The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on Camhs in crisis: young people need more help

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Children’s mental health services in England are overstretc­hed to the point where young people in some areas are waiting up to two years for treatment. A recent survey of GPs by the charity stem4 found that half said most of their referrals of young people for conditions including anxiety and depression are rejected. One child and adolescent mental health service (Camhs) refused to take on a boy found with a ligature in his room because the fact that he had no marks on his neck meant that he did not meet the threshold for treatment. Figures obtained via a freedom of informatio­n request show average waiting times for autism referrals of a yearand-a-half at Coventry and Warwickshi­re NHS trust, with one child kept waiting for five years.

Perhaps the range of mental health conditions, and the fact that so many people experience symptoms or episodes over their lifetimes, help to explain how these services have been allowed to deteriorat­e to the point that they have done without a louder public outcry – or closer scrutiny of what is going on. Attention to healthcare has understand­ably been focused principall­y on hospitals and Covid over the past two years. The NHS across the UK is understood to be facing an unpreceden­ted crisis of unmeetable demand.

But a decade after a Conservati­veled government made the promise that mental illness would have “parity of esteem” with physical illness, it is hugely dismaying that nothing seems further from the truth. “It is so appalling in our area it may as well not exist” was one GP’s descriptio­n of a Yorkshire Camhs. Mental illness should be treated in people of all ages. But children waiting such long periods should concern us particular­ly, given the emotional and educationa­l significan­ce of childhood.

The impact of domestic violence and parental mental illness remain the most frequent reasons for children being referred to councils’ specialist services. The danger now is that rising poverty levels, as energy and other prices rise while benefits have been cut, will only exacerbate such needs. Already, government statistics show a 25% increase in the number of young people with a mental health need – from 61,830 in 2019 to 77,390 last year.

Cuts imposed under austerity led to reductions in the number of highly skilled staff. While funding has since increased, the early interventi­on and community programmes that were removed have not been adequately replaced. Camhs staff report that nearly all their time is spent on identifyin­g problems and managing risks – and almost none on delivering the treatments for which they were trained. Huge regional variations in spending are the result of the different priority accorded to young people’s mental health by clinical commission­ing groups, whose decision-making is often opaque. Short-term initiative­s too often take the place of sustained investment, including in staff.

The narrative of Covid’s impact on children is unfinished, and in parts contradict­ory. There is no doubt that damage has been caused, with widespread reports of anxiety and developmen­tal difficulti­es. But deciding at what point a child’s unhappines­s should be classed as a problem requiring profession­al help is not always straightfo­rward. And there are multiple other factors, with rising concerns around the impact of social media use, particular­ly on teenage girls with their susceptibi­lity to eating disorders, predating the pandemic. Young refugees, including those arriving from Ukraine, are another group needing support.

Mental illness remains a complex and contested area. Social determinan­ts affect all aspects of our health, but the impact on mental health of poor housing and low incomes is clear. Strengthen­ed children’s services and ringfenced funding should form part of the forthcomin­g mental health strategy. New protection­s in the online safety bill should be introduced as quickly as possible. But as long as the government rejects policies that would lift millions of families out of poverty, it is hard to see the outlook for the most vulnerable young people improving.

 ?? Photograph: Fiordaliso/Getty Images ?? ‘The narrative of Covid’s impact on children is unfinished, and in parts contradict­ory.’
Photograph: Fiordaliso/Getty Images ‘The narrative of Covid’s impact on children is unfinished, and in parts contradict­ory.’

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