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Children’s mental health services need ‘rocket boost’ in funding

Children’s mental health services need a ‘rocket boost’ in funding if they are to support the one in six children in England who have a probable mental health condition – as well as those suffering the consequences of the pandemic, the Children’s Commissioner has warned.
The Children's Commissioner report highlights the impact that Covid has had on children's mental health
The Children's Commissioner report highlights the impact that Covid has had on children's mental health

At the launch of her fourth annual report on the state of services in England, Anne Longfield called for a large-scale increase for children’s mental health services, including an NHS-funded counsellor in every school in England, as well as online well-being support.

The report examines the progress that has been made over the past five years (up until the end of last March), as well as the impact the Covid crisis has had on children’s mental health.

It finds that a cocktail of education disruption, isolation from friends, limited chances to play and worry about the impact of the virus on their families had taken a heavy toll on some children.

While there has been an expansion of children’s mental health services over the past four years, the poor starting point was so poor that services are still ‘nowhere near’ meeting the needs of many hundreds of thousands of children, it states.

In the year before the pandemic, referrals to children’s mental health services increased by 35 per cent while the number of children accessing treatment increased by just four per cent.

A large study, undertaken by the NHS in July 2020, found that clinically significant mental health conditions among children had risen by 50 percent compared to three years earlier, with one in six children now having a probable mental health condition.

The report states that there has already been a spike in referrals to NHS services during autumn 2020, and it is likely that the level of underlying mental health problems will remain significantly higher as a result of the pandemic.

Ms Longfied said, ‘Even before the Covid pandemic, we faced an epidemic of children’s mental health problems in England and a children’s mental health service that, though improving significantly, was still unable to provide the help hundreds of thousands of children required.

‘It is widely accepted that lockdown and school closures have had a detrimental effect on the mental health of many children. Since the NHS study in July 2020 estimating one in six children in England have a probable mental health condition, we have had another long lockdown. Sadly, this will be causing even more damage to many children’s mental well-being and putting even greater strains on mental health services, potentially for years to come.

‘That is why in the short term it is so important the Government sets out a roadmap that helps schools to reopen over the coming weeks.'

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