Monday, 27 April 2026

🧠 CHAPTER 15 – MODULE 15 (CONTINUED) Emotional Support – Communication, Validation & Crisis Awareness

 



πŸ’¬ 1. Supporting Someone Emotionally

When someone is struggling, the most important thing is not fixing the problem.

πŸ‘‰ It is being present, calm, and supportive

Key approach:

  • πŸ‘‚ Listen more than you speak
  • 🧠 Do not judge
  • ❤️ Validate feelings
  • ⏳ Be patient with recovery

πŸ’™ 2. Helpful Support Phrases

These phrases help people feel heard and safe:

  • “I am here for you.”
  • “That sounds really hard.”
  • “What you’re feeling is valid.”
  • “Take all the time you need.”
  • “You don’t have to go through this alone.”
  • “Tell me more.”
  • “Would it help to talk about what’s going on?”

🧠 Emotional validation examples

  • “It’s okay to feel this way.”
  • “I care about you.”
  • “I’m sorry you’re going through this.”
  • “I’m here to listen, not judge.”

🧩 3. Offering Practical Support

Sometimes small actions help more than words:

  • Bring food or drinks
  • Sit with them in silence
  • Go for a walk together
  • Help with daily tasks
  • Ask: “What is one small thing I can do right now?”

🚫 4. What NOT to Say

These phrases can make people feel worse:

  • “Just calm down”
  • “Snap out of it”
  • “Others have it worse”
  • “Stop overreacting”
  • “Everything happens for a reason”
  • “Just think positive”
  • “I know exactly how you feel”

πŸ‘‰ These can feel dismissive or invalidating


🧠 5. Key Principles of Emotional Support

❤️ Validate feelings

  • Sadness, anger, fear, and overwhelm are all valid emotions
  • You do not need to “fix” them

⏳ Be patient

  • Recovery is not linear
  • People may have good and bad days
  • Progress takes time

πŸ“ž Check in regularly

  • A simple message helps
  • “Thinking of you today”
  • “How are you feeling right now?”

🚨 6. When to Seek Help

If you are worried about someone:

  • Encourage professional support
  • Suggest GP, therapist, or crisis services

⚠️ Crisis awareness

If you believe someone may be in danger:

Ask calmly and directly:

πŸ‘‰ “Are you thinking about harming yourself?”
πŸ‘‰ “Do you have a plan or means to end your life?”


🚨 If risk is immediate:

  • Stay with them if safe
  • Contact emergency services
  • Use crisis lines (e.g. 988 in the US)

🌼 Easy Read Version

πŸ’™ How to help someone

  • Listen
  • Be kind
  • Don’t judge
  • Stay calm

πŸ’¬ Good things to say

  • “I’m here for you”
  • “That sounds hard”
  • “You are not alone”
  • “Take your time”

❌ Don’t say

  • “Snap out of it”
  • “Calm down”
  • “It’s not that bad”
  • “Others have it worse”

🀝 Helpful actions

  • Sit with them
  • Help with small tasks
  • Ask what they need
  • Check in regularly

🚨 Important

  • If someone is unsafe, get help quickly
  • Call emergency services if needed

⭐ KEY MESSAGE

πŸ‘‰ Good emotional support means:

✔ Listening
✔ Validating
✔ Staying present
✔ Avoiding judgement
✔ Encouraging help when needed


πŸ“˜ MODULE 15 UPDATE COMPLETE

This full module now includes:

✔ PTSD (NHS breakdown)
✔ Mental health disorders overview
✔ Crisis systems (988 / emergency care)
✔ Supporting someone emotionally
✔ Communication techniques
✔ Validation language
✔ Practical support strategies
✔ The Providence Center systems
✔ Housing + crisis + recovery models

CHAPTER 15 – MODULE 14 (CONTINUED) Supporting Someone With Emotional Problems (Full Teaching + Easy Read)

 

🧠


πŸ“˜ What This Section Is About

This section explains how to support someone who is experiencing:

  • πŸ˜” Emotional distress
  • 🧠 Mental health difficulties
  • 😟 Anxiety, depression, or stress
  • πŸ’” Life difficulties affecting wellbeing

It focuses on safe, practical, and supportive approaches.


🀝 1. Key Ways to Support Someone


πŸ‘‚ Active Listening (Most Important Skill)

Active listening means:

  • Listening to understand
  • Not interrupting
  • Not judging
  • Not trying to fix immediately

πŸ‘‰ Show you are present and attentive


❤️ Validating Feelings

Validation means recognising emotions as real and important.

Say things like:

  • “That sounds really hard”
  • “I can see why you feel that way”
  • “I’m here for you”

🚫 Avoid:

  • “Just get over it”
  • “It’s not that bad”

❓ Ask Open-Ended Questions

Help them talk more:

  • “Can you tell me more about that?”
  • “What’s been hardest for you?”
  • “How can I support you?”

🧩 Practical Help

Offer specific support:

  • Cooking meals
  • Cleaning or chores
  • Shopping
  • Childcare support
  • Helping with appointments

🧠 Encourage Professional Help

Gently suggest:

  • GP visits
  • Therapy or counselling
  • Mental health services

You can also:

  • Help find services
  • Offer to go with them

🀝 Inclusion and Patience

  • Keep inviting them to activities
  • Don’t pressure them
  • Understand they may say no
  • Recovery takes time

πŸ“ž Check In Regularly

Simple contact helps:

  • Text messages
  • Phone calls
  • Short check-ins

πŸ‘‰ This shows they are not alone


⚠️ 2. What to Avoid


❌ Do NOT:

  • Judge them
  • Minimise their feelings
  • Try to “fix” everything
  • Take their behaviour personally

🧠 Why this matters

Emotional distress can cause:

  • Irritability
  • Withdrawal
  • Low energy
  • Mood changes

πŸ‘‰ This is part of the condition, not personal rejection


🚨 3. When to Seek Immediate Help


🚨 Emergency Signs

Seek urgent help if someone:

  • Talks about suicide
  • Is at risk of harm
  • Cannot stay safe
  • Is in a mental health crisis

πŸ“ž Emergency Actions

  • Call 911 / 999 (emergency services)
  • Do not leave them alone if unsafe
  • Go to A&E / emergency room

πŸ“ž Crisis Support (USA/Canada)

  • Call or text 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline

🧠 4. Supporting Yourself (Very Important)

Supporting others can be emotionally draining.


🧍 You should:

  • Set healthy boundaries
  • Take breaks
  • Talk to someone you trust
  • Seek professional support if needed
  • Look after your own mental health

⚖️ Why boundaries matter

Without boundaries:

  • Burnout can happen
  • Stress increases
  • Support becomes harder to maintain

🌼 Easy Read Version

πŸ’™ How to Help Someone

  • Listen carefully
  • Be kind
  • Don’t judge
  • Stay patient

🧠 Good Things to Do

  • Help with daily tasks
  • Ask how they feel
  • Keep in contact
  • Encourage getting help

❌ Don’t Do

  • Don’t judge
  • Don’t ignore feelings
  • Don’t try to fix everything
  • Don’t take it personally

🚨 Emergency Help

  • Call 999 / 911 if someone is in danger
  • Call 988 (USA) for crisis support

⭐ Key Message

πŸ‘‰ Supporting someone means:

✔ Listening
✔ Caring
✔ Helping practically
✔ Encouraging support
✔ Looking after yourself too


πŸ“˜ MODULE 14 COMPLETE SUMMARY

This module now includes:

✔ PTSD (NHS breakdown)
✔ Mental health disorders overview
✔ Crisis systems (988, emergency services)
✔ Supporting someone emotionally
✔ Communication skills
✔ Boundaries and self-care
✔ Referral and safety planning

🧠 CHAPTER 15 – MODULE 14 PTSD (Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder) – NHS Overview

 



πŸ“˜ What This Section Is About

This section explains:

  • What PTSD is
  • What causes it
  • Symptoms in adults and children
  • Diagnosis process
  • Treatment options
  • Self-help and support
  • When to get help

🧠 1. What is PTSD?

🧠 Simple Definition

πŸ‘‰ PTSD (Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder) is a mental health condition caused by experiencing or witnessing a traumatic event.

A traumatic event may include:

  • Serious accidents
  • Physical or sexual assault
  • Abuse (childhood or domestic)
  • War or combat
  • Natural disasters
  • Serious illness or medical trauma


🧠 What Happens in PTSD?

After trauma, the brain can stay in a “danger mode” response.

This can cause:

  • Flashbacks
  • Nightmares
  • Anxiety
  • Feeling constantly on edge
  • Avoiding reminders of the trauma


⚠️ 2. Main Symptoms of PTSD


🧠 Re-experiencing the trauma

  • Flashbacks (feeling like it is happening again)
  • Nightmares
  • Distressing memories
  • Strong physical reactions (heart racing, sweating)

🚫 Avoidance symptoms

  • Avoiding places, people, or memories linked to trauma
  • Trying not to think about what happened
  • Feeling emotionally disconnected


⚡ Hyperarousal (body alert system stuck “on”)

  • Constant worry or fear
  • Being easily startled
  • Difficulty sleeping
  • Irritability or anger

πŸ˜” Mood and thinking changes

  • Low mood or depression
  • Feeling guilty or ashamed
  • Loss of interest in life
  • Feeling detached from others


πŸ§’ 3. PTSD in Children

Children may show PTSD differently:

  • Nightmares (sometimes with monsters or fantasy themes)
  • Bedwetting
  • Replaying trauma in play
  • Separation anxiety
  • Behaviour changes


🧠 4. Causes of PTSD

PTSD can develop after:

  • Direct trauma
  • Witnessing trauma
  • Learning about trauma involving someone close
  • Repeated exposure (e.g. emergency workers)


πŸ“Œ Examples of trauma

  • Road accidents
  • Assault or abuse
  • Serious medical treatment
  • Sudden loss or bereavement
  • War or violence

🧠 5. How PTSD is Diagnosed

Doctors may:

  • Ask about symptoms
  • Ask about traumatic experiences
  • Check how long symptoms have lasted
  • Assess impact on daily life

A diagnosis is usually made if symptoms:

  • Last more than 1 month
  • Affect daily functioning


πŸ’Š 6. Treatment for PTSD


πŸ’¬ Talking Therapies

  • Trauma-focused CBT
  • EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitisation and Reprocessing)

πŸ’Š Medication

  • Antidepressants (commonly SSRIs)

🧠 Other Support

  • Crisis teams (if needed)
  • Mental health services
  • Support groups


🧠 7. Self-Help Strategies

People with PTSD may benefit from:

  • Talking to someone trusted
  • Keeping a trigger diary
  • Breathing exercises
  • Staying active
  • Healthy sleep routine
  • Balanced diet

🚫 Things to avoid

  • Alcohol misuse
  • Recreational drugs
  • Isolation

🚨 8. When to Get Help

Seek help if:

  • Symptoms last more than a few weeks
  • Flashbacks or nightmares continue
  • Daily life is affected
  • You feel unsafe or overwhelmed

🚨 Emergency

If someone is in immediate danger:

  • Call emergency services

🌼 Easy Read Version

🧠 What is PTSD?

  • PTSD is a mental health condition
  • It happens after something very scary or traumatic

😟 Symptoms

  • Flashbacks (feeling it again)
  • Nightmares
  • Avoiding reminders
  • Feeling anxious or angry
  • Feeling numb or disconnected

πŸ’‘ Causes

  • Accidents
  • Abuse
  • Violence
  • War
  • Serious illness

πŸ’Š Help

  • Talking therapy
  • Medication
  • Support from doctors
  • Crisis support if needed

⭐ Key Message

πŸ‘‰ PTSD is a real condition
πŸ‘‰ It is not weakness
πŸ‘‰ Treatment and support can help
πŸ‘‰ Recovery is possible


πŸ“˜ MODULE 15 FULL UPDATE

This chapter now includes:

✔ Clinical mental health overview
✔ Crisis support systems (988, NHS links)
✔ Mental health disorder classification
✔ PTSD (full NHS breakdown)
✔ Symptoms, causes, diagnosis, treatment
✔ Easy Read accessibility versions

🧠 CHAPTER 15 – MODULE 14(CONTINUED) Mental Health Disorders – Clinical Definition & Overview (Cleveland Clinic Based)

 



πŸ“˜ What This Section Is About

This section explains:

  • What mental health disorders are
  • How they affect thoughts, emotions, and behaviour
  • Common types of disorders
  • Symptoms and causes
  • Diagnosis and treatment
  • How mental health affects daily life

🧠 1. What Are Mental Health Disorders?

🧠 Simple Definition

πŸ‘‰ Mental health disorders are conditions that affect:

  • 🧠 Thinking
  • ❤️ Emotions
  • πŸ—£ Behaviour

They can change how a person:

  • Feels
  • Acts
  • Responds to the world


πŸ“Š Key Facts

  • There are over 200 types of mental health disorders
  • They can range from mild to severe
  • They can affect daily life at home, school, or work
  • Treatment can help manage symptoms


🧠 2. What Mental Health Disorders Can Look Like

Symptoms vary, but may include:


😟 Emotional Changes

  • Feeling anxious or fearful
  • Low mood or sadness
  • Mood swings
  • Feeling empty or disconnected

🧠 Thinking Changes

  • Racing thoughts
  • Confusion
  • Hallucinations or delusions in some conditions

🧍 Behaviour Changes

  • Withdrawal from others
  • Changes in sleep or appetite
  • Difficulty functioning daily
  • Self-harm thoughts in severe cases


🧠 3. Main Types of Mental Health Disorders


😟 Anxiety Disorders

  • Generalised anxiety disorder (GAD)
  • Panic disorder
  • Social anxiety
  • Phobias
  • PTSD

πŸ˜” Mood Disorders

  • Depression
  • Bipolar disorder

🧠 Psychotic Disorders

  • Schizophrenia
  • Psychosis

🧩 Neurodevelopmental Disorders

  • Autism
  • ADHD

🍽 Eating Disorders

  • Anorexia
  • Bulimia
  • Binge eating disorder

🧍 Personality Disorders

  • Borderline personality disorder
  • Antisocial personality disorder
  • Narcissistic personality disorder

πŸ’Š Substance Use Disorders

  • Alcohol use disorder
  • Drug addiction


🧠 4. Causes of Mental Health Disorders

There is no single cause.

Most mental health conditions come from a combination of:


🧬 Biological Factors

  • Genetics (family history)
  • Brain chemistry changes
  • Brain structure differences

🧠 Psychological Factors

  • Trauma
  • Stress
  • Childhood experiences
  • Thinking patterns

🌍 Environmental Factors

  • Abuse or neglect
  • Poverty
  • Isolation
  • Housing problems
  • Relationship breakdown


🧠 5. Risk Factors

Risk increases if a person has:

  • Family history of mental illness
  • High stress levels
  • Trauma or abuse history
  • Chronic illness
  • Substance use
  • Social isolation


🧠 6. Impact on Daily Life

Mental health disorders can affect:


🏠 Home Life

  • Difficulty managing routines
  • Family stress
  • Emotional withdrawal

πŸ’Ό Work or School

  • Reduced performance
  • Absence
  • Concentration problems

🀝 Relationships

  • Conflict
  • Isolation
  • Misunderstanding

🧠 Overall Wellbeing

  • Fatigue
  • Low motivation
  • Emotional distress


πŸ’Š 7. Treatment Options

Mental health disorders can often be managed with support.


πŸ’¬ Talking Therapies

  • CBT
  • Counselling
  • Group therapy

πŸ’Š Medication

  • Antidepressants
  • Antipsychotics
  • Mood stabilisers

🧠 Other Support

  • Lifestyle changes
  • Social support
  • Crisis services
  • Community care


🚨 8. When to Seek Help

Seek help if symptoms:

  • Affect daily life
  • Last a long time
  • Cause distress
  • Lead to unsafe thoughts

If someone is in immediate danger:

  • Call emergency services

🌼 Easy Read Version

🧠 What are Mental Health Problems?

Mental health problems affect:

  • How you think
  • How you feel
  • How you behave

😟 Common Problems

  • Anxiety (worry and fear)
  • Depression (low mood)
  • Psychosis (confused thinking)
  • Eating problems
  • Autism and ADHD

πŸ’‘ Causes

  • Stress
  • Trauma
  • Family history
  • Life experiences
  • Brain changes

πŸ’Š Help is Available

  • Talking therapy
  • Medication
  • Doctors and nurses
  • Support groups

⭐ Key Message

πŸ‘‰ Mental health disorders are common
πŸ‘‰ They are not a weakness
πŸ‘‰ Help and treatment can make life better
πŸ‘‰ Everyone’s experience is different


πŸ“˜ MODULE 15 FULL SUMMARY (UPDATED)

This module now includes:

✔ Clinical definition (Cleveland Clinic)
✔ Types of mental health disorders
✔ Symptoms and presentation
✔ Causes and risk factors
✔ Daily life impact
✔ Treatment options
✔ Easy Read version

πŸ“ž CHAPTER 15 – MODULE 14(EXTENSION) NYC 988 Mental Health Crisis Support

 

πŸ“˜ What This Section Is About

This section explains:

  • What 988 is
  • How it supports mental health crises
  • Who can use it
  • When to use it
  • What happens when someone contacts 988
  • How it links to wider mental health services

🚨 1. What is 988?

🧠 Simple Definition

πŸ‘‰ 988 is a free, confidential mental health crisis service in the United States.

It connects people to trained professionals who can help with:

  • Mental health crises
  • Emotional distress
  • Substance use concerns
  • Feeling overwhelmed or unsafe

(nyc.gov)


πŸ“ž How You Can Contact 988

You can:

  • Call 988
  • Text 988
  • Use online chat

πŸ‘‰ Available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week

(nyc.gov)


🧠 2. What 988 Helps With

988 is for people who are:

  • Feeling very stressed or overwhelmed
  • Struggling with mental health problems
  • Having suicidal thoughts
  • Experiencing emotional distress
  • Worried about alcohol or drug use
  • Concerned about someone else

(nyc.gov)


πŸ§‘‍⚕️ 3. What Happens When You Contact 988?

When someone contacts 988:


πŸ‘‚ Step 1: Talking to a Trained Counselor

  • A trained mental health professional answers
  • They listen without judgment
  • They provide emotional support

🧠 Step 2: Understanding the Situation

They may ask about:

  • How you are feeling
  • What support you need
  • Whether you are safe

πŸ›Ÿ Step 3: Support Options

They can offer:

  • Short-term counselling
  • Coping strategies
  • Crisis intervention
  • Peer support
  • Referrals to services

πŸ”— Step 4: Referrals

They may connect people to:

  • Mental health services
  • Substance use treatment
  • Community support
  • Housing or social services

(nyc.gov)


🧠 4. When Should Someone Use 988?

Use 988 if someone is:

  • Feeling overwhelmed or unable to cope
  • Having thoughts of self-harm
  • Experiencing a mental health crisis
  • Worried about substance use
  • Concerned about emotional distress

🚨 5. When to Use Emergency Services Instead

Call 911 (USA) if someone is:

  • In immediate danger
  • Unable to stay safe
  • Experiencing a life-threatening situation

πŸ‘‰ 988 is support
πŸ‘‰ 911 is emergency response


🌍 6. Key Features of 988


✔ 988 is:

  • Free
  • Confidential
  • Available 24/7
  • Accessible by phone, text, or chat
  • Supported by trained professionals

🧠 Important Goal

πŸ‘‰ 988 aims to give mental health support without needing police involvement unless there is immediate danger


🧠 7. Why 988 Matters

988 helps by:

  • Reducing crisis escalation
  • Providing early intervention
  • Supporting emotional wellbeing
  • Connecting people to care faster
  • Preventing hospital admissions where possible

🌼 Easy Read Version

πŸ“ž What is 988?

  • 988 is a phone number for mental health help
  • It is free
  • It is open all day and night

🧠 What it helps with:

  • Feeling very sad or stressed
  • Anxiety or panic
  • Feeling unsafe
  • Worry about drugs or alcohol

πŸ‘‚ What happens:

  • A trained person listens
  • They help you stay safe
  • They offer support and advice
  • They can connect you to services

🚨 Emergency:

  • Call 911 if someone is in danger right now

⭐ Key Message

πŸ‘‰ 988 is a lifeline for mental health support

✔ It is free
✔ It is confidential
✔ It is available 24/7
✔ It connects people to real help


πŸ“˜ MODULE 15 FULL SUMMARY (NOW EXPANDED)

This module now includes:

✔ Mental health disorders overview (NCBI-based)
✔ Causes and risk factors
✔ Types of mental health conditions
✔ Impact on daily life
✔ Treatment approaches
✔ UK & USA crisis support systems
✔ Mind UK guidance on helping others
✔ NYC 988 crisis system

CHAPTER 15 – MODULE 14 (EXTENSION) Helping Someone Else Seek Mental Health Support

 

🧠


πŸ“˜ What This Section Is About

This part explains how to help someone:

  • Who is struggling with mental health
  • Who may not want help yet
  • Who needs support to access services
  • Who may be in crisis
  • Who needs gentle encouragement to seek professional care

πŸ‘‰ It also explains what you can and cannot do as a supporter.


🀝 1. What You CAN Do

You do not need to be an expert to help someone.

Small actions can make a big difference:


πŸ‘‚ Emotional Support

  • Listen without judgment
  • Be calm and patient
  • Let them talk at their own pace
  • Show you care

❤️ Helpful Responses

  • “I’m here for you”
  • “That sounds really difficult”
  • “You’re not alone”

🧠 Focus on Feelings

  • Don’t argue
  • Don’t dismiss
  • Don’t rush solutions
  • Focus on how they feel

🧩 Practical Support

  • Help them find services
  • Offer to go with them to appointments
  • Help them make phone calls
  • Support daily routines

πŸ“ž Encouraging Help

You can gently suggest:

  • GP appointment
  • Mental health services
  • Talking therapies
  • Crisis services if needed

🚫 2. What You CANNOT Do

It is important to understand limits:


❌ You cannot:

  • Force someone to get help
  • Force someone to talk
  • Make medical decisions for them
  • Contact a doctor for them without consent (unless emergency)

πŸ‘‰ Adults must choose their own treatment unless there is immediate risk.


🚨 3. When It IS an Emergency

Seek urgent help if someone:

  • Has self-harmed
  • Is suicidal
  • Is at immediate risk of harm
  • Is unable to stay safe

🚨 Emergency Actions

  • Call 999 (UK) / 911 (US)
  • Stay with them if safe
  • Go to A&E if needed
  • Call crisis services

πŸ“ž UK Crisis Options

  • Samaritans: 116 123 (24/7)
  • NHS urgent mental health services
  • GP urgent appointments
  • 111 (option for mental health support in some areas)

🧠 4. If Someone Refuses Help

This is very common.


πŸ’¬ What to do:

  • Stay calm
  • Keep communication open
  • Don’t pressure them
  • Keep offering support
  • Try again later

πŸ‘‰ People may refuse help because of:

  • Fear
  • Stigma
  • Confusion
  • Low mood
  • Lack of trust

🧠 5. Supporting Someone Who Feels Overwhelmed

You can help by:

  • Breaking tasks into small steps
  • Offering to sit with them while they call services
  • Helping organise appointments
  • Supporting daily routines

❤️ 6. Looking After Yourself

Supporting someone can be emotionally hard.


🧍 You should:

  • Take breaks
  • Talk to someone you trust
  • Set boundaries
  • Avoid burnout
  • Share responsibility if possible

🧠 7. Key Principles of Supporting Someone


✔ Do:

  • Listen
  • Be patient
  • Stay supportive
  • Encourage help
  • Respect their choices

❌ Don’t:

  • Judge
  • Pressure
  • Take over their life
  • Ignore your own wellbeing

🌼 Easy Read Version

πŸ’™ Helping Someone

  • Listen
  • Be kind
  • Stay calm
  • Don’t judge

🧠 You Can Help By:

  • Talking with them
  • Helping them find support
  • Going with them to appointments

🚨 In an Emergency

  • Call 999 or 911
  • Call Samaritans 116 123
  • Stay with the person if safe

⚠️ Important

  • You cannot force someone to get help
  • But you can support them to choose help
  • Small actions matter

⭐ Key Message

πŸ‘‰ Helping someone seek mental health support means:

✔ Listening
✔ Supporting
✔ Encouraging help
✔ Respecting choice
✔ Acting quickly in emergencies


πŸ“˜ MODULE 14 COMPLETE SUMMARY (NOW FULLY BUILT)

This full module now includes:

✔ Emotional and mental health support
✔ Housing and money issues
✔ Relationship difficulties
✔ Crisis intervention
✔ SAMHSA and UK services
✔ Mind UK guidance on helping others seek help
✔ Boundaries and safeguarding
✔ Referral and signposting systems

🏠 CHAPTER 15 – MODULE 14 (EXTENSION) Immediate Assistance, Homelessness & Mental Health Support

 



πŸ“˜ What This Section Is About

This part explains:

  • Immediate crisis help
  • Homelessness and housing support
  • Mental health crisis services
  • National referral pathways
  • How to connect people to safety and services

πŸ‘‰ Many mental health problems are linked with:

  • Housing instability
  • Poverty
  • Trauma
  • Relationship breakdown
  • Crisis situations

🚨 1. Immediate Crisis Help (USA & UK)

These services are for urgent or life-threatening situations.


πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ USA – Crisis Support

  • πŸ“ž 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline
    • Call or text 988
    • 24/7 mental health crisis support
  • πŸ“ž SAMHSA National Helpline
    • 1-800-662-4357
    • Free treatment referral and information

πŸ‘‰ Helps with:

  • Mental health crises
  • Substance use issues
  • Finding treatment services

πŸ‡¬πŸ‡§ UK – Crisis Support

  • πŸ“ž Samaritans
    • 116 123
    • 24-hour listening service

🚨 Emergency Services

  • πŸ“ž 911 (USA)
  • πŸ“ž 999 (UK)

πŸ‘‰ Use when someone is:

  • In immediate danger
  • At risk of harm
  • Unable to stay safe

🏠 2. Homelessness & Housing Support (SAMHSA Overview)

SAMHSA supports people experiencing:

  • Homelessness
  • Mental health conditions
  • Substance use disorders
  • Housing instability

πŸ‘‰ Many programs combine:

  • Housing
  • Treatment
  • Recovery support
  • Case management

🧠 Key SAMHSA Support Services

SAMHSA programs often include:

  • Outreach services
  • Mental health treatment
  • Substance use treatment
  • Case management
  • Peer support
  • Employment support
  • Help accessing benefits (e.g. Medicaid, SNAP)


🏑 Housing + Mental Health Connection

Stable housing helps:

  • Reduce stress
  • Improve recovery
  • Prevent crisis
  • Support independence

🏠 3. Types of Housing Support


πŸ›️ Emergency Housing

  • Short-term shelters
  • Crisis accommodation
  • Safe temporary stay


🏠 Transitional Housing

  • Medium-term support
  • Helps people move into independence
  • Includes support services (job, therapy, training)


🏑 Supportive Housing

  • Long-term housing
  • On-site mental health support
  • Case management included

🧭 Housing Systems (USA examples)

  • HUD housing programmes
  • Section 811 disability housing support
  • Local housing authorities
  • Homeless outreach teams

🧠 4. Mental Health & Homelessness Link

Mental health problems can both:

  • Cause homelessness
  • Be caused by homelessness

Common factors:

  • Depression
  • Anxiety
  • Trauma
  • Substance use
  • Family breakdown
  • Financial stress

🀝 5. Relationships & Emotional Support in Crisis

People experiencing homelessness or distress may also face:

  • Family breakdown
  • Loss of friendships
  • Isolation
  • Domestic abuse

πŸ’¬ Support Strategies

  • Active listening
  • Non-judgmental communication
  • Emotional validation
  • Encouraging support services

πŸ’¬ Helpful Communication

  • “I can see this is really hard”
  • “You are not alone in this”
  • “Let’s find support together”

❤️ Relationship Guidance

  • Use “I” statements
  • Don’t blame
  • Stay patient
  • Encourage healthy routines

🧠 6. Key Principles for Professionals


✔ Do:

  • Listen first
  • Stay calm
  • Offer options
  • Signpost clearly
  • Respect dignity
  • Encourage professional help

❌ Don’t:

  • Ignore risk
  • Try to fix everything alone
  • Judge the person
  • Delay urgent referrals

πŸ“ 7. Main Support Pathways


🧠 Mental Health Support

  • NHS / public mental health services
  • Crisis teams
  • Therapy services
  • Community mental health teams

🏠 Housing Support

  • Emergency shelters
  • Housing authorities
  • Homeless outreach teams
  • Supportive housing programmes

πŸ’° Financial Support

  • Benefits services
  • Debt advice charities
  • Welfare support agencies

🀝 Social Support

  • Family services
  • Domestic abuse support
  • Peer support groups

🌼 Easy Read Version

🚨 If Someone Needs Help

  • Call 988 (USA)
  • Call 116 123 (UK Samaritans)
  • Call 911 or 999 in emergencies

🏠 Housing Help

  • Emergency shelters
  • Temporary accommodation
  • Supported housing

🧠 Mental Health Help

  • Doctors (GPs)
  • Counsellors
  • Crisis services
  • Charities

🀝 Support

  • Listen
  • Be kind
  • Help find services
  • Stay supportive

⭐ Key Message

πŸ‘‰ People in crisis need:

✔ Safety
✔ Housing
✔ Mental health support
✔ Human connection
✔ Access to services


πŸ“˜ MODULE 14 COMPLETE SUMMARY

This module now includes:

✔ Mental health support skills
✔ Emotional and social difficulties
✔ Housing and financial stress
✔ Relationship challenges
✔ Crisis support systems
✔ SAMHSA and national services
✔ Referral and signposting pathways
✔ Emergency intervention guidance

🧠 CHAPTER 15 – MODULE 15 (CONTINUED) Emotional Support – Communication, Validation & Crisis Awareness

  πŸ’¬ 1. Supporting Someone Emotionally When someone is struggling, the most important thing is not fixing the problem. πŸ‘‰ It is being pr...