The Sunday Telegraph

Mental health crisis risks new generation of worklessne­ss

Depression, anxiety and eating disorders are afflicting a high proportion of young people, reports

- Tim Wallace

Psychiatri­sts speak in the most dramatic terms when describing the explosion in demand for mental health services among young people. “It is horrendous and incredible,” says Dr Lade Smith. Depression, anxiety and eating disorders have all seen a “massive increase”, she says. “It has gone up enormously, particular­ly over the past three or four years since the pandemic.”

Britain is in the grip of a mental health crisis that has reached such a scale that it is now having an economic impact. Ministers have made tackling the issue – and helping people back to work – a priority. Yet the worrying prevalence of mental health issues among young people suggests the problem is deep-seated and could leave long-lasting economic scars.

“If you don’t treat the child, that child does not complete their GCSEs. If they don’t finish school, they don’t go to university,” says Smith. “If they don’t go to university, they are less likely to get a job that pays the wages that puts loads of money into tax coffers.”

Experts such as Smith believe more support is needed in schools to tackle the problem before children drop out of education.

The pandemic has fuelled the child mental health crisis but the problem did not start there. “For the past 10 or 15 years, we have had an increase in the percentage of people requiring mental health support,” says Smith, who focuses on treating young adults.

The reasons are complicate­d and numerous, she says, but they include the long economic impact of the financial crisis, which put families under strain, as well as the crippling effects of Covid and lockdown, which increased loneliness and isolation.

She also cites expensive and insecure housing as a factor, as well as the potential for social media to feed users a cycle of negative posts.

Treating so many people is tough and there are not enough doctors to meet the need. Almost one-fifth of consultant posts are vacant in the specialism, says Smith, who is also president of the Royal College of Psychiatri­sts. NHS numbers tell a similar story. Last year 1.2m people were on the waiting list for community mental health services. More than a quarter of a million children and young people referred to mental health services in 2022-23 were still waiting for support at the end of that period, the Children’s Commission­er for England has found.

Poor mental health is now so widespread it is becoming a drag on the economy. “The number of young people not working due to poor health has doubled in the past decade. People in their early 20s are now more likely than those in their early 40s to be out of work due to poor health. That is really quite striking,” says Louise Murphy, an economist at the Resolution Foundation. “It is very different to 25 years ago, when there was a very straightfo­rward trend that the older you got, the more likely you were to have poor health and therefore the more likely to be out of work.”

Worsening mental health is a key factor behind this trend.

Missing out on the early stages of a career can have lifelong effects on earning power, known to economists as “scarring”. In effect, people never catch up after missing out on these crucial early opportunit­ies.

Policymake­rs are worried and searching for solutions. However, at the moment it looks like the situation is only likely to get worse. A growing number of school children are suffering meaning that, unless something changes dramatical­ly, a new generation is likely to struggle when they leave education and, if they are well enough, seek work.

More than one in five pupils aged between eight and 16 are believed to have a “probable mental health disorder”, according to NHS surveys. That is up from one in eight before the pandemic. On top of that, an additional 12pc are deemed to have a “possible disorder”. The figure rises to nearly a quarter among older teenagers, aged from 17 to 19. In this group, almost one in three young women are thought to have a probable disorder.

Half of mental illnesses start before the age of 14, says Smith, with 75pc beginning by the age of 24. Early treatment can cure around one quarter of cases completely. Waiting for treatment risks leaving sufferers with chronic conditions and relapses.

Tackling this crisis, and associated worklessne­ss, has become a priority for the Government.

Employers are desperatel­y short of staff; there were more than 900,000 open vacancies at the start of the year, according to the Office for National Statistics.

Doing more to hire and keep those with mental health conditions in work would be good for the workers and good for the companies. Last month, Mel Stride, the Work and Pensions Secretary, unveiled plans to make 150,000 people signed off with mild mental health conditions look for work. “As a culture, we seem to have forgotten that work is good for mental health,” he said, in remarks which attracted some criticism.

“While I’m grateful for today’s much more open approach to mental health, there is a danger that this has gone too far. There is a real risk now that we are labelling the normal ups and downs of human life as medical conditions.”

The Government has announced multiple schemes aimed at helping people into work. Tony Wilson, director of the Institute for Employment Studies, says some initiative­s, such as the Individual Placement and Support in Primary Care Initiative, have yielded good results. The scheme sends employment advisers to help patients in hospital with job applicatio­ns alongside their normal treatment, with the aim of breaking the cycle of poor mental health and worklessne­ss.

“The integratio­n of employment advice with mental health talking therapies and mental health support is really important,” says Wilson. “It is achieving really significan­t impacts [that] bring real benefits to individual­s and the Exchequer, as the alternativ­e would usually be people staying off work for a very long time.”

The scheme requires both the Department for Work and Pensions and the Department for Health to work together.

Smith believes collaborat­ion such as this is central to tackling the mental health crisis among young people. The NHS must work with the education system to help identify and treat problems early.

More specialist support in schools is key, says Smith. Assessing pupils in situ allows “short, sharp treatment [so they can] get better and get back on with their lives”.

Murphy’s research found that four in five 18 to 24-year-olds who are out of work because of ill health have no qualificat­ion beyond GCSEs.

The situation can become selfreinfo­rcing.

No work means no extra experience or on-the-job training, making it harder to get on the career ladder. No work breeds isolation and can be bad for mental health.

“Work is good for your health,” Smith says, “as long as it is meaningful, useful, you know what your role is, and you can be productive.”

Financiall­y, it also helps fund a better lifestyle that can improve your health: paying for gym membership, say, or relaxing holidays.

Smith says: “If you want UK plc to be successful, you have to have children who become adolescent­s who become functionin­g adults.”

A Government spokesman said its £2.5bn back-to-work plan was helping people with mental health conditions “break down barriers to work and put an additional 384,000 people through NHS talking therapies”.

They added that it continues to “roll out mental health support teams in schools and colleges, investing £8m in 24 early support hubs and expanding talking therapies services”.

‘People in their early 20s are now more likely than those in their early 40s to be out of work over health’

‘Work is good for your health, as long as it’s meaningful, useful and you know what your role is’

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