Abstract
Purpose - This paper aims to provide a profile of Andrew Voyce.
Design/methodology/approach - Andrew gives a short biography and is then interviewed by Jerome. Areas covered in the interview include the central role of Mrs Thatcher in closing down the old asylums, homelessness, education, benefits and digital art.
Findings - Andrew's recovery from long term mental health problems has seen him return to higher education. He failed to get his undergraduate degree, but decades later and with the encouragement of workers in the community, he completed both undergraduate and postgraduate studies. He talks of the negative impact of asylum care, especially the terrible side effect of akathisia, which resulted from the depot neuroleptic medication.
Originality/value - This paper shows a remarkable journey of recovery, from a life of being a "revolving door'' patient, to homelessness, to re-establishing an ordinary life in the community. The inmate's perspective is one that has largely been absent from narratives of asylum care.