Colleges join to improve young people’s mental health

The Royal Colleges of GPs (RCGP), Paediatrics and Child Health (RCPCH), and Psychiatrists (RCPsych) have committed to five shared principles that they hope will improve the care and support of children and young people (CYP) with mental health problems.

The three colleges say that as well as the commissioning of specialist treatment, an effective CYP mental health service requires: acknowledgement that CYP mental health is everybody’s business and should be supported by a shared vision across all government departments; a preventative, multi-agency approach to mental health across all ages, incorporating attention to education for young people and families, social determinants and health promotion; a system of national and local accountability for population0level CYP mental health and well-being; training and education for the entire children’s workforce; and more support for professionals dealing with CYP who do not meet referral threshold to a Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service (CAMHS).

The three colleges have committed to a number of ongoing actions following the development of the joint principles. These include: ensuring the highest quality training and standards in CYP mental health; supporting the department of evidence based models of care that are focused on integration of care; and calling for greater investment and resources to focus on developing services in CYP friendly settings that promote early intervention and resilience.

Farah Mughal, clinical fellow for mental health for the RCGP, said: “An estimated 850,000 children and young people have mental health problems in the UK, yet only a quarter receive specialist intervention they need. We desperately need more, and more varied, mental health services in the community, where they can be of most benefit for our patients – and GPs need to have better and quicker access to these services for our patients.

"NHS England's GP Forward View pledged for every GP practice to have access to one of 3,000 new mental health therapists. We need this, and its other promises - including £2.4 billion extra a year for general practice and 5,000 more GPs - to be delivered as a matter of urgency, so that we can continue to provide the best possible mental health care to our young patients."

Max Davie, mental health lead at the RCPCH, said: "We are failing children and young people and condemning them to a potential lifetime of mental ill health if we don't acknowledge that mental health is everybody’s business and requires a coordinated approach across many agencies. It is shocking that 75 per cent of children and young people with mental health problems aren’t receiving the specialist interventions they need – and it’s a problem that’s only set to get worse.

"Getting it right for young people's mental health means putting resources into early intervention and prevention; building resilience amongst young people, ensuring the children’s workforce as a whole is trained to spot the signs of mental ill health and refer to appropriate services, and crucially making sure local areas have robust plans and adequate resource to provide appropriate local support.”

Bernadka Dubicka, chair of the child and adolescent faculty at RCPsych, said: "Too many children and young people are falling through the gaps. Our NHS is so overstretched, they are unable to access care. Patients either aren't getting the help they need, when they need it, or they are being sent hundreds of miles from home and family for treatment – a practice we know hinders their recovery.

"We know that money isn't reaching the frontline for CAMHS – our analysis of NHS England Mental Health Dashboards found that 10 CCGs were planning to spend less than £10 a head on children's mental health. This is simply unacceptable.

"To meet the increasing demand for child and adolescent mental health services in our country, we need a greater workforce. The RCPsych is calling for 350 more child psychiatrists, and welcomes the government’s forthcoming green paper as a further opportunity to invest in CAMHS."

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This story was first published in digitalhealth.net

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