More than 15,000 Nottinghamshire children in contact with mental health services

More than 15,000 children in Nottingham and Nottinghamshire were in contact with mental health services in the year to September, new figures show.
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It comes as more children than ever accessed mental health services across England, with the number of open referrals having almost doubled throughout the coronavirus pandemic.

Mental health charity YoungMinds said the Government is failing to take action against a ‘deepening’ crisis.

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NHS Digital figures show around 17,175 children in the former NHS Nottingham and Nottinghamshire CCG area were in contact with mental health services in the year to September.

More than 15,000 children are accessing mental health services in Nottingham and Nottinghamshire. Photo: OtherMore than 15,000 children are accessing mental health services in Nottingham and Nottinghamshire. Photo: Other
More than 15,000 children are accessing mental health services in Nottingham and Nottinghamshire. Photo: Other

Nationally, 710,000 children accessed mental health support – the highest observed figure since comparable records began in March 2021.

Meanwhile, the number of children with an open referral has rocketed during the pandemic.

Some 465,000 children waiting for a mental health appointment following a referral at the end of September – up from 250,000 at the end of September 2019.

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In Nottingham and Nottinghamshire, 9,385 children had an open referral at the end of September

Laura Bunt, chief executive at YoungMinds, said: "Instead of action, young people get broken promises in the form of scrapped plans and missed opportunities.

"We need the Government to turn the tide on this emergency – it must commit to reducing prevalence and tackle the reasons why so many young people are struggling with their mental health."

"We need an ambitious plan that matches the scale of need focusing on prevention, investment and improving services.

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Further NHS Digital figures show children in England aged between 11 and 16 with a probable mental disorder were five times more likely to have been bullied in person and four times more likely to be bullied online.

Meanwhile, more than one in four children with a probable mental disorder had a parent who could not afford activities outside school.

Claire Murdoch, NHS mental health director, said: "NHS staff are working harder than ever to meet the increased demand and we have fast-tracked mental health support for millions of pupils in schools and colleges, as well as significantly expanding the children’s mental health workforce."

The Department for Health and Social Care also said it will invest an additional £2.3 billion a year in mental health services, meaning an additional 345,000 children and young people can access support.