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“If the issue lies in the community, then so does the solution”

Posted by Solving Together (Admin) Feb 13, 2024

Bethany Golding, Public Participation Manager, NHS England


Bethany Golding shares her lived experience of mental illness and community mental health services.

I have a severe mental illness – bipolar disorder. When I was younger, though, I was diagnosed with anorexia, depression and anxiety. I received a great deal of support via community mental health services during my teenage years and early 20s.

Getting the right diagnosis at a young age is important and I would like to see earlier diagnoses for people with bipolar disorder so that the best possible support can be provided from a young age. 

Nearly 70% of respondents to a Bipolar UK survey said that they had received a diagnosis of depression prior to one for bipolar disorder.

According to the research by Bipolar UK: ‘Clinicians say there are also a number of other reasons for the delay, including a lack of psychiatrists, diagnostic complexity, overlap with other mental health conditions, people not presenting severe symptoms to primary care, people not recognising the significance of previous periods of hypomania and a reluctance to get a bipolar diagnosis which still carries a stigma.’

I have a severe mental illness – bipolar disorder. When I was younger, though, I was diagnosed with anorexia, depression and anxiety. I received a great deal of support via community mental health services during my teenage years and early 20s.

Getting the right diagnosis at a young age is important and I would like to see earlier diagnoses for people with bipolar disorder so that the best possible support can be provided from a young age. 

Nearly 70% of respondents to a Bipolar UK survey said that they had received a diagnosis of depression prior to one for bipolar disorder.

According to the research by Bipolar UK: ‘Clinicians say there are also a number of other reasons for the delay, including a lack of psychiatrists, diagnostic complexity, overlap with other mental health conditions, people not presenting severe symptoms to primary care, people not recognising the significance of previous periods of hypomania and a reluctance to get a bipolar diagnosis which still carries a stigma.’

My mental health issues cost me a lot as a young person. I missed my grades for Cambridge University because of a period of severe mental illness during my final exams. However, I spent a fantastic three years at the University of East Anglia, and then two years for a Master’s degree at the University of York, during both of which I was able to access mental health support services.

The support I received from community mental health services for depression and anxiety as a young person was excellent. Mind provided me with a course of therapy, and later on I was able to access counselling from my university services. During my MA, I was able to access a course of CBT through the NHS which I found genuinely life changing. The CBT gave me access to coping strategies and skills which have stayed with me throughout my adult life. I also discovered other things which helped me through my own research, such as using an S.A.D. lamp and taking vitamin D in the winter to ease seasonal depression. The Bipolar UK community has since also played a part in securing my wellbeing.

A wise woman once said to me: “If the issue lies in the community, then so does the solution”. These words really resonated with me and continue to resonate, and I think we cannot underestimate the importance of mental health services working with the third sector and with people with lived experience to improve the services that they offer.

I am proud that despite my mental health condition – which does not define me – I am able to work full time in a meaningful role for the NHS, and to volunteer for an LGBT charity in West Yorkshire. I genuinely don’t think this would’ve been possible without the support I received as a young person to help me develop my coping strategies. I am therefore extremely grateful to all those services and absolutely passionate about ensuring that we hear from a wide range of voices in our work to improve access to children and young people’s community mental health services. 

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flyingtogether says... Mar 31, 2024
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