The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Psychiatri­sts warn vulnerable young Scots are at risk because of underfundi­ng

- By Laura Smith lasmith@sundaypost.com

Funding for Scotland’s children and young people mental health services is a “drop in the ocean” of what is needed and fails to match an escalating need for specialist support, experts warned yesterday.

Dr Elaine Lockhart, chair of the child and adolescent faculty at the Royal College of Psychiatri­sts in Scotland, says investment is not enough to meet a growing demand on child and adolesence mental health services (CAMHS).

She said: “We’re aware of the need for improved mental health services for children and young people, but this is not being matched by funding across Scotland.

“We need to be asking health boards how much they spend on CAMHS which is woefully underfunde­d, especially when compared with physical healthcare services.

“There is always the risk that any new money coming to children’s services is taken out of local mental health budgets, which is less than 10% of the overall NHS spend.”

Dr Lockhart’s comments came after an investigat­ion by The Post exposed the devastatin­g consequenc­es of failing to offer swift, specialist support to vulnerable young people. Leading clinicians told us CAMHS is over-stretched and losing skilled staff. Less than 1% of the entire NHS workforce is dedicated to CAMHS, with staff struggling to cope with everincrea­sing caseloads.

The Royal College of Psychiatri­sts recently launched its Choose Psychiatry campaign in Scotland, to encourage more trainee doctors to study psychiatry as a speciality.

Dr Lockhart added: “There is huge variation in the CAMHS workforce levels across the country which does not reflect the population need. Caseloads of individual clinicians are even more variable, and we are losing good colleagues who are overwhelme­d with demand.”

Julie O’donnell, operations director of the charity Love Learning and speaking for the Scottish Children’s Services Coalition, echoed concern saying urgent ction is needed.

She said: “Currently around 50p in every £ 100 of NHS spending goes to child and adolescent mental health services, a drop in the ocean of what’s needed. Yet we know that one in ten children has a diagnosabl­e mental health problem and that is increasing.

“With increased numbers of those experienci­ng mental health problems, as well as those whose existent conditions are being worsened due to the pandemic, coupled with further cuts in services, this points to a perfect storm in mental health care for young people.”

“Mental health services must be given funding and resources equal to that of physical health provision. The pandemic means this is even more urgent.”

In 2018/ 19, the Scottish Government allocated £ 67.2 million to the children and adolescenc­e mental health services (CAMHS), a 4% increase on the previous year. The sum represente­d 0.56% of its overall NHS budget and 6.61% of the mental health budget and was with distribute­d across 14 health boards.

Lisa Bond, whose daughter Aaliyah took her own life in 2015 aged 13, was among the grieving parents who shared their story in The Post.

She said: “There needs to be a huge focus on mental health, especially at a young age. We need to make sure young people get the support so their families don’t go through this.”

The Scottish Government said NHS spend on CAMHS in Scotland has increased year-onyear since 2011 and by 182.7% since 2006, adding: “Even in the face of the obvious operationa­l difficulti­es caused by Covid, we have worked hard to ensure that CAMHS services are now operating at pre- COVID levels and continue to improve.”

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 ??  ?? Only 50p in £100 goes to child mental health care
Only 50p in £100 goes to child mental health care

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