
Woman with autism left 'scarred' by secure hospital detention
A woman with autism who was repeatedly detained in secure hospitals as a teenager has said proposed changes to a mental health law do not go far enough. Lucy Bowerman, from Witney, Oxfordshire, said being sectioned at 12 years old, before being diagnosed with autism, left her mentally "scarred".She is part of a campaign that has called for an end to the detention of people with autism or learning difficulties. The Department for Health and Social care said its "proposed reforms to the Mental Health Act [would] ensure people get the support they need in the community".
Miss Bowerman told BBC Radio Oxford's Sophie Law she was first sectioned after suffering from "autistic burnout" and attempting to take her own life. "I had a feeling they saw that as depression at the time, whereas we realise now that I was just very, very deep into autistic burnout and struggling to cope," she said. "[Secure hospitals] weren't very pleasant places to be. I was only 12 and most of the other patients were 15 or 16 plus. "That was quite scary being surrounded by some very, very unwell people at such a young age."Miss Bowerman is co-chair of Oxfordshire charity My Life My Choice, which is run by people with learning disabilities. The group took part in a protest in Westminster in April against proposed changes in the government's Mental Health Bill.The government wants to change the law so that disabled and autistic people cannot be detained under the act in most circumstances, unless they have a co-occurring mental health disorder.
'Justice for my younger self'
Miss Bowerman said the changes do not go far enough and more support should be available in the community so people can live in "good homes".She said: "The reason I'm involved... is partly to get justice for my younger self, who shouldn't have been put through what I was put through. "But most importantly, for the people who are still locked up in these places because this should not be happening in this day and age."In December the BBC reported that the current wait for people seeking a diagnosis for autism in Oxfordshire is 18 years. Miss Bowerman said: "If we're unable to effectively diagnose people and support them, there are going to be more people ending up in burnout... and ending up in these institutions."A Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson said: "The number of autistic people and people with a learning disability in mental health hospitals is unacceptable."Through our proposed reforms to the Mental Health Act, we will ensure people get the support they need in the community, closer to home, improving care and keeping people out of hospitals."We welcome stakeholders' contributions, including through the public consultation, and will engage further as the bill progresses through Parliament."
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Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Christine McGuinness, 37, reveals she has dated women since she was a teenager as she opens up about her sexuality and divorce from ex Paddy
Christine McGuinness has opened up about her sexuality and her divorce from Paddy McGuinness, as she revealed she has dated women since she was a teenager. The TV personality, 37, explained to Elizabeth Day on her How To Fail podcast, that her ex-husband and family have known about her sexuality since she was little and it was 'never a secret'. She and Paddy separated in 2022 after 11 years of marriage, but continued to live together in their shared home for the sake of their three children - twins Leo and Penelope, and Felicity. And now she has opened up about how she was dating women, including one two-year 'situationship', before she met Paddy, and admits she wants a connection for herself and not a step-parent for her children. She told the broadcaster: 'It shouldn't matter somebody's gender. It never mattered to me, which was why once me and my ex-husband were separated and I met people, I didn't properly date. From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the DailyMail's new Showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop. 'It was more like blurred the lines of friendships for me, that was normal. It felt comfortable because I'd done that as a teenager and I, as a teenager, I dated both men and women. My ex-husband knew. My family knew. It was never a secret for me.' When asked if she has a label for her sexuality, Christine said she has thought about it but would consider herself more of a 'free spirit'. When asked about labels, Christine explained: 'No and again, I've thought about it. A lot of people always ask me, are you a lesbian? Are you bisexual? Are you what? Is this a phase? 'I've always been quite a free spirit. I think that's the only word I would put on it. When I was a teenager, I'd dated boys and girls. 14/15 was probably when I had my first kisses with, with both, and I never felt it was anything different or a big deal. 'Then I think where I grew up, everyone was kind of just there for a good time.' Christine explained that before Paddy she did date women and her longest relationship latest around two years. 'My longest was two years before I met my ex-husband and then I've had really, really lovely long situation shifts where we purposely haven't put a label on anything', she added. 'But my experiences with women have been lovely and It's not like women are better or worse. 'It's simply that the connection for me is different. I need a connection now. I need something different. 'I really, really, honestly, I love my family and Patrick is part of my family and he always, always will be. But now for my next relationship, I know what I want and I want someone for me. 'I want someone that I like spending time with, we can do stuff together that we both enjoy. I want that emotional connection where I can be open and I can talk and I can be vulnerable and I can ask for help, but I can also have a laugh and just have a good time. 'It's not like I'm trying to find a new family unit or someone to come in and be a stepparent. I want my next relationship to be for me.' Christine also opened up about her divorce as she explained that they both know they are both allowed to day and they do not 'overshare' any information about their lvoe interests. She said: We actually had a good 16 years we were together. I still lived with him. I met him when I was 19 and we still live together and we've been separated for three years and it was one of those things, I remember when we put out the statements about us separating we were both nervous about what the reaction was going to be publicly. 'We both know that we're we can date and we're allowed to', she added. 'We're adults and we're single, so we can, but we also know that we don't need to overshare any information about anything because we are still exes and we are still living in the same house.' She then explained that they are in 'different wings' of the property and everything is completely separate. Her confession comes after she was spotted landing back in the UK after quitting Celebs Go Dating. Pals close to the mother-of-three believe she may have left the programme over 'fears' of upsetting ex-husband Paddy, 51, by discussing their recent divorce on TV. According to insiders, the model, who split from the former Top Gear host in 2022, had been 'enjoying' filming and going on dates after flying to the White Isle this week. On Wednesday, she got stuck in at the show's Ibiza pool party, which was attended by Celebs Go Dating alumni and surprise guests Wayne Lineker and Dean Gaffney. The reality star, who was set to date both men and women on the show, had been revealing more about her 'type', explaining that she likes 'feminine women with an edge' at the show's 'mixer', where celebrities met the contestants for the first time. However, Christine then suddenly quit the series, with insiders saying she had become anxious over her private life, including feelings surrounding her divorce, being made public. A source said: 'Christine was really up for this show and discovering more about herself with the help of the relationship experts. 'She settled in really well in Ibiza and treated it like a bit of a holiday. 'Hours before she pulled out of the series, she was having so much fun at one of the show's pool parties, chatting away to former contestants Wayne and Dean. 'She had even struck up a flirtatious relationship with one of the contestants, who she flew to Ibiza as part of the dating series, and was finally opening up about her feelings towards women. 'But all of a sudden her mood changed and she began to have real doubts over her appearance, especially with how she may be upsetting Paddy by discussing their divorce on a TV show. 'It's a real shame but she just wasn't in the right frame of mind to take part and it was best for all concerned for her to leave the process.' In her statement, she confirmed: 'I joined Celebs Go Dating with great intentions but have realised that dating on a public platform and the attention is brings is just too soon for me.' Christine also said that she may appear in the future, adding: 'They've said the door is always open for me which I'm so grateful but for now I'm returning home to my family.' Christine and Paddy, who share three children, twins Leo and Penelope, and daughter Felicity, who have all been diagnosed with autism, split in 2022 after 11 years of marriage. The exes finalised their divorce out of court last summer. Last month, MailOnline revealed Paddy had put their £6.5million Cheshire house up for sale. The pair had carried on living at their marital home post divorce, but Christine had reportedly grown increasingly tired of cohabiting with Paddy, who was happy for the arrangement to continue. Speaking about their split, Christine said: 'I've never spoken about the reasons for our divorce, and I don't know if I ever will. 'It was a difficult time. It wasn't something that, you know, I just decided to do overnight, or that we chose to do. 'We tried, and, yeah, there just, unfortunately, there was no repairing it, you know?' Discussing her appearance on the show before deciding to quit, the TV personality admitted that she hasn't 'dated much before' so this will be a new experience for her. She said: 'I'm really excited to be joining the agency, I'm going to have a summer of fun. Who knows what might happen? I've not really dated much before, so I feel like I'm doing a crash course. 'I'm looking forward to getting to know the other celebs and I'm especially looking forward to the coaching side of things with the agents. I think that's going to be good for me.' Christine was set to date both men and women, having become attracted to the opposite sex following her close relationship with singer Chelcee Grimes, whom she was spotted kissing in the wake of her split from Paddy.


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Hamad Butt: Apprehensions review – beauty and violence from a lost and dangerous YBA
Flies crawl about in a triptych of glass-fronted cabinets, while in another installation you gradually realise the fragile bottles you're looking at are full of poisonous gas, lethal to humans. Does this remind you of anyone? Hamad Butt is the Damien Hirst who got away, the Young British Artist of the 1990s who didn't win the Turner prize, make millions or lose his youthful talent and turn into a bloated mediocrity. Now he is a cult figure precisely because he is none of those things and can instead be presented as if he was a complete unknown, whose art expresses his queer Pakistani identity rather than being part of a fin-de-siecle art movement of sensation and creepy science. I couldn't find any reference, even in the moving array of Butt's working documents on show, to the fact he studied at Goldsmiths alongside Hirst, Collishaw, Wearing and more. If we need to detach this brilliant artist from that generation to celebrate him, it's better than forgetting his work. But as soon as you walk into this convincing retrospective you're back in 1992. Occupying the whole of the Whitechapel's main ground floor gallery is Butt's three-part installation Familiars. Like a giant executive toy, spherical glass vessels are suspended from the ceiling by thin threads in a long row. Pull the first one back, as it is weirdly tempting to do, and you'd set them going by action and reaction. Except it would surely shatter these vessels and kill you, or at least make you very ill. The coloured gas inside each sphere is mustard-coloured, as in mustard gas. This is gaseous chlorine, first used as a chemical weapon by Germany in 1915 and in these static, sealed bottles it looks lovely, golden, glowing in the gallery lights. It's disturbing but, let's be honest, darkly thrilling to be only a thin glass wall away from a first world war soldier's death here in an art gallery. To put it another way it's sublime. One of the sculptures in this installation is actually entitled Substance Sublimation Unit, a play on chemistry and aesthetics. The other two elements of this epic sculpture look equally hazardous: a ladder with rungs that light up with blazing gas like a stairway to hell, and three curving, blood-red glowing spikes. To feel such beauty and violence in a gallery may strike you as shockingly new or oddly nostalgic. In the archives room there's a 1995 Jak cartoon from the Evening Standard, depicting a dodgy geezer selling gas masks outside the Tate – a reference to a leak from this installation when it was in a show called Rites of Passage, alongside Louise Bourgeois. Hamad Butt was not alive to laugh at Jak's cartoon. He died in September 1994, at the age of 32, from Aids-related complications. In a video interview, lying on a sofa at his family home in Ilford, he's still talking vividly about his future projects, months before his death. What a compelling presence he is, how deeply intelligent and imaginative. His gripping art makes you aware of how quickly and suddenly you can stray from civilised normality to mortal danger. His installation Transmission glows with gorgeous, if clinical, blue light – but look for too long, or without the protective glasses you are offered, at its ultra-violet bulbs and you risk damaging your eyesight. The bulbs rest on a circle of opened books made of glass, on which the monstrous people-eating, world-conquering flora from John Wyndham's novel The Day of the Triffids are engraved. In another classic trope of Young British Art, that of appropriation, his design of a Triffid, with its fat vegetable body, long sucker and libidinous tongue, is borrowed wholesale from the cover of the original Penguin paperback of The Day of the Triffids. Sign up to Art Weekly Your weekly art world round-up, sketching out all the biggest stories, scandals and exhibitions after newsletter promotion The labels prompt you to see Hamad Butt's art in relation to his tragic early death, so Transmission is about the Aids epidemic, and his Triffids – which also feature in a hilarious animated video – are images of the HIV crisis. However, in the video interview, he says 'transmission' refers in the first place to the transmission of light. He clearly did not want his art to be understood only one way. Today figurative painting is back in fashion, so this exhibition includes Butt's early canvases before he turned conceptual. On the sofa on screen he explains he had to stop because he was too in thrall to Picasso and Matisse. You can see Picasso's shadow over his paintings of sensual Minotaur-like men. This exhibition risks removing him from his wider context, but it can't go very wrong with such art. It's right to include his paintings, drawings and archives because we possess so little of such magnificent promise. Hamad Butt died so long before his time, yet his work is a living thrill. He is the Young British Artist who is for ever young, for ever lethal. Hamad Butt: Apprehensions is at Whitechapel Art Gallery, London, from 4 June to 7 September


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Domestic abuse: Housing Sanctuary Scheme 'gave me peace of mind'
A domestic violence victim who said she slept with a hammer beside her bed for protection has described a scheme that installed new cameras, locks and security lights at her home as a Murray, 34, said she was terrified her abusive ex-partner would attack her and her unborn child at she said the Housing Executive's Sanctuary Scheme helped her rebuild her scheme allows people to stay in their homes with additional security measures, including cameras, lights, door and window locks and safety rooms. Warning: This story contains details some may find distressingThe mother-of-one's ex-partner Donald Newell was sentenced in November 2023 to two years' probation after he was convicted of common assault, criminal damage and persistent improper use of electronic communications to cause anxiety against 35 from Saltcoats outside Glasgow, was also convicted of being in breach of a non-molestation order against Ms Murray and sentenced to three months in jail, suspended for two years."Donald was very scary," said Ms Murray."He preyed on the good in you, seeing the good in him."Whenever he'd come out of that rage, he would always have a rhyme and reason as to why he was doing it. "I was always the problem. It was always my fault."She described a litany of abuse directed at her by her former partner including being strangled, verbally abused in public and threatened."I didn't deserve for him to threaten my life. I didn't deserve any of that," she would "always promise he would get help", she added, but the abuse got recalled a night when getting into the car with her former partner, who was drunk."He was pushing my face into the car window. Telling me he was going to cave my head in. He was going to punch me."He then broke the ligaments and tendons in my fingers."On another occasion, Newell drove a car into one being driven by Ms Murray, who was five months pregnant."He followed me down the dual carriageway and rammed me."I was pregnant and had reduced movement and had to go to hospital." What does the Sanctuary Scheme do? But she said the help received through the Housing Executive's Sanctuary Scheme gave her "real peace of mind".Living in a one-bedroom flat and pregnant, Ms Murray said her house was red-flagged due to the risk Newell posed to her and her unborn daughter."He was given a non-molestation order to stay away within a mile of my property. But that didn't stop him," she part of the scheme, the Housing Executive installed door and window alarms, flood lights, cameras and heavy-duty door locks."If anyone tries the door, the alarms go off; if anyone taps my window, the alarms go off," she said."I rely on the alarms. I can watch my home from my cameras when I'm out also."It just gives me that peace of mind."She added: "The thought of him knowing where I was whenever he leaves jail or after the non-molestation order ran out was actually a very scary thing. I was always on edge."So the fact that I can surround myself with good neighbours that are able to keep an eye out for me is a big relief."My daughter can grow up in peace and safety away from him." How does social housing work for domestic abuse victims? Kerry Logan, from Housing Rights, welcomed the scheme but said she would like to see it extended beyond Housing Executive also said an underlying issue was the urgent need for the government to build more social homes."With more than 49,000 households on the social housing waiting list in Northern Ireland and a temporary accommodation crisis, it can be very challenging for people fleeing domestic violence abuse to find a safe place to live in the time frame that they need it," she Logan also called for people experiencing domestic abuse to be prioritised on the social housing waiting list, by giving them access to a "much higher level of points than they're currently able to". Previously, victims of domestic violence were awarded less points for social housing than victims of terrorism or paramilitary that changed in May when intimidation points were removed from social housing Minister Gordon Lyons said it was to "level the playing field for victims of violence".Figures from October 2023 to March 2024 show that 607 people presented as homeless due to the treat of domestic violence compared to 101 for Long, chief executive of the Housing Executive, said balancing the system is "a long-term project". She said the removal of intimidation points was recommended to the department by the Housing Executive and that it is now putting in place a system that "ensures that the points that are allocated better reflect the nature of the violence and the scale of the violence".She added: "I think the public understand the profound effect that domestic violence has on women. "It's really important we talk about these things and build public awareness."If you are affected by any of the issues raised, help and support is available via BBC Action Line.