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Several independent reviews in the UK have recently investigated sustained, systemic failings by statutory services and government departments. These reviews document severe psychological impacts on people affected by these scandals, which have been exacerbated by miscarriages of justice, denials of accountability and lack of formal support. There is evidence that impacted people have significant, unmet mental health needs.
Aims
To explore the psychological support needs of people infected and affected by the infected blood scandal in England, their experiences of seeking support and how insights from this research could inform responses to people affected by similar failings, including the Hillsborough Disaster, Windrush Scandal and Post Office Horizon IT Scandal.
Method
We used a qualitative design involving semi-structured interviews with infected and affected people in England and with mental health practitioners to explore experiences, psychological impacts and perspectives on existing support services. Our analysis was thematic, adopting an empathetic interpretive orientation toward participants’ experiences.
Results
We identified significant unmet mental health needs among infected and affected people, including those who had been in contact with NHS or private psychological support services. Historically, infected and affected people have rarely accessed effective mental health support.
Conclusions
Insights from the Infected Blood Inquiry and the subsequent development of a bespoke psychological support service could inform the setting up of skilled, tailored psychological support for people affected by other severe, systemic state failings. This response could address complex, unmet mental health needs and increase understanding of the psychological impacts of scandals resulting from systemic, statutory failings.
Reddie offers a history and indictment of anti-Blackness in British Christianity and politics, from its imperial origins to the Brexit referendum and the Windrush scandal. Through the act of truth-telling, Black Theology aims to dismantle the veneration of Whiteness at the heart of British Christianity. To counter the narrative of exclusion with belonging, reparations must be made, for which the biblical example of Zacchaeus serves as a model. But as long as the apparatus of Empire remains operative in British Christianity, Reddie wonders whether gratitude is possible for Black people of the Windrush generation.
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