Bella Jackson has worked in mental health since 2010. She is a registered Mental Health Nurse and Integrative Psychotherapeutic Counsellor. Her previous roles were as a Key Worker for Mind and Kids Company; a Nurse Consultant for Save the Children; a Family Support Worker in London prisons and with detainees seeking asylum; an Independent Mental Health Advocate (IMHA); and as a Mental Health and Neurodiversity Advisor at the University of Oxford. Bella currently practices as a private therapist, a Specialist Mental Health Mentor, and as a mental health advisor and practitioner in the theatre industry.
Fragile Minds is beautiful and restrained, sensitive and powerful. Bella Jackson tells incredible human stories with wisdom and insight. This is a very compassionate book. One that opens up a righteous anger at a system that's failing. -- Professor Simukai Chigudu author of upcoming When Will We Be Free? Fragile minds is a book of powerful significance. It’s beautiful and compelling, urgent and compassionate, often distressing but ultimately hopeful. By giving voice to the users of our mental health service the author calls our attention to our largest unmet health need. She opens up our minds to a key question: how would we feel if we were in need of this care? -- Prof Jim Lucey MD, Inspector of Mental Health Services, Mental Health Commission IE A shocking, intimate portrayal of psychiatric nurse training in the UK. This book will rock your complacency towards how we understand and treat mental health, and of what we know about personal suffering. It will break your heart, and perhaps in that cracking open you will rally with its author to work for change. In vivid and sensitive prose, Bella Jackson paints a compassionate yet disturbing portrait of a system more ill than those it claims to help. A must read for anyone concerned about our whole society’s wellbeing. -- Tessa McWatt, author of Shame On Me I loved this book. Its power is giving a real insight into a world that many of us are unfamiliar with but that we need to understand. Mental health is something that affects us all, and Fragile Minds makes you realise how we just haven’t funded it correctly, and how important it is for everyone to have a proper and functioning mental health service. We spend so much time speaking about wellbeing, but this book shows how far we have to come in making sure that when we stumble, there is something solid there to catch us. -- Cherry Healey