This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Forensic Psychiatry and Psychology on 24/05/2016, available online: 10.1080/14789949.2016.1187760Health and social care professionals are gatekeepers to, and custodians of, confidential service user information. In the United Kingdom (UK), police investigations have unveiled cases of payments being made to public service officials by journalists in return for service user information. The purpose of this discussion is to investigate such cases in the context of high security forensic care. This paper provides a discussion drawing upon two UK-based case studies of prosecutions of public service workers relating to the sale of confidential information. Th...
This evidence-based opinion piece explores the totalising risk averse nature of secure and forensic ...
This article addresses the question: ‘What can popular culture know?’ via an examination of the crit...
We present two studies examining the role of the British press in promoting heuristic-based decision...
© 2017 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. Media reportage about forensic mental ...
Haggerty (2009) argues that serial killing is essentially a phenomenon of modernity. One of the key ...
Ensuring confidentiality is the cornerstone of trust within the doctor–patient relationship. However...
Oregon's forensic psychiatry hospital experienced a convulsing chain of events that began with ...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Criminal Justice Matte...
This article explains a collaborative and critically reflective journalism research project stemming...
In this article we examine how forensic mental health service users actively attempt to manage their...
This thesis is a sociological analysis of the role of executive discretion in decisions about the re...
Should psychiatrists be able to speculate in the press or social media about their theories? John Ga...
Guidance on service user involvement is available to help researchers working with people with menta...
The General Medical Council decides if, when they are convicted of a crime, a doctor in the United K...
Recent scandals in UK undercover policing have prompted a public re-examination of the basis for con...
This evidence-based opinion piece explores the totalising risk averse nature of secure and forensic ...
This article addresses the question: ‘What can popular culture know?’ via an examination of the crit...
We present two studies examining the role of the British press in promoting heuristic-based decision...
© 2017 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. Media reportage about forensic mental ...
Haggerty (2009) argues that serial killing is essentially a phenomenon of modernity. One of the key ...
Ensuring confidentiality is the cornerstone of trust within the doctor–patient relationship. However...
Oregon's forensic psychiatry hospital experienced a convulsing chain of events that began with ...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Criminal Justice Matte...
This article explains a collaborative and critically reflective journalism research project stemming...
In this article we examine how forensic mental health service users actively attempt to manage their...
This thesis is a sociological analysis of the role of executive discretion in decisions about the re...
Should psychiatrists be able to speculate in the press or social media about their theories? John Ga...
Guidance on service user involvement is available to help researchers working with people with menta...
The General Medical Council decides if, when they are convicted of a crime, a doctor in the United K...
Recent scandals in UK undercover policing have prompted a public re-examination of the basis for con...
This evidence-based opinion piece explores the totalising risk averse nature of secure and forensic ...
This article addresses the question: ‘What can popular culture know?’ via an examination of the crit...
We present two studies examining the role of the British press in promoting heuristic-based decision...