-
Considerable increase in the number of children
referred to mental health services – rise of 26 per cent in the
last 5 years.
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As many as 1 in 4 children referred to CAMHS in
England were rejected.
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A quarter of local authorities have phased out
vital support services, including school-based mental health
services, family counselling and support for those living with
domestic abuse.
-
Average waiting times for treatment have fallen –
yet remain twice as long as the government’s new standard
outlined in its mental health green paper.
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CAMHS data is often inconsistent and
inaccessible, with many providers failing to produce basic
information on services. Better government accountability
measures for reporting data are urgently
required.
A new
report by the Education Policy
Institute assesses the state of children’s mental health
services in England. The research examines access to specialist
services, waiting times for treatment, and provision for those
children that are not able to receive treatment.
The report uses Freedom of Information (FOI) requests to
providers of child and adolescent mental health services (CAMHS)
and local authorities in England.
Key findings
Referrals to children’s mental health
services
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The number of referrals to specialist
children's mental health services has increased by 26 per
cent over the last five years. This is a substantial
increase, indicating that services are coming under increasing
strain. This number has risen despite a population
decrease of 3 per cent.
-
Rejection rates remain high: as many as one in four
children (24.2 per cent) referred to specialist mental health
services were rejected in 2017/18. These rates
have failed to improve substantially over the last 5 years.
-
We estimate that there were at least 55,800
children not accepted into treatment in
2017/18. The real figure is likely to be far
higher as a number of providers did not disclose referral
numbers.
-
The most common reason for referrals being rejected was
that children’s mental health conditions were not serious
enough to meet the eligibility criteria for
treatment. Among those excluded by threshold
criteria were young people who had self-harmed or experienced
abuse.
-
Most providers do not follow up with children who have
been unable to access treatment. The outcomes for these
children are often unknown – with no consensus as
to who is responsible for supporting them.
-
Many areas of the country lack sufficient alternative
services for young people who have not been accepted for
treatment. As many
as a quarter of local authorities have
phased out vital support services, including
school-based mental health services, family counselling and
support for those living with domestic abuse.
Waiting times for children’s mental health
services
For those children with mental health problems who are accepted
into specialist services, many face a lengthy wait before their
treatment begins:
-
The average median waiting time for children in 2017/18
was 34 days to receive an initial assessment and 60 days to
receive treatment. This has been broadly stable
over recent years for assessment times, but has improved a
little for the longest times to treatment.
-
Many children still face unacceptably long waiting
times, and there are great disparities across
providers. The longest wait for treatment reported by
mental health service providers in England ranges from 188
days, to just 1 day. On average, children in London experience
the longest wait for specialist treatment (64 days) – while
those in the South of England have the shortest average wait
- 58 days.
-
Significantly, current waiting times are far longer
than the government’s new standard of 4 weeks, set out in
its green paper on children’s mental
health. Average waiting times are currently twice
as long as this proposed standard.
CAMHS data deficiencies hinder progress
-
There are many loopholes in the current system for
reporting and disclosing data for CAMHS in England under
Freedom of Information law, and many children's mental
health providers did not provide basic information on access to
services that we requested from them. Such practices
greatly obscure our understanding of the state of services in
England.
-
Privatised service provision poses further barriers to
transparency around publicly funded services, as
independent providers are exempt from the Freedom of
Information Act.
-
There may also be a risk of ‘gaming’ of waiting time
standards from some providers. There is a danger that
thresholds for securing treatment are raised to meet new
standards on waiting times – denying more children access to
support.
-
Broader, more consistent government accountability
measures for reporting data on CAMHS are therefore urgently
required, including clear definitions of
who is eligible for treatment. Failure to compel
universal reporting across service outcomes
may impede government plans to improve mental health
services for children and young people.
Commenting on the new research, Whitney Crenna-Jennings,
report author and Senior Researcher at the Education Policy
Institute, said:
“Our research finds no significant improvement in access to
children’s mental services over the last few years, with a number
of treatment gaps evident in a system that is coming under
increased pressure from rising referral rates.
“As many as one in every four children referred are denied
access to specialist mental health services, often
because their condition is not deemed serious enough to
warrant treatment. Those excluded from treatment include children
and young people that have self-harmed or experienced abuse.
“With a significant number of local authorities phasing out
crucial services that offer alternative support, these children
may find it increasingly difficult to access any formal help at
all”.
Rt. Hon , Executive Chairman of the
Education Policy Institute, said:
"This report shows a significant increase in demand for
children's mental health services over the last 5 years, even as
many local authorities are having to cut back on the services
they are providing - this is very worrying and could lead to
increased access problems.
"A large number of children referred to mental health
services are already rejected for treatment, and the follow up
for these children looks unsatisfactory.
"It is also disturbing that many mental health providers seem
unwilling or unable to provide even basic data on their services
- the government should take steps to compel all providers to
report regularly on their standards and performance, and this
data should be collected and reported nationally. Until we can
understand what is really happening on the front-line, it is
difficult to say whether government rhetoric about improving
mental health services is being matched by the real experience of
children and families."
Notes to editors
- This report includes results from Freedom of Information
(FOI) requests to providers of specialist child and adolescent
mental health services (CAMHS) in England.
- FOI requests were sent to 60 public child and adolescent
mental health services providers across England. We received 54
responses - a response rate of 90.0 per cent. However, several
providers disclosed information selectively, with many too often
reporting incomplete or unreliable data.
- The figure of 24.2% for referrals rejected was calculated
after accounting for missing data. The raw figure was 21.1%,
however due to eight providers failing to respond to requests for
this particular data, and one provider reporting an implausible
drop from our report last year (from 64.1 to 0 per cent), imputed
data from our 2017 report was
used, resulting in a rate of 24.2 per cent. This is well within
the 95 per cent confidence interval for last year’s
responses.
- FOI requests were also sent to all 152 local authorities. We
received 111 responses, a response rate of 73.0 per cent.