ABSTRACT

Public alarm for random attacks by mentally ill people is at an all-time high. The brutal killing of Jill Dando, the TV personality, and the assault on George Harrison, the former Beatle, are among the cases which have undermined confidence in the mental health service. Community care is widely seen as a failed policy that has left too many people walking the streets, posing a risk to themselves and a threat to others. The Government has responded with a programme of change billed as the biggest reform in forty years, but will it achieve the 'safe, sound, supportive' service as promised?

For Pure Madness, Jeremy Laurance travelled across the country observing the care provided to mentally ill people in Britain today. Based on interviews, visits and case histories, his book reveals a service driven by fear.

chapter |18 pages

The state we're in

chapter |16 pages

How we got here

chapter |15 pages

Taking care to the home

chapter |12 pages

Taking care to the streets

chapter |23 pages

Life stories

chapter |15 pages

Carers — the missing link

chapter |19 pages

The new meaning of community care

From public safety to individual need