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Led by Associate Professor Ed Heffernan, the Forensic Mental Health Research stream aims to improve outcomes for people with mental health problems who have contact with the criminal justice system and people who experience mental health and suicide crisis in the community. The research projects traverse the potential touch points people may have across the entirety of the criminal justice system and crisis care including:
We focus on partnerships in research with key stakeholders such as those with lived experience, the Non-Government Sector, Police, Corrective Services, Australian Defence Force, Youth Justice stakeholders, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Justice Stakeholders and other health stakeholders. The research is embedded in a statewide clinical service and leads to significant benefits for clinical practice by informing service design and delivery and, ultimately, improving the experience of consumers of forensic services and other stakeholders.
1. Changing Direction: Mental Health Needs of Justice-Involved Young People in Australia
The research underpinning this report involved QCMHR Forensic Mental Health Group members Carla Meurk, Megan Steele, Jacklyn Schess, and Ed Heffernan. The report’s authors found that justice-involved young Queenslanders and Western Australians experienced higher levels of psychological distress and suicidality than their counterparts in the community. There were consistent associations between experiences of abuse, head injury, psychological distress, and mental disorders. The findings highlight the importance of delivering trauma-informed care to young people who are justice-involved, or who are at risk of justice system involvement, and the need for services and interventions that aim to prevent or address the abuse that they may experience.
pdf Changing Direction Report (5.24 MB)
2. Partners in Prevention: Understanding and Enhancing First Responses to Suicide Crisis Situations
Individuals who experience a suicide crisis or self-harm often come into contact with police or paramedics. Those who have experienced a suicide crisis report deficiencies with the existing system, and police and paramedics report that responding to these events is one of the most challenging aspects of their role. However, little is known about the nature, extent, precipitating factors, pathways and outcomes of a suicide related call-out, and what responses will most effectively and compassionately meet the needs of those in crisis. Partners in Prevention: Understanding and Enhancing First Responses to Suicide Crisis Situations, funded by the Queensland Health Suicide Prevention Health Taskforce, was established in 2017 to address these knowledge gaps and inform systems enhancements. The outcomes of this work include the following five reports.
pdf
Partners in Prevention – Summary Report
(3.08 MB)
pdf
Partners in Prevention – Data Linkage Study
(2.84 MB)
pdf
Partners in Prevention – Optimal Care Pathways Report
(2.51 MB)
pdf
Partners in Prevention – Perspectives from Lived Experience Report
(2.61 MB)
pdf
Partners in Prevention – Knowledge, Skills, Attitudes and Confidence of Police Report
(2.41 MB)
3. The use of involuntary treatment orders within Australia
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/1039856218789787
4. Fitness for Trial and Fitness for Interview – a retrospective review of individuals found to be of unsound mind in Queensland
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7033686/
Head
Forensic Mental Health Research Stream and Military and Veterans' Mental Health Research Stream
Director
Queensland Forensic Mental Health Service
Acacemic Title Holder
Royal Brisbane Clinical Unit and School of Public Health, The University of Queensland
Affiliate member - Deputy Head
Forensic Mental Health Research Stream
Operations Director
Queensland Forensic Mental Health Service
Associate Head and Principal Researcher
Forensic Mental Health Research Stream and Military and Veterans' Mental Health Research Stream
Adjunct Associate Professor
School of Public Health, The University of Queensland
Research Officer
Forensic Mental Health Research Stream and MIlitary and Veterans' Mental Health Research Stream
Adjunct Fellow
School of Public Health, The University of Queensland
Research Coordinator
Forensic Mental Health Research Stream
Adjunct Fellow
School of Public Health, The University of Queensland
Click on the links to view more details about each of our projects.
Want to know more about QCMHR? Click the button to get in touch with us!
Level 3, Dawson House
The Park Centre for Mental Health Treatment
Research and Education, Wacol, QLD 4076
P: +61 7 3271 8660
In the spirit of reconciliation, the Queensland Centre for Mental Health Research (QCMHR) acknowledges the Traditional Owners of the lands in which QCMHR operates and their continuing connections to land, waters and community. We pay our respects to Elders past and present and stand together with all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.