The Scotsman

Report lays bare ‘crisis in children’s mental health’

- By DAN O’DONOGHUE

Ministers have been urged to address the “crisis in children’s mental health” after a Children’s Society report revealed that around one in four 14-yearold girls self-harms.

The charity’s annual Good Childhood Report, which examines the state of children’s well-being in the UK, found that out of the 11,000 children surveyed one in six reported self-harming at 14.

Based on these figures, the Children’s Society estimates that nearly 110,000 children aged 14 may have self-harmed across the UK during the same 12-month period, including 76,000 girls and 33,000 boys.

One young person told the charity: “I felt like selfharmin­g was what I wanted to do and had to do as there was nothing else I could do. I think there is help for young people but not the right kind of help.

“Feeling not pretty enough or good enough as other girls did contribute towards my self-harming, however, I don’t feel just being a girl is the reason as I think boys feel the same way too.”

Almost half of 14-yearolds who said they had been attracted to people of the same gender or both genders said they had self-harmed (46 per cent), analysis revealed.

Children’s Society chief executive Matthew Reed said: “It is deeply worrying that so many children are unhappy to the extent that they are self-harming.

“Worries about how they look are a big issue, especially for girls, but this report shows other factors such as how they feel about their sexuality and gender stereotype­s may be linked to their unhappines­s.”

Dr Max Davie, officer for health promotion for the Royal College of Paediatric­s and Child Health, said: “Education around issues like appearance, gender stereotype­s and sexuality is also desperatel­y needed and should be included in the new relationsh­ips and sex education curriculum. This country’s mental health crisis is not going to go away overnight, but with appropriat­e action from government, there is hope that fewer children will have mental health worries and be happier with their life as a result.”

The Good Childhood Report draws on the Children’s Society’s annual survey of 10-to17-year-old children and their parents from 2,000 socioecono­mically representa­tive households in England, Scotland and Wales. The report also uses the Millennium Cohort Survey, which follows the lives of 11,144 children born in the UK in 2000-01.

“Feeling not pretty enough or good enough as other girls did contribute towards my selfharmin­g”

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