[Libre-soc-dev] Fwd: 58498 Care Quality Commission MHA-03402-V5V8D1 Desired outcomes CRM:003564158488
lkcl
luke.leighton at gmail.com
Sun Nov 24 07:24:00 GMT 2024
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: lkcl <luke.leighton at gmail.com>
Date: Sunday, November 24, 2024
Subject: 58498 Care Quality Commission MHA-03402-V5V8D1 Desired outcomes
CRM:003564158488
To: Complaints <complaints at southernhealth.nhs.uk>, "
hiowicb-hsi.stpeterssurgery at nhs.net" <hiowicb-hsi.stpeterssurgery at nhs.net>
Cc: redacted, MHA Enquiries <MHAEnquiries at cqc.org.uk>
https://www.futurelearn.com/info/courses/addressing-violence-patient-care/0/steps/120123
in my case the torture was from domestic verbal abuse,
over 3,000 ordeals spanning a 16 year period where i
protected my 15 year old daughter from the effects of
her mother's multiple worsening mental health disorders.
your continued lying, subjecting me to shock at your
manipulation, and failure to provide a safe environment
for me to recover, and failure to provide adequate support
including financial support, as well as failure to give
diagnoses that would activate adequate care and resources
to aid in my recovery of health and well-being, is itself
continuing and extending the psychological torture.
additionally staff at A&E far from helping me have now
explicitly stated that "they can do nothing for me".
this statement is permanently on my NHS record, a
permanent marker of their abuse and neglect, further
terrorising amd traumatising me as i have no idea if
on attending UHS A&E if i will end up being abused or
neglected (or violently assaulted as has now happened
four times).
even the thought of having to be on the UHS campus
as a future Neurology outpatient is already causing me
to consider plans on how to protect myself from
further abuse and torture whilst on the premises.
that i successfully recorded multiple assaults by
multiple health "care" individuals, showing myself
screaming in terror or sobbing uncontrollably at their
abusive and callous treatment, itself gives
justification of the very mistrust described below
...or others,
a lack of trust between the clinician and patient,
depression...
please explain why you engaged in psychological torture.
please outline how you intend to provide adequate support
and compensation for engaging in psychological torture.
----
Common psychological signs of torture
What symptoms or signs in a patient should make you as a health
professional alert to the possibility that a patient may have experienced
torture?
The symptoms and signs of torture are not specific to torture. It is also
helpful to keep in mind that the psychological consequences of torture
occur in the context of the individual torture survivor’s personality,
personal attribution of meaning, and social, political and cultural
factors. Common psychological symptoms include:
Hyperarousal: Difficulty falling or staying asleep; Irritability or
outbursts of anger; Difficulty concentrating; Hypervigilance (exaggerated
startled response);
Anxiety, either generalised or specific anxieties
Avoidance, emotional numbing, detachment, withdrawal
Low mood, depression
Paranoia
Nightmares
Flashbacks
Psychosomatic symptoms – generalised weakness, abdominal discomfort,
headaches, nausea
Dissociation, depersonalization and atypical behaviour
Sexual dysfunction
Mistrust, fear, shame, rage and guilt, particularly when being asked to
recount or remember details of their trauma.
Errors of recall – this should not be assumed to be an indicator of a
falsified testimony. Research has shown discrepancies in recalling
traumatic events, commonly blanking out particularly awful details and
distorting perceptions of time and place. Torture survivors may also have
difficulties recounting specific details as a result of blindfolding or
drugging, fear of endangering themselves or others, a lack of trust between
the clinician and patient, depression, or neuropsychiatric impairment from
suffocation or a blow to the head.
Culture-specific syndromes and ideally clinicians should have knowledge of
the victim’s culture. Where they don’t, assistance of an interpreter who
does is essential.
Source: Cohen, 2001; Medical Justice, 2002; REDRESS, 2004; UN, 1999.
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