Anna Jack’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Young offenders ' and their families ' experiences of mental health interventions
  • Article

December 2015

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131 Reads

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8 Citations

Journal of Children's Services

Anna Jack

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Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to explore the relevance of young people ' s experiences of mental health interventions with Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) before and during their time with youth offending services. Design/methodology/approach – This qualitative interpretive study involved 14 interviews with young people who had offended, five of their carers and five CAMHS professionals from one local authority. Findings – The paper identifies understanding, recognition, respect and trust as key principles in the practitioner-young person relationship, and in the intervention process more broadly, and suggests that systematic consultation with young people and their caregivers about their experience of mental health interventions would be beneficial. It notes important similarities and differences in the views of the different parties which shed further light on reasons why a young person may or may not engage with mental health services. Research limitations/implications – The study is based on a small sample of young people from one service, but it is hoped that the findings will be a useful springboard for other services to reflect upon. Practical implications – The paper proposes the importance of recognising young people ' s agency in the intervention process and the value of systematic consultation with young people and their caregivers for securing their engagement in interventions. Originality/value – The study takes a multi-perspective approach (of young people, their carers and practitioners) to capture the synergies and tensions in the expectations of and interactions between young people, practitioners and caregivers.

Citations (1)


... The use of mental health services has been rare at the time when the violent crime leading to a forensic psychiatric examination was committed. (Hagelstam & Häkkänen, 2006;Jack et al., 2015;Huikko et al., 2023.) However, also among children and adolescents in general multiple treatment periods in mental health services and dropping out are common (de Haan et al., 2013;O'Keeffe et al., 2018;Dossett & Reid, 2020;Reid et al., 2021;Green et al., 2022). ...

Reference:

Discontinuities in and Perceptions of Mental Health Service Path of Violent Young Offenders: A Qualitative Descriptive Study
Young offenders ' and their families ' experiences of mental health interventions
  • Citing Article
  • December 2015

Journal of Children's Services