How to decolonise mental health services

Site Admin • 6 June 2016
David ‘Rocky’ Bennett

source: Open Democracy
published: 5 April 2016

Before David ‘Rocky’ Bennett’s death in a psychiatric unit 18 years ago, he sent a letter to the nurse director, pointing out there were no black staff members. He wrote: “There are over half a dozen black boys in this clinic. I don’t know if you have realised that there are no Africans on your staff at the moment”.

Bennett died while being held down by four staff members at a psychiatric unit after a violent altercation with another patient and a nurse. Looking at the circumstances around his untimely death, it’s clear his blackness was threatening to staff members. He had been using the mental health for at least a decade, yet his needs as a black Rastafarian were not being met.

Bennett’s death was a catalyst for what became ‘delivering race equality’ in health, however the cuts since 2010 mean little is currently being done. He is just one example of the mental health system failing people of colour – Sarah Reed, who died in a prison cell earlier this year after having been sexually assaulted, is a more recent case, but the list is far, far longer.

Read full article >

OTHER NEWS:

League of Awkward Unicorns: a podcast that mixes mental health with laughter
2 April 2016

Meet & Eat flyer
by Site Admin 9 May 2026
We are pleased to announce the return of the popular Mentoring & Advocacy Support Hub (MASH) Meet & Eat sessions starting in July 2026. The first eat-out took place in November 2017.
man walks through open door
by Site Admin 7 May 2026
The Pathway to Independence programme was launched in October 2024, led by Catalyst 4 Change on behalf of Birmingham Solihull Mental Health Foundation Trust (BSMHFT).
Shine The Light Event - Family of Trevor Smith
by Site Admin 6 May 2026
The National Mikey Powell Memorial Family Fund worked in close partnership with INQUEST and the Family Reference Group to host the Shine The Light event in Birmingham on 31 January 2026.
Quaye Botchway
by Site Admin 5 May 2026
CHERP is a partnership between academia, community researchers, and the Voluntary, Community, Faith and Social Enterprise sector that enables communities to shape research and drive change.
More posts