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DiMH 2021 AWARDS Art Installation of the Year Award


The studio created at the London children’s hospital by Great Ormond Street Arts, for the ‘Oh My GOSH…You’re Wellcome Kitten’ project, and a drawing of ‘The perfect carer’.


shape the future of CAMHS at GOSH. It is a unique example of co-design, and the transformative effect of bringing service- users and clinical staff together.” The award was received by DiMHN Board member and expert-by-experience, Katharine Lazenby, on behalf of the winners.


Self-employed artist highly commended


Highly Commended was self-employed artist, David Parkin, for his entry, ‘David Parkin’s Delusions of Grandeur’ a ‘fully immersive exhibition piece that tells you everything you didn’t want to know about being sectioned’. Based on his own experience at Leicester’s Bradgate Mental Health Unit following his first bipolar manic episode in 2015, it describes moments on the ward, enables visitors to listen to songs he secretly wrote and recorded, to ‘check out my alternative vision of seclusion’, and to ‘spend time in the visitors’ section’, listening to interviews with loved ones and friends who visited him ‘through the mania and inevitable depression that followed’. As part of the installation, he worked with local service-users to write about their own experiences and share them within the exhibition.


Clinical Team of the Year


The evening’s penultimate award – for Best Clinical Team of the Year – sponsored by P+HS Architects, went to the team behind Inspire, a new £7.8 m CAMHS inpatient unit serving Hull, East Riding, and north and north-east Lincolnshire, which also won the Project of the Year New-Build UK Award. The entrants said: “Inspire is the result of a truly collaborative and inclusive delivery process. The service is brand new, so the clinical team has built up the care model from scratch, challenging the norm, and aspiring for a truly unique and appropriate environment that both relates to, and supports, young people.”


THE NETWORK | OCTOBER 2021


Designed by Gilling Dod Architects for Humber Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, the Inspire unit, on Hull’s Walker Street, includes nine general adolescent beds and four PICU beds for young people with severe and complex mental health difficulties.


Drawing on both UK and international best practice The design draws on UK and international best practice, and had to overcome technical/financial/logistical challenges, ‘working beyond the latest guidance via real innovation’. Constructed on a brownfield site, the design regenerates/ incorporates a once derelict building, delivers BREEAM Excellent, and facilitates efficient staffing/FM delivery. The entry added: “Inspire will mark a national step-change in CAMHS delivery as a service shaped with young people at its heart. Young people and their families were involved in each stage, identifying a suitable location, designing interiors, selecting the name, and developing the services that will be used during treatment.


“An engaged, passionate, and committed clinical group not only informed, but also shaped, the architecture from day one, and ensured everyone remained true to the core principles and aspirations of the brief.”


Possibilities despite site and budget constraints Andrew Arnold, director at Gilling Dod Architects, said: “The Trust stayed true to its vision and aspirations, and even found more funding to deliver the quality the service deserved. The buy-in, energy, and passion, displayed by the newly formed clinical team was unbelievable, especially from the lead clinician, Paul Warwick, and the work of both Health Stars (a charity launched by the ‘By Young People, For Young People’ campaign during Children’s Mental Health Week 2019 as part of a larger fund-raising and mental health awareness initiative in Hull), and local schools, in creating the ‘By Young People, For Young People’ campaign, was truly moving.” Paul Warwick received the award from P+HS Architects director and DiMHN Board member, Cath Lake.


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©The Vacuum Cleaner


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