A tribute to Helen Blackwell, Project Worker/Service User Adviser and Friend

             HB6HB8

 

Helen first worked with the Royal College of Psychiatrists when she contributed to the 2004 self-harm guideline produced by the National Collaborating Centre for Mental Health and NICE.  In-keeping with her enthusiasm to drive forward service improvement, she then helped secure funding from the Health Foundation to establish the ‘Better Services for People who Self-Harm’ Project. 

 

The ‘Better Services’ project was designed to bring together emergency department staff and service users to make positive changes to the experiences of people who had self-harmed.  Helen’s contribution to the development of the project, through her role as Project Worker and Service User Advisor, simply cannot be overstated.  She was involved in all aspects of the work - the development of the underlying quality standards, the design of the data collection tools, the writing of reports, and the composition of important recommendations for future improvements.  Helen (and Kate the dog!) travelled with the rest of the team to deliver presentations, run workshops and take part in peer-reviews with staff and service users.  Helen’s insight, enormous experience, and the gentle, yet compelling manner in which she delivered her message was a powerful tool for change.  When Helen spoke, people listened.  She was described as ‘an inspiration...a passionate and vibrant woman….with humour, warmth and insightful leadership’.  In 2006 Helen also became involved with the College’s Training and Education Centre, and had put together a training package to be jointly delivered by service users and mental health staff. 

 

Helen was a great believer in meaningful service user involvement and her guidance around this will direct the way that the College’s Centre for Quality Improvement engages users in its work for years to come.  She has also influenced wider organisations, such as the Health Foundation, who in a tribute to her life explained that ‘she showed us all what a large and useful contribution patients can make to quality improvement – her caring, her insight and her ideas have shaped our work, and our future plans’.         

 

Helen was loved by the Project Team for her warmth, her kindness, her brilliant mind, her great sense of humour, her fervour for improving services and her perception, fantastic awareness, and sensitivity to others.  Helen’s insight and input has had a profound effect on the Project Team, both professionally and personally, and they are determined that her legacy to improve services for people with mental health problems will live on through their work, and the work of others.  

© 2007 Royal College of Psychiatrists