New Philanthropy Capital (NPC)

Mental health

Don't mind me: Adults with mental health problems

Iona Joy & Iona Miller

March 2006, 76 pages

New Philanthropy Capital_image_Mental Health MediaEven if you do not have a mental health problem yourself, with 700,000 adults in the UK experiencing a severe mental illness in the course of a year, chances are you will have a friend, relative or colleague who does.

NPC's report, Don't mind me, highlights that people's social circumstances – such as difficulty finding work or feeling socially cut off – can significantly affect how they cope with mental health problems and their chances of recovery.


Did you know?

  • There are nearly one million people out of work because of mental health problems.
  • Over the past 12 years, the number of prescriptions for antidepressant drugs in England has almost tripled

The report highlights the following priorities for donors:

  • preventing mental ill health
  • tackling stigma and discrimination
  • helping with employment and work-related activity, and
  • improving health services for people with mental health problems.

‘What really struck we was the number of people I met who were on cracking form, leading busy, constructive lives, who, if you’d met them a few years earlier were probably being written off by mental health services. I learnt that people can live a good life with, and recover from mental health problems.’
Iona Joy, Senior research analyst

Charity insight

"Only a quarter of people with long-term mental health problems are in work.''

FIRST STEP TRUST provides real work experience and employment to people in mental distress.

New Philanthropy Capital_image_first step trust