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Leaving No One Behind People of African descent & the Sustainable Development Goals

Leaving No One Behind People of African descent & the Sustainable Development Goals.  People of African Descent and Right to Health Goal #3. Sustainable Development Goal 3. Matilda MacAttram Founder & Director Black Mental Health UK Email: matilda@blackmentalhealth.org.uk.

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Leaving No One Behind People of African descent & the Sustainable Development Goals

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  1. Leaving No One BehindPeople of African descent & the Sustainable Development Goals

  2.  People of African Descent and Right to HealthGoal #3

  3. Sustainable Development Goal 3

  4. Matilda MacAttramFounder & Director Black Mental Health UKEmail:matilda@blackmentalhealth.org.uk

  5. Black Mental Health UK Human Rights and Social Justice

  6. Black Mental Health UK Government to Grassroots Campaign group

  7. BMH UK Website

  8. BMH UK Magazine

  9. BMH UK online magazine

  10. BMH UK online magazine

  11. BMH UK online magazine

  12. BMH UK online magazine

  13. BMH UK online magazine

  14. BMH UK online magazine

  15. BMH UK online magazine

  16. BMH UK online magazine

  17. BMH UK online magazine

  18. BMH UK online magazine

  19. BMH UK online magazine

  20. BMH UK online magazine

  21. BMH UK online & print magazine

  22. BMH UK Publications & Campaigns

  23. Leaving No One BehindPeople of African descent & the Sustainable Development Goals

  24. Published Sept 2016

  25. Denton Rates Under the Mental Heath Act

  26. Denton Rates Under the Mental Heath Act

  27. Background and context The African Caribbean Experience

  28. Background and context The African Caribbean Experience

  29. Police use of force Policing, Mental Health & Black Briton Recent developments

  30. Home Office & BMH UK Policing and Mental Health Summit

  31. Police use of force “...this is not just about mental health – the use of physical restraint and the use of Taser deserve a similar level of scrutiny. Taser is an important operational tactic which can protect the public, but we are right to demand transparency. So I have asked the national policing lead and Home Office officials to conduct an in-depth review of the publication of Taser data and other use of force by police officers. This will present options for publishing data on how police officers are deploying these sensitive powers, who they are being used on and what the outcome was. Just as with stop and search, we need to bring proper transparency to these powers by improving data reporting”. Home Secretary Theresa May, Home Office BMH UK summit on Policing and Mental Health 2014

  32. HMIC welfare of vulnerable people in custody 2015

  33. Police use of force ‘People taken into police custody are vulnerable in some way, and that detention in police custody can be particularly detrimental to their welfare. This vulnerability may take many forms, including: • mental health problems; • learning difficulties; • physical illness or disability; • alcohol and/or substance misuse; • age (all children are vulnerable, and older people may be more likely to be vulnerable through illness, for example); and • race (people from black, Asian and minority ethnic (BAME) communities can be vulnerable because of their minority status) HMIC Report 2015

  34. Police use of force People from African-Caribbean backgrounds are three times more likely to be arrested per 1,000 population than a white person. Those from a mixed heritage were twice as likely to be arrested per 1,000 population than a white person There was no difference in arrest rates between those from an Asian and white background HMIC Report 2015

  35. Police use of force ‘Our data collection from the inspected forces indicated that a disproportionate number of people from African-Caribbean groups (compared to numbers in the general population) were both in custody, and subject to strip-searches. ‘ HMIC Report 2015

  36. Police use of force ‘The NatCen report and our focus group work indicated that people from African-Caribbean backgrounds felt they were discriminated against by the police. They cited examples of rudeness, disrespect or an over-use of force, which they attributed to racism.’ HMIC Report 2015

  37. Police use of force ‘While three percent of the population was from African-Caribbean groups in the forces we inspected, people from these backgrounds represented nine percent of the custody throughput, and 17 percent of those strip-searched.’ HMIC Report 2015

  38. Black Mental Health UK Human Rights and Social Justice

  39. (Go back to fetch it) Symbol of the wisdom of learning from the past to build the future Ghanaian saying

  40. The African Caribbean Experience

  41. David Oluwale 391930 - 1969

  42. David ‘Rocky’ Bennett Inquiry Report

  43. David Bennett Inquiry report • Recommendations • Training in use of control and restraint – violent incidents 3minute rule • Monitor patterns of diagnosis for African Caribbeans - Further research into the diagnosis of schizophrenia of African Caribbeans • Staff training in resuscitation techniques • Staff member appointed to tackle racism in hospitals – National Race Equality Lead • Hospital develop clear procedures for advising relatives of the death of a patient • Ministerial acknowledgement of Institutional Racism

  44. Five Year Programme

  45. Count Me In Census

  46. Count Me In 2005

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