a member of the steering group for an initiative called 'The Challenging Research Network' (led by Dr Louise Hide, Birkbeck, University of London). We successfully bid for £1,408 of funding from the Birkbeck Institute for Social Research to host a founding conference and steering group meeting on 9th and 10th January 2020. I co-organised the conference and spoke about the ethical and methodological aspects of working on difficult sources relating to mental health, and the challenges and rewards of oral history research with clinicians and mental health service users; I also chaired the steering group meeting for planning future activities. Myself, Prof Lynch (Kent) and Dr Chris Sandal-Wilson (UEA) successfully applied to the AHRC CHASE doctoral training partnership for £7080 funding for a 3-day residential training event in June 2021 for doctoral research students on 'Ethics, Reflexivity and the Medical Humanities' to be hosted at Birkbeck. We plan to use this as a basis for further doctoral and postdoctoral training at our respective institution. |
Collaborator Contribution | Prof Gordon Lynch (Kent) and Dr Chris Millard both collaborated on the organisation of the conference and sit on the steering group. Along with Dr Louise Hide, Dr Julia Laite and Prof Felicity Callard (Birkbeck). Lynch and Sandal-Wilson collaboratively wrote the application for the AHRC CHASE application, which was submitted via UEA. |
Impact | Conference 'Supporting Researchers Working with Sensitive Sources' 9th January 2020. Multidisciplinary: including history, religious studies, psychosocial studies and geography. Website and series of events: https://challengingresearch.org/ Awarded £7,080 of funds (with Chris Sandal-Wilson, UEA and Gordon Lynch, Kent) by AHRC CHASE doctoral training partnership to organise a 3-day residential doctoral training event in June 2021 on 'Ethics, Reflexivity and the Medical Humanities' to be hosted at Birkbeck Network website established in 2023 with resources, affiliated with Birkbeck Centre for Interdisciplinary Research on Mental Health |
Start Year | 2019 |
Description | Challenging Research Network |
Organisation | University of Kent |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | I am a member of the steering group for an initiative called 'The Challenging Research Network' (led by Dr Louise Hide, Birkbeck, University of London). We successfully bid for £1,408 of funding from the Birkbeck Institute for Social Research to host a founding conference and steering group meeting on 9th and 10th January 2020. I co-organised the conference and spoke about the ethical and methodological aspects of working on difficult sources relating to mental health, and the challenges and rewards of oral history research with clinicians and mental health service users; I also chaired the steering group meeting for planning future activities. Myself, Prof Lynch (Kent) and Dr Chris Sandal-Wilson (UEA) successfully applied to the AHRC CHASE doctoral training partnership for £7080 funding for a 3-day residential training event in June 2021 for doctoral research students on 'Ethics, Reflexivity and the Medical Humanities' to be hosted at Birkbeck. We plan to use this as a basis for further doctoral and postdoctoral training at our respective institution. |
Collaborator Contribution | Prof Gordon Lynch (Kent) and Dr Chris Millard both collaborated on the organisation of the conference and sit on the steering group. Along with Dr Louise Hide, Dr Julia Laite and Prof Felicity Callard (Birkbeck). Lynch and Sandal-Wilson collaboratively wrote the application for the AHRC CHASE application, which was submitted via UEA. |
Impact | Conference 'Supporting Researchers Working with Sensitive Sources' 9th January 2020. Multidisciplinary: including history, religious studies, psychosocial studies and geography. Website and series of events: https://challengingresearch.org/ Awarded £7,080 of funds (with Chris Sandal-Wilson, UEA and Gordon Lynch, Kent) by AHRC CHASE doctoral training partnership to organise a 3-day residential doctoral training event in June 2021 on 'Ethics, Reflexivity and the Medical Humanities' to be hosted at Birkbeck Network website established in 2023 with resources, affiliated with Birkbeck Centre for Interdisciplinary Research on Mental Health |
Start Year | 2019 |
Description | Challenging Research Network |
Organisation | University of Sheffield |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | I am a member of the steering group for an initiative called 'The Challenging Research Network' (led by Dr Louise Hide, Birkbeck, University of London). We successfully bid for £1,408 of funding from the Birkbeck Institute for Social Research to host a founding conference and steering group meeting on 9th and 10th January 2020. I co-organised the conference and spoke about the ethical and methodological aspects of working on difficult sources relating to mental health, and the challenges and rewards of oral history research with clinicians and mental health service users; I also chaired the steering group meeting for planning future activities. Myself, Prof Lynch (Kent) and Dr Chris Sandal-Wilson (UEA) successfully applied to the AHRC CHASE doctoral training partnership for £7080 funding for a 3-day residential training event in June 2021 for doctoral research students on 'Ethics, Reflexivity and the Medical Humanities' to be hosted at Birkbeck. We plan to use this as a basis for further doctoral and postdoctoral training at our respective institution. |
Collaborator Contribution | Prof Gordon Lynch (Kent) and Dr Chris Millard both collaborated on the organisation of the conference and sit on the steering group. Along with Dr Louise Hide, Dr Julia Laite and Prof Felicity Callard (Birkbeck). Lynch and Sandal-Wilson collaboratively wrote the application for the AHRC CHASE application, which was submitted via UEA. |
Impact | Conference 'Supporting Researchers Working with Sensitive Sources' 9th January 2020. Multidisciplinary: including history, religious studies, psychosocial studies and geography. Website and series of events: https://challengingresearch.org/ Awarded £7,080 of funds (with Chris Sandal-Wilson, UEA and Gordon Lynch, Kent) by AHRC CHASE doctoral training partnership to organise a 3-day residential doctoral training event in June 2021 on 'Ethics, Reflexivity and the Medical Humanities' to be hosted at Birkbeck Network website established in 2023 with resources, affiliated with Birkbeck Centre for Interdisciplinary Research on Mental Health |
Start Year | 2019 |
Description | Commissioned collaboration with Wellcome Trust Mental Health team on Understanding Theories of Causality in Mental Health |
Organisation | Wellcome Trust |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Charity/Non Profit |
PI Contribution | Leading a commissioned project between December 2022 and December 2028 to deliver a report, three research articles and an interactive website for with the Wellcome Mental Health team, collaborating directly with their Head of Field building Dr Niall Boyce and his team. |
Collaborator Contribution | Editing and feedback on report, articles and website content. Working collaboratively to consider potential to create a game based on the content of the research. |
Impact | Report submitted to Wellcome April 2023, scheduled for publication on Wellcome Trust website Autumn 2023 Three articles completed and under peer review with Wellcome Open Research, History of the Human Sciences and International Journal of Mad Studies Website http://www.historyofcauses.co.uk launched in 2024 Pop-up exhibition at Wellcome Trust in February 2024, presentation at 'Mental Health: A Field Fit for Purpose?' conference January 24th 2024, and engagement event with Wellcome Mental Health Lived Experience Advisory Group, 3rd February 2024 |
Start Year | 2022 |
Description | Conditions to Cure? Histories of Medicalization, Psychologisation, and Intergenerational Trauma in the LGBTQIA+ Community |
Organisation | University of Birmingham |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | A conference hosted in Birmingham 2nd-3rd June 2022 and collaboration on grant application to Society for Social History of Medicine Network Grant |
Collaborator Contribution | Co-hosting the initial conference for the network. |
Impact | Conference 2nd-3rd June 2022, University of Birmingham |
Start Year | 2022 |
Description | Engaging Clinicians with the History of Aversion Therapy |
Organisation | University of Central Lancashire |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | Successfully applied (as PI) for Society for Social History of Medicine/Wellcome Trust Network Award for £6,000 to support collaborative activities in 2023-24 to engage clinical organisations (British Psychological Society, British Association for Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapies) with the difficult history of 'aversion therapy' a widespread behaviour therapy practice developed in the 1950s and '60s that was used to reorientate sexuality and gender among LGBTQ people. We are working with these organisations to work through this difficult history of their profession using a 'Truth and Reconciliation' model, and are working with organisations to explore the possibility of a formal apology to the LGBTQ community. Leading authorship of an article for Review of General Psychology (submitted January 2024, under review) |
Collaborator Contribution | Collaborative leadership on engagement with clinical organisations and LGBTQ stakeholders and co-hosting of events, including writing retreat at University of Edinburgh (April 2024) and stakeholder engagement conference with clinical, policy and LGBTQ groups at Birkbeck, 7th June 2024 |
Impact | Article submitted to Review of General Psychology in January 2024, under review Online network engagement event July 2023 In-person writing retreat for publication preparation scheduled for 8th/9th April 2024 In-person stakeholder engagement conference scheduled for 7th June 2024 |
Start Year | 2022 |
Description | Engaging Clinicians with the History of Aversion Therapy |
Organisation | University of Surrey |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | Successfully applied (as PI) for Society for Social History of Medicine/Wellcome Trust Network Award for £6,000 to support collaborative activities in 2023-24 to engage clinical organisations (British Psychological Society, British Association for Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapies) with the difficult history of 'aversion therapy' a widespread behaviour therapy practice developed in the 1950s and '60s that was used to reorientate sexuality and gender among LGBTQ people. We are working with these organisations to work through this difficult history of their profession using a 'Truth and Reconciliation' model, and are working with organisations to explore the possibility of a formal apology to the LGBTQ community. Leading authorship of an article for Review of General Psychology (submitted January 2024, under review) |
Collaborator Contribution | Collaborative leadership on engagement with clinical organisations and LGBTQ stakeholders and co-hosting of events, including writing retreat at University of Edinburgh (April 2024) and stakeholder engagement conference with clinical, policy and LGBTQ groups at Birkbeck, 7th June 2024 |
Impact | Article submitted to Review of General Psychology in January 2024, under review Online network engagement event July 2023 In-person writing retreat for publication preparation scheduled for 8th/9th April 2024 In-person stakeholder engagement conference scheduled for 7th June 2024 |
Start Year | 2022 |
Description | Historical Approaches to Lived Experience in Mental Health |
Organisation | University of Sheffield |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | Collaborative conference 27th-28th April 2021 |
Collaborator Contribution | co-hosted by Dr Chris Millard, University of Sheffield Department of History |
Impact | Conference (27th-28th April 2021) Seminar series on Researching Lived Experience in Mental Health planned for Spring/Summer 2023 hosted by Birkbeck Centre for Interdisciplinary Research on Mental Health |
Start Year | 2021 |
Description | Innovation and Inclusion in Digital Mental Health: Histories and Futures |
Organisation | London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM) |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | Co-designing conference content and report |
Collaborator Contribution | LSHTM Centre for Global Mental Health (partners: Ms Asmae Doukani, Research Fellow and Dr Ritsuko Kakuma, Associate Professor and Co-Director of the Centre) collaborated on a 1-day online symposium on Innovation and Inclusion in Digital Mental Health, 17th November 2022 |
Impact | Symposium generated a transcript that will be used as a basis for a joint LSHTM/Birkbeck report. |
Start Year | 2019 |
Description | Oral Histories of Psychotherapy and Community Mental Health in Ghana |
Organisation | King's College London |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | As the PI for this project I contributed £4,190 towards transcription, catering and in-country costs along with c.£800 from my UKRI grant towards travel costs. This work in Ghana provides a concrete case study for my fellowship around the question of how CBT and related mental health interventions have been implemented in transcultural and 'Global Mental Health' contexts. I led on the organisation of an oral history witness seminar at Noguchi Memorial Institute, University of Ghana with participation from representatives from the WHO in Ghana, Ghana Health Service, Accra Psychiatric Hospital, Psych Corps Ghana, Ghana Mental Health Authority and Ghana's former Chief Psychiatrist. This seminar was focused around the history of mental health treatments and psychotherapies in community settings in Ghana and West Africa. Along with Dr Ursula Read (KCL) I interviewed a total of 16 mental health professionals (including clinical psychologists, psychiatrists and mental health nurses) about their experiences of working in community mental health, their familiarity with cognitive and behavioural therapies, and their opinions about transcultural settings and global mental health. I have led on the co-authored publications and policy briefing, and the deposit of edited transcripts in a repository. |
Collaborator Contribution | Dr Ursula Read (anthropologist and Wellcome Trust Research Fellow, Kings College London) has worked in Ghana for 10 years and has extensive expertise and a wide network of contacts in mental health in Ghana. She accompanied me on the trip in December and took the lead in organising a a series of oral history interviews with mental health professionals. She worked with me to design the interview schedule for the oral history witness seminar and one-to-one interviews, and has assisted with applying for in-country ethics for interviews with service-user organisations in April through the Ghana Health Service. Dr Lily Kpobi (Clinical Psychologist and Lecturer at the University of Ghana Department of Psychology) co-designed the interview schedules for the oral history witness seminar and one-to-one interviews, facilitated connections to interviewees and advised on the history and current context of psychotherapy and clinical psychology in Ghana. Prof Collins Ahorlu (social scientist and epidemiologist at Noguchi Memorial Institute for Medical Research, University of Ghana) hosted the witness seminar and facilitated organisational support, advised on ethics applications and methodology. Dr Read, Dr Kpobi and Prof Ahorlu have co-authored a policy briefing which is currently under review with the WHO in Ghana for consideration for joint publication. We also plan peer-reviewed article on community mental health in Ghana. |
Impact | Witness Seminar: Psychotherapies and Community Mental Health in Ghana, Noguchi Memorial Institute, University of Ghana, 6th December 2019 Planned outputs: Co-authored Policy briefing (with KCL, University of Ghana and WHO in Ghana) - this has been drafted and is with the WHO in Ghana for consideration for joint publication - this has been delayed due to the partners' involvement in the covid response but is planned for publication in 2023 Co-authored interdisciplinary article on the history of community mental health in Ghana (for submission to BMJ Medical Humanities or Critical Global Health) Co-authored article on the history of CBT in Ghana since 1974 (for submission to Isis or Studies in the History and Philosophy of Science) Transcripts of oral history interviews to be edited and deposited in a public-access repository. |
Start Year | 2019 |
Description | Oral Histories of Psychotherapy and Community Mental Health in Ghana |
Organisation | University of Ghana |
Country | Ghana |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | As the PI for this project I contributed £4,190 towards transcription, catering and in-country costs along with c.£800 from my UKRI grant towards travel costs. This work in Ghana provides a concrete case study for my fellowship around the question of how CBT and related mental health interventions have been implemented in transcultural and 'Global Mental Health' contexts. I led on the organisation of an oral history witness seminar at Noguchi Memorial Institute, University of Ghana with participation from representatives from the WHO in Ghana, Ghana Health Service, Accra Psychiatric Hospital, Psych Corps Ghana, Ghana Mental Health Authority and Ghana's former Chief Psychiatrist. This seminar was focused around the history of mental health treatments and psychotherapies in community settings in Ghana and West Africa. Along with Dr Ursula Read (KCL) I interviewed a total of 16 mental health professionals (including clinical psychologists, psychiatrists and mental health nurses) about their experiences of working in community mental health, their familiarity with cognitive and behavioural therapies, and their opinions about transcultural settings and global mental health. I have led on the co-authored publications and policy briefing, and the deposit of edited transcripts in a repository. |
Collaborator Contribution | Dr Ursula Read (anthropologist and Wellcome Trust Research Fellow, Kings College London) has worked in Ghana for 10 years and has extensive expertise and a wide network of contacts in mental health in Ghana. She accompanied me on the trip in December and took the lead in organising a a series of oral history interviews with mental health professionals. She worked with me to design the interview schedule for the oral history witness seminar and one-to-one interviews, and has assisted with applying for in-country ethics for interviews with service-user organisations in April through the Ghana Health Service. Dr Lily Kpobi (Clinical Psychologist and Lecturer at the University of Ghana Department of Psychology) co-designed the interview schedules for the oral history witness seminar and one-to-one interviews, facilitated connections to interviewees and advised on the history and current context of psychotherapy and clinical psychology in Ghana. Prof Collins Ahorlu (social scientist and epidemiologist at Noguchi Memorial Institute for Medical Research, University of Ghana) hosted the witness seminar and facilitated organisational support, advised on ethics applications and methodology. Dr Read, Dr Kpobi and Prof Ahorlu have co-authored a policy briefing which is currently under review with the WHO in Ghana for consideration for joint publication. We also plan peer-reviewed article on community mental health in Ghana. |
Impact | Witness Seminar: Psychotherapies and Community Mental Health in Ghana, Noguchi Memorial Institute, University of Ghana, 6th December 2019 Planned outputs: Co-authored Policy briefing (with KCL, University of Ghana and WHO in Ghana) - this has been drafted and is with the WHO in Ghana for consideration for joint publication - this has been delayed due to the partners' involvement in the covid response but is planned for publication in 2023 Co-authored interdisciplinary article on the history of community mental health in Ghana (for submission to BMJ Medical Humanities or Critical Global Health) Co-authored article on the history of CBT in Ghana since 1974 (for submission to Isis or Studies in the History and Philosophy of Science) Transcripts of oral history interviews to be edited and deposited in a public-access repository. |
Start Year | 2019 |
Description | Transcultural Histories of Psychotherapy Network |
Organisation | Oswaldo Cruz Foundation (Fiocruz) |
Country | Brazil |
Sector | Public |
PI Contribution | Invited co-convenor of Transcultural Histories of Psychotherapy Network. We co-convene a monthly seminar and annual workshop. I will be contributing to a 3-day workshop and public conference organised by the network on 20th-24th June 2020 at Università degli Studi Europea di Roma (UNIER) |
Collaborator Contribution | Co-convenors Professor Sonu Shamdasani (UCL), Professor Cristiana Fachinetti (Fiocruz), Marco Inamoretti (UNIER) have provided funding and organisational support for the events and planned publications, along with and collaborators in Argentina, Chile, Italy and the USA. |
Impact | 3 day workshop and public conference in July 2019 at UCL Institute of Advanced Studies https://www.ucl.ac.uk/institute-of-advanced-studies/events/2019/jul/intersections-transcultural-histories-psychotherapies 3-day workshop and public conference organised by the network 20th-24th June 2022 at Università degli Studi Europea di Roma (UNIER) We host a monthly seminar and plan for annual events to take place at respective partners' institutions thereafter. |
Start Year | 2019 |
Description | Transcultural Histories of Psychotherapy Network |
Organisation | University College London |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | Invited co-convenor of Transcultural Histories of Psychotherapy Network. We co-convene a monthly seminar and annual workshop. I will be contributing to a 3-day workshop and public conference organised by the network on 20th-24th June 2020 at Università degli Studi Europea di Roma (UNIER) |
Collaborator Contribution | Co-convenors Professor Sonu Shamdasani (UCL), Professor Cristiana Fachinetti (Fiocruz), Marco Inamoretti (UNIER) have provided funding and organisational support for the events and planned publications, along with and collaborators in Argentina, Chile, Italy and the USA. |
Impact | 3 day workshop and public conference in July 2019 at UCL Institute of Advanced Studies https://www.ucl.ac.uk/institute-of-advanced-studies/events/2019/jul/intersections-transcultural-histories-psychotherapies 3-day workshop and public conference organised by the network 20th-24th June 2022 at Università degli Studi Europea di Roma (UNIER) We host a monthly seminar and plan for annual events to take place at respective partners' institutions thereafter. |
Start Year | 2019 |
Description | Wellcome Collaborative Award: Connecting Three Worlds: Socialism, Medicine & Global Health after WWII |
Organisation | National Autonomous University of Mexico |
Country | Mexico |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | This is a 5-year Wellcome Collaborative Award for an international project to re-examine the history and legacies of Global Health since 1945, with a particular focus on the role of socialised healthcare systems. I co-wrote the application with PI Vargha and co-I Suarez-Diaz. I now host two postdoctoral researchers, Dr Sarah Howard and Dr David Bannister at Birkbeck (2021-2025) working on histories of healthcare in Ethiopia, and South Africa and Ghana respectively. Collaboratively, David, Sarah and myself are working to build an oral history archive about the experiences of African doctors and healthcare officials who trained in Eastern Europe, the Soviet Union and other parts of the socialist world. In September 2021 we co-organised a hybrid launch conference at Freie University, Berlin attended by 20 people in person and a further 15 online. |
Collaborator Contribution | The total value of the grant is £1,560,998 (predomaninatly administered by University of Exeter), of which I will be able to access a share of the research, travel and consumables expenses towards my own research and collaborative activities and conferences. Exeter also host a project co-ordinator, IT developer, postdoctoral researcher and a PhD student; and UNAM host a postdoctoral researcher. |
Impact | The project is predominantly historical, but draws on Science and Technology Studies, Anthropology, and Area Studies (in particular African, East Asian and Latin American Studies). In September 2021 we co-organised a hybrid launch conference at Freie University, Berlin attended by 20 people in person and a further 15 online. Further events, a blog and activities are recorded on https://connecting3worlds.org/ |
Start Year | 2021 |
Description | Wellcome Collaborative Award: Connecting Three Worlds: Socialism, Medicine & Global Health after WWII |
Organisation | University of Exeter |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | This is a 5-year Wellcome Collaborative Award for an international project to re-examine the history and legacies of Global Health since 1945, with a particular focus on the role of socialised healthcare systems. I co-wrote the application with PI Vargha and co-I Suarez-Diaz. I now host two postdoctoral researchers, Dr Sarah Howard and Dr David Bannister at Birkbeck (2021-2025) working on histories of healthcare in Ethiopia, and South Africa and Ghana respectively. Collaboratively, David, Sarah and myself are working to build an oral history archive about the experiences of African doctors and healthcare officials who trained in Eastern Europe, the Soviet Union and other parts of the socialist world. In September 2021 we co-organised a hybrid launch conference at Freie University, Berlin attended by 20 people in person and a further 15 online. |
Collaborator Contribution | The total value of the grant is £1,560,998 (predomaninatly administered by University of Exeter), of which I will be able to access a share of the research, travel and consumables expenses towards my own research and collaborative activities and conferences. Exeter also host a project co-ordinator, IT developer, postdoctoral researcher and a PhD student; and UNAM host a postdoctoral researcher. |
Impact | The project is predominantly historical, but draws on Science and Technology Studies, Anthropology, and Area Studies (in particular African, East Asian and Latin American Studies). In September 2021 we co-organised a hybrid launch conference at Freie University, Berlin attended by 20 people in person and a further 15 online. Further events, a blog and activities are recorded on https://connecting3worlds.org/ |
Start Year | 2021 |
Description | Witness seminar and impact events with University of Oxford and British Association of Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapies |
Organisation | British Association for Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapies |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Charity/Non Profit |
PI Contribution | Collaboration with Professor Paul Salkovskis (President of the BABCP and Director of the Oxford Institute for Clinical Psychology Training) to co-host an oral history witness seminar with key figures in the clinical and policy history of CBT in Britain at Harris Manchester College, University of Oxford, along with planned events and collaborative publications aimed at clinical psychologists, psychotherapists and trainees for the BABCP's 50th anniversary conference in 2023. |
Collaborator Contribution | Prof Salkovskis has facilitated access to the BABCP's membership network and archives for my fellowship project.A full-day panel has been organised at the BABCP's 50th anniversary conference in Cardiff July 2023, co-organised by Salkovskis with participation of several former presidents of the BABCP along with historians. |
Impact | Panel 'Reflecting on the History of CBT' at BABCP 50th Anniversary conference 2023 (accepted by the conference organisers) Collaborative publications aimed at BABCP members and trainees. |
Start Year | 2020 |
Description | Appearance in Sky TV History's series Strangest Things |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A broadcast e.g. TV/radio/film/podcast (other than news/press) |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | International |
Primary Audience | Media (as a channel to the public) |
Results and Impact | Interviewed as part of Series 2 of Strangest Things, a series broadcast on Sky TV History in UK and The Science Channel in the US/Canada |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2022 |
Description | Historical Advice to BBC Radio 4 series 'Is Psychiatry Working?' |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A press release, press conference or response to a media enquiry/interview |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | National |
Primary Audience | Media (as a channel to the public) |
Results and Impact | Responded to invitation for research consultation with BBC Radio 4 producer to shape content of series 'Is Psychiatry Working?' |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2022,2023 |
URL | https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m001h3y5 |
Description | Interview and radio appearance for BBC Radio 4's 'D for Diagnosis with Claudia Hammond', 12th July 2019 |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A broadcast e.g. TV/radio/film/podcast (other than news/press) |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | International |
Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
Results and Impact | Interviewed by Claudia Hammond for Radio 4 series 'D for Diagnosis' about the history of behaviour therapy 'treatments' for homosexuality when it was still considered a psychiatric diagnosis. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2019 |
URL | https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m0006n0s |
Description | Invited member of convening group for Wellcome Trust Mindscapes exhibition series |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | International |
Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
Results and Impact | Invited member of the convening group for the Wellcome Trust Mindscapes programme, Berlin (Spring 2022), helped to shape content for the 'YOYI? Care and Repair' exhibition at the Groupius Bau, Autumn 2022 and events series |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2022 |
URL | https://wellcome.org/what-we-do/our-work/mindscapes |
Description | Invited podcast for Cambridge Festival of Ideas on Researching the History of CBT |
Form Of Engagement Activity | Engagement focused website, blog or social media channel |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | International |
Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
Results and Impact | Recording of podcast discussion chaired by Dr Riana Betzler in conversation with myself and Dr Rachael Rosner about researching the history of CBT, for the Cambridge Festival of Ideas. Initiated by the University of Cambridge CRASSH 'Talking as Cure' network |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2021 |
URL | http://crassh.cam.ac.uk/programmes/talking-as-cure-contemporary-understandings-of-mental-health-and-... |