The Mental Health of Chinese Women in Britain 1945-2000

Date:
1999-2000
Reference:
GC/282
  • Archives and manuscripts

About this work

Description

The following is an interim description which may change when detailed cataloguing takes place in future:

Please note that this archive is largely made up of patient data that is highly sensitive in nature. When the archive is catalogued, the patient data will require closure for the lifetime of the data subjects in accordance with the 1998 Data Protection Act. We anticipate that it will not be possible to make patient records from the archive available for research before 2085 at the earliest.

Audio recordings and transcripts of interviews, along with questionnaires and other supporting documentation.

Publication/Creation

1999-2000

Physical description

Uncatalogued: 1 transfer box, 39 audio cassettes, 2 floppy disks and 27 digital files

Biographical note

The Mental Health of Chinese Women in Britain, 1945-2000, was a project run by Professor Gill Green at the University of Essex, and funded by the Economic and Social Research Council. Professor Green and her colleagues hypothesised that the low uptake of mental health services by Chinese women in Britain was due to issues such as long working hours, a gendered division of domestic labour, racist social exclusion, language barriers and migration stresses. The project also aimed to explore the use of alternative means of support, including traditional Chinese medicine and informal social support networks. The project ran from 1999-2000.

Related material

The research was published in 2002 and some of the data deposited with the UK Data Service: Eldridge, K., Green, G., Bradby, H., Lee, M. (2002). Mental Health of Chinese Women in Britain, 1945-2000. [data collection]. UK Data Service. SN: 4523, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-4523-1.

Terms of use

This collection is currently uncatalogued and cannot be ordered online. Requests to view uncatalogued material are considered on a case by case basis. Please contact collections@wellcomecollection.org for more details.

Permanent link

Identifiers

Accession number

  • 1065