Here are all the people involved in the project
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Dr Holttum leads the project. She is a member of the clinical psychology doctorate team at Canterbury Christ Church University’s Salomons Institute for Applied Psychology. She also works part-time for the British Association of Art Therapists, supporting research in art therapy.
Contact: sue.holttum@canterbury.ac.uk
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Professor Burton is co-leader of the project. He is Dean of the School of Health Sciences, University of East Anglia. He is a registered nurse with an extensive track record of research funded by the National Institute of Health and Care Research.
Contact: chris.burton@uea.ac.uk
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Jennifer Monkhouse is the Senior Research Fellow on this project. As well as being an experienced public health researcher, she has a background in the Early Years, family support and further education. Jenny has a keen interest in Social and Community Psychology, mental health in contemporary societies, and youth vulnerabilities. She is also developing expertise in evaluating services, interventions, and their methodologies.
Contact: jennifer.monkhouse@canterbury.ac.uk
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Laura Lea takes the lead for patient and public involvement in the project. She has considerable experience as a co-ordinator of input from experts by experience (service users and carers) to the clinical psychology doctorate at the Salomons Institute for Applied Psychology, where she has developed and expanded involvement from a small advisory group to a large and diverse network with involvement in multiple areas of the course.
Contact: anne.martin@canterbury.ac.uk
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Dr Anne Martin is a Senior Research Fellow, School of Allied and Public Health Professions at Canterbury Christ Church University. She is a health and social care systems design, delivery and improvement researcher.
Contact: anne.martin@canterbury.ac.uk
Our Advisory Panel
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Professor Russell Razzaque is a consultant psychiatrist in psychosis care. He recently co-led a major UK trial of Open Dialogue, a novel approach to mental health crisis care involving people’s social networks.
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Professor Dawn Edge is an internationally recognised health service researcher at the University of Manchester. She specialises in ethnicity and mental health, health inequalities, and qualitative and mixed methods research. She led the co-design of Culturally adapted Family Intervention for psychosis (CaFI) with service users, family members and clinicians in UK African and Caribbean communities.
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Professor Weich is a professor of mental health. He is a practising psychiatrist and an experienced mental health researcher. He has a track record of NIHR-funded research. He contributed to two recent major reviews on services that promote recovery, and crisis services.