The Kansas City Star (Sunday)

Missouri kids are in mental health crisis. This bill would help

- BY EMMA KENNEY Emma Kenney is a graduate student of social work with a specializa­tion in strengthen­ing children, youth and families. She lives in Berkeley, California, and works in a community mental health clinic.

In the United States, youth mental health has only gotten worse. In Missouri, it is a crisis.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than 1 in 3 high school students reported poor mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic. The CDC also reports that suicide is now the second leading cause of death in youth ages 15-19.

In Missouri, Children’s Mercy Kansas City reports seeing an average of 24 children each day for mental or behavioral health emergencie­s. According to data from the federal Health Resources and Service Administra­tion, 110 of Missouri’s 114 counties are designated as mental health profession­al shortage areas, including every county in the Kansas City metropolit­an area.

These numbers should shock us, outrage us and concern us deeply.

Parents, teachers, doctors and mental health profession­als are underresou­rced and unprepared to deal with this sudden influx of mental health concerns. Children and teens in Missouri desperatel­y need solutions.

Fortunatel­y, schoolbase­d mental health interventi­ons show promise as an effective way to support both children and families.

As a former Missouri K-12 student, it was surprising to me when I discovered that many schools across the nation are already utilizing licensed mental health profession­als to provide schoolbase­d therapy, support groups and resources for families. This was not an opportunit­y that I had available to me as I navigated the transition from childhood to adolescenc­e. However, it would have benefited me and many of my peers greatly.

Currently, many schools are forced to rely on school counselors, nurses, teachers and administra­tors to fill in gaps related to mental health and social and emotional learning, despite many of them receiving little training or support. This situation only exacerbate­s burnout among school profession­als and fails to provide students with the foundation they need to be successful as adults.

It is time to put concerted effort into integratin­g mental health into school settings and a bill introduced in the Missouri House of Representa­tives offers just the path to do so. House Bill 2858 was introduced in February by state Rep. Yolanda Young of Jackson County’s District 22. The bill would allow any Missouri public school to apply to the

Department of Elementary and Secondary Education for a state financial supplement to pay for a school mental health profession­al. The department would have the discretion to offer funding to schools with the greatest need. Those would be defined as schools that have a mental health profession­al-to-student ratio above the recommenda­tion made by the department, schools with a high percentage of students receiving Title 1 funding, and schools with a high percentage of students eligible for free and reduced lunch.

This is a straightfo­rward approach targeting the most disadvanta­ged communitie­s and school districts in Missouri, many of which cannot afford to pay for mental health profession­als themselves. The bill would promote students’ access to mental health care and reduce the burden that families, school employees and medical profession­als face trying to meet the everincrea­sing need for childhood mental health care.

I have always found that one of the greatest strengths of my hometown Kansas City is that people care deeply about their families and children. It is time to extend that care to all children across the state and meet their mental health needs with both compassion and action.

 ?? Shuttersto­ck ?? Children’s Mercy Kansas City reports seeing an average of 24 children each day for mental or behavioral health emergencie­s.
Shuttersto­ck Children’s Mercy Kansas City reports seeing an average of 24 children each day for mental or behavioral health emergencie­s.
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