‘One stop shops’ can transform youth mental health support
COVID 19 is affecting the mental health of many people across the country and many are predicting that we are poised for a major mental health crisis in Wales.
We don’t really know how many people might currently be in need of mental health support.
A new study by Swansea and Cardiff Universities shows that Wales faces a wave of mental health problems in the wake of Covid-19, with younger adults, women and people from deprived areas suffering the most.
Young people are being increasingly affected by Covid restrictions and self-isolation requirements. Waiting times for non-Covid services are getting longer and longer.
That is why Plaid Cymru has unveiled a plan for youth mental health ‘one stop shops’ to support young people’s mental wellbeing.
A Plaid Cymru Government would establish Wales-wide hubs to provide mental health support for young people.
The hubs would offer early intervention for young people who are not ill enough to require advanced psychiatric treatment, yet require support for their mental health. They would offer pre-arranged counselling and could deal with emergencies and other walk-ins.
The “one stop shop” hubs would transform the way young people access support for their mental health, and, in being linked to other health services, would help join up an increasingly fragmented service.
The fully costed scheme mirrors a similar concept launched in New Zealand, with town-centre locations offering services by physicians, nurses, counsellors, social workers and youth staff.
Huge changes are needed in terms of services that are available and access to them. Plaid’s one-stop shop hubs will be a key part of that transformation of services for young people.
The focus will be on mental health and wellbeing.
These hubs would offer counselling both by appointment but also – crucially – on a walk-in basis. We already have walk-in services for physical problems in our A&E departments, so it’s only right that there should be walk-in services for those experiencing mental health problems.
No young person should be left feeling like they have no support, especially following one of the biggest periods of upheaval in living memory.
Left unchecked, poor mental health in childhood and adolescence is linked to mental health problems in adulthood, and so it’s really important to make early interventions easy accessible to any young person that needs them.