Kent Messenger Maidstone

‘Unrelentin­g’ mental health caseload

- By Ciaran Duggan Local Democracy Reporter @KM_newsroom

‘The growth in the caseload - how are we going to be able to keep pace with that?’

Kent is engulfed in an “unrelentin­g” mental health crisis, with providers struggling to cope with spiralling caseloads and one person sent 240 miles for treatment.

One councillor revealed last week that someone had to travel from Sevenoaks to Manchester to get the support they needed.

It comes after we reported in February how a 13-year-old girl was sent from Whitstable to Manchester for treatment.

At the time mum Claire Oliver, who was forced to spend all her savings to visit her daughter, said the system was “broken and was breaking people”.

Around 15,000 patients are relying on mental health support across the south east and London, described as a “significan­t caseload” by NHS bosses.

Referrals have risen from around 85 children per month in March 2021 to 140 in February 2022 at North East London Foundation Trust (NELFT). This marks a jump of 65% in the last financial year amid the pandemic.

Kent County Council (KCC), which commission­s the service along with the Kent and Med

way Clinical Commission­ing Group (CCG), reviewed the “crisis” at a public meeting last week.

KCC’s shadow cabinet member for public health, Cllr Karen Constantin­e (Lab), said: “The growth in the caseload - how are we going to be able to keep pace with that?”

NELFT says it is meeting

the challenges and mobilised quickly to manage the increase, which has been described as “unrelentin­g” in one of their reports published to the panel last week.

More investment has been made into enhancing the workforce. New projects are being created, such as giving help to youngsters growing up with a

sibling who has a lifelong disability and more counsellin­g access.

Outdoor activities like gardening are being explored, along with art and music therapy, according to NELFT chiefs.

Gill Burns, who is the interim deputy director at NELFT, said: “It can be really instrument­al in their recovery, how they express

themselves. We actively encourage that as an organisati­on.”

But Sevenoaks Town county councillor Richard Streatfiel­d (Lib Dem) described the current situation as a “crisis”.

One Sevenoaks resident ended up travelling to Manchester to get mental health support, he said. The delays gave “considerab­le” cause for concern.

Cllr Streatfiel­d said: “The requiremen­t of NELFT is growing exponentia­lly faster than it is able to deal with. There are no easy choices.”

New services have been commission­ed in the last six months to respond to the increasing demand from children and young people within Kent.

They include specialist bereavemen­t services, emotional support for children and a rise in the number of autism and diagnostic assessment­s.

Meanwhile, Cllr Andrew Kennedy (Con), who is one of Kent’s mental health champions, said he is “worried” about the “hidden demand” of adolescent­s not coming forward.

Calling for a deeper dive, he said: “My main concern is of young people, particular­ly adolescent boys, who are the hardest to reach. I fear that stigma for a 14- and 15-year-old boy admitting he needs support.”

 ?? ?? Cllr Karen Constantin­e asked how the 65% increase in children needing help will be tackled
Cllr Karen Constantin­e asked how the 65% increase in children needing help will be tackled
 ?? ?? Claire Oliver, from Seasalter, previously told how her daughter was sent to Manchester for treatment
Claire Oliver, from Seasalter, previously told how her daughter was sent to Manchester for treatment

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