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1 – 2 of 2Being unemployed made me more than usually aware of Mrs Thatcher looking over my shoulder. She was saying, ‘Don't just sit there filling in application forms, do something  
Abstract
Being unemployed made me more than usually aware of Mrs Thatcher looking over my shoulder. She was saying, ‘Don't just sit there filling in application forms, do something — voluntary work for instance’. So, a few months out of library school, I took on a voluntary project, organising the photograph collection of a community publisher in Hackney, ‘Centerprise’. Mrs Thatcher aside, I thought doing this project would be a good way of finding out what freelance librarianship might be like. But before I tell my story, I must say something about Centerprise.
Charlotte Kirton, Nicky Lambert, Helen Matheson and Sandra Connell
The Trainee Mental Health Worker (TMHW) Programme is an initiative developed collaboratively between Middlesex University and local NHS Mental Health Trusts in response to…
Abstract
Purpose
The Trainee Mental Health Worker (TMHW) Programme is an initiative developed collaboratively between Middlesex University and local NHS Mental Health Trusts in response to national workforce requirements for flexible clinical personnel. The purpose of this paper is to explore the experience of this new category of mental health workers and to address the feedback given by previous cohorts of TMHWs.
Design/methodology/approach
This qualitative study comprised of three focus groups who met over their year-long training. In total, 20 participants self-selected from a population of 60 TMHWs, and their expectations of the TMHW role prior to starting the programme and following each of two practice placements were explored.
Findings
The thematic analysis identified five domains: identity, career strategy, functioning in the system, status and responsibility; the TMHWs demonstrated notable changes in their attitude and behaviour as they progressed. The findings demonstrate the challenges of integrating a new type of workforce into the rigid systems of the health care service.
Research limitations/implications
Focus groups by their nature are not always representative, and this programme is limited in its number of students.
Practical implications
This study has led to a greater understanding of the experiences of trainees across a variety of clinical settings.
Social implications
The results from this study will assist employing trusts in recruitment and retention by helping them to understand this phenomenon and the role itself.
Originality/value
This study’s value lies in the insight it offers into the experience of a new kind of worker moving from novice status to practitioner outside the constraint of a professional registration.
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