Available Formats
Don't Turn Away: Stories of Troubled Minds in Fractured Times - As Featured on BBC Woman's Hour
By (Author) Penelope Campling
Elliott & Thompson Limited
Elliott & Thompson Limited
5th October 2022
28th July 2022
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Memoirs
616.89
Hardback
304
Width 138mm, Height 216mm
As Featured on BBC Woman's Hour
Deeply thoughtful and compassionateSusieOrbach, author ofIn Therapy
Abook with the power to move and inform . . . [Campling] is an expert in intelligent kindness.Gwen Adshead, authorof The Devil You Know
'Fantastic new book from Penny Campling - 5 stars' Dr Kate Lovett, former Dean, Royal College of Psychiatrists
Over the course of her 40-year career, psychiatrist and psychotherapist Penelope Campling has worked with patients from all walks of life, from survivors of abuse to ICU doctors struggling under the strain of Covid-19. She has seen many positive changes in how we approach mental health and yet she is increasingly troubled by the state of our health services. Too often those suffering from serious mental illness are being neglected, locked away, even abused.
In Dont Turn AwayCampling takes us into the therapy room, offering unique insight into how we treat those in distress. She shows us how the progress made in a more optimistic era of psychiatry is fast being eroded; how our struggling healthcare system often fails those who need our support; and how crucial it is in todays uncertain world that we do not turn away.
Candid, compassionate and, above all, hopeful,Dont Turn Awayis a story of troubled minds and how we try to heal them.
'[An] insightful, important book . . . an exhibition of what could be possible and an invitation to act to deliver that vision. Kathryn Mannix, author of Listen
A lucid and much-needed articulation of the frustration shared by so many struggling to keep the NHS afloat Iona Heath, BMJ
As a GP I wish I could send patients to Penelope Campling; as someone worried about failing mental health services, I wish she were in charge. Gavin Francis, author of Adventures in Human Being
An important book, moving and honest stands out in its field of psychotherapist memoirs Beth Guilding, TLS
This book oozes compassion and kindness and made me want to be a more understanding doctor. Kate Milton, British Journal of GP Practice
Penelope Campling is a psychiatrist and psychotherapist, and a fellow of the Royal College of Psychiatrists. For twenty years, she ran the NHS personality disorder unit in Leicester, and she is the co-author of 'Intelligent Kindness: Rehabilitating the Welfare State' (CUP, 2020). Now retired from the NHS, she continues to lecture and campaign, and works in private practice. Since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic, she has been supporting clinicians on the frontline in intensive care units.