Meet the Team
Ellie Gordon
Mental Health Forum Chair
Senior Nurse for Learning Disability and Mental Health (Health Education England)
My name is Ellie Gordon and I am the recently appointed Chair of the RCN Mental Health Forum steering committee.
I have been a Mental Health Nurse for a number of years and over that time have worked across a number of areas clinical speciality ranging from Forensic In patient in the private sector, through to working in an NHS International Centre of excellent for Addictions, as a Clinical Nurse Specialist. I have also worked a Commissioner in both a PCT and a CCG and worked at National level for NHS England as part of the transforming care team. My current role is that of Senior Nurse for Learning Disability and Mental Health in the National nursing and midwifery team in Health Education England.
I have been very fortunate throughout my career, and thanks due to supportive employers and managers, that I have been able to continue to practice as a nurse. I do this as it not only reminds me why I became a nurse, but also because I want to share the knowledge skills and experience that I have developed over the years as Nurse prescriber.
My vision for the forum is that we will ensure we continue to represent forum members at a national UK-wide level - increasing our engagement and collaboration with forum members, so that when as a steering committee we engage with national policy and development, we speak with your voice. In this way, we ensure that when we speak at national level across the UK, we do so using your words, your vision and your passion, so that we are truly representing you our forum members to shape Mental Health and Mental Health Nursing and Nurses development.
I also believe that as a forum we have to ensure that we hear from our members who have lived experience of Mental illness, be that as a person who has experienced such illness or someone who is a family member or carer of someone who has been ill. We need to hear your voices so we can benefit from and share our insight, knowledge and understanding. Twitter: @ElliePhonstan
Zeba Arif
Biography to followDr Annie Cox
Dr Annie Cox is a proud mental health nurse and a CAMHS consultant nurse working at Derbyshire Healthcare NHS foundation Trusts. Annie is currently a co-chair for the National Mental Health Consultant Nurse Network and chair of the CAMHS Consultant Nurse Network.
Annie has been working in CAMHS for the past 20 years, and has collected a number of additional skills along the way including being an independent prescriber, a cognitive behavioural and EMDR therapist and qualifications in supervision.
Annie has developed expertise in working with young children who are or present at a younger developmental stage and has a keen interest in research and was awarded her Doctoral award in Mental Health Nursing practice. Annie researched 'how to involve children aged 8-12 years in decision making and consent processes in outpatient CAMHS'. Annie a member of the ISUPPORT () team which has develop standards to ensure children’s rights are upheld across all healthcare settings.
Annie is a Florence Nightingale Scholar and an RCN Foundation bursary awardee. Annie is a peer reviewer for a number of journals and publishers and is associate editor for the Journal of Child Health Care.
Annie is co-chair of the Children and families SIG for the British Association of Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapists (BABCP). Annie has a number of publications regarding CAMHS clinical practice and recently published a book titled ''. Annie is a co-founding member of @CAMHSNetwork. Annie is passionate about children’s mental health nursing development and understanding the application of theory to practice.
Annie is really looking forward to providing a children and families focus for the MH forum. Annie will be ensuring children’s and families’ voices are front and centre in supporting the development of nursing practice in children’s mental health services.
Laura Daukintis
Mental Health Forum Deputy Chair
Advanced Practitioner / Non-Medical Prescriber (RMN)
Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust
Qualifying as a Mental Health Nurse in January 2011, I began my career in Residential Rehabilitation for adults with enduring mental ill health. Here, I developed my core nursing skills and discovered an interest in substance misuse and forensic nursing. I then moved to HMP Nottingham to pursue my interests, where I worked as a Substance Misuse Nurse in the Prison setting, nursing offenders who were dependent on opiates and alcohol. I further developed my interest by undertaking BSc in Working with Addictive Behaviours and eventually moved into community Substance Misuse Services within the Criminal Justice Service where I worked for 6 years.
I went back to university and gained my Non-Medical Prescribing qualification in 2016 which allowed me to be better serve my patient population by giving them quicker and more efficient access to medications. I then transferred my skills to psychiatric outpatients in Derby where I worked as an Advanced Practitioner working alongside the medical team before moving back to Nottingham where I am now undertaking my MSc in Advanced Clinical Practice at Sheffield Hallam University. I pride myself in offering a holistic package of care for my patients, delivering person-centred nursing approach combined with all interventions tailored to the individual.
All throughout my career, I have maintained an interest in union representation, ensuring a fair working environment for all my nursing colleagues, as I hold the firm belief that well supported staff deliver better and safer patient care. I am also an accredited Steward and Learning Representative for the RCN. I have a special interest in supervision and I am active in promoting this in the workplace. I have been a member of the Mental Health Committee since 2019 and look forward to contributing to the task force alongside my colleagues.
Outside of work I run a support and social group for local parents who were effected during the pandemic to ensure they have access to services and a knowledge of activities available for them to engage in. I am pleased to be able to support the local community’s collective mental health.
Twitter:
Helena Ann Mitchell
Researcher in mental health
Dr Helena Ann Mitchell has contributed extensively to mental health nursing as a practitioner, educationalist and in more recent years as a researcher. She qualified as an RMN in 1981, obtaining a community psychiatric qualification in 1986. As a nurse educationalist she gained her BSc (Hons) Health Sciences in 1993 and a Master's in Women Studies in 1996. She worked at University College Northampton as a senior lecturer where she developed community psychiatric programmes and managed undergraduate courses and post graduate modules.
Helena Ann took up a position at the Open University in 2005 as a lecturer in mental health nursing and became a skilled writer of distance/online learning materials in mental health, policy and teaching and learning in clinical practice. She was also appointed as a Co-Qualification Director for the BSc Hons Adult and Mental health nursing pre-registration degree that enabled health care support workers in England, Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales to become registered graduate nurses.
Following achievement of her PhD in 2015 for a participatory action research (PAR) study with Guyanese women with Type 2 diabetes in England, Helena Ann developed a passion and expertise in this research methodology. In 2019 she received funding from the British Academy to undertake, as principal investigator, an interdisciplinary PAR project (ARCLIGHT) to promote community mental health resilience in Guyana within three diverse and culturally complex communities. Her other research interests include perinatal mental health, domestic violence, suicide and online learning in mental health nursing. She has co-authored health and social care books, journal articles and presented conference papers nationally and internationally.
Helena Ann is keen to see an increased representation of BAME groups within the forum and their contribution to projects in light of the current movement for greater inclusion within society.
Contact
Professional Lead for Mental Health: Stephen Jones
Twitter: @SWJ_1
Stephen joined the RCN as professional lead for mental health in January 2021. Prior to this appointment, Stephen worked in the South London NHS Mental Health and Community Partnership (SLP), driving the advancement of senior nursing careers across Oxleas, South West London and St Georges and South London and Maudsley. In his role at the RCN, Stephen’s priorities include: driving the UK-wide parity-of-esteem agenda, supporting the mental wellbeing of the nursing workforce, as well as supporting, developing and promoting the work of the RCN Mental Health Forum.
Stephen is Co-Chair of the One Voice Group, a collective of Royal Colleges, professional bodies and associations from across the UK. The One Voice Group represents over one million health and social care staff working within the NHS and independent sector. We strive to be ‘one voice’, using our strategic strength and influence to collectively help tackle the prevailing issues of emotional and psychological wellbeing, faced by the health and social care workforce.
Contact the Mental Health Forum committee at: RCNMentalHealthForum@rcn.org.uk
Helen Rees
Senior Mental Health Nursing Lecturer, Nottingham Trent University
A new member of the forum committee, Helen qualified as a mental health nurse in 2009 and in 2011 as a specialist community public health nurse (health visitor). Since qualifying Helen has worked with young people (aged 0-25) and their families in both inpatient and community settings around Birmingham. Having always held a strong interest in nursing education Helen currently works as a senior mental health nursing lecturer at Nottingham Trent University, whilst still practicing clinically in acute mental health community services.
Helen is currently undertaking a doctorate looking at nursing education and the impact of core content on the mental health nursing field and is a member of Mental Health Nurse Academics UK. As someone with a strong belief in the power of nurses to reduce social injustice and improve care for people experiencing mental distress Helen sees the forum as a key part of achieving this. Twitter: @lavelleree
Page last updated - 12/07/2024