Oh, look at this. Mental illness rising in under-18s. Who would have thought?
And this isn't just a few more cases of ADHD, this is the serious stuff. Suicidal people, MDD, Schizophrenia and nervous breakdowns. (A simplified and far from exhaustive or descriptive list)
I'll put the full article in a spoiler and single out some of the more important chunks.[spoiler]An increasing number of under-18s with mental health problems in England are being treated on adult psychiatric wards, it has emerged.
And many children are having to travel hundreds of miles across the country to receive hospital treatment.
Treating young people in such units should only happen in exceptional circumstances. The Department of Health had promised this would stop by 2010.
The DoH said children and young people's mental health was a priority.
Using Freedom of Information requests, the BBC and online journal Community Care found the number of under-18s being treated in adult units was in its hundreds - and rising.
Continue reading the main story
Under-18s admitted to adult mental health wards
2013-14: 350 (to date)
2012-13: 257
2011-12: 242
Continue reading the main story
Under-16s admitted to adult mental health wards
2013-14: 12 (to date)
2012-13: 3
2011-12: 3
Data returned by 51 of the 58 NHS mental health trusts in England showed that 350 under-18s have been admitted so far to adult mental health wards in 2013-14, compared with 242 two years earlier.
The figures also reveal that 12 under-16s have been admitted so far in 2013/14, compared with just three in 2011-12.
Out of 18 trusts that provided out-of-area placement data, 10 had sent children more than 150 miles away for care.
The furthest distance was from Sussex to Bury, Greater Manchester - 275 miles. Sussex Partnership NHS Foundation Trust said it had to make the admission because there was no bed available nearer home.
Data obtained from the Care Quality Commission confirmed that the social care regulator had received an alert about a 12-year-old being admitted to an adult psychiatric unit.
'Inappropriate facilities'
Continue reading the main story
'Don't leave me'
mother affected
A mother of a 12-year-old girl tells how her daughter was sent from her home in Hull to a psychiatric unit in Stafford, 130 miles away.
The child stayed there for a month and her mother visited 13 times. The girl is still in hospital, but now in Sheffield.
"One time she got upset because she didn't want me to go and they had to prise her off me.
"They put her in a room and as I was leaving the unit she was shouting out the window, 'Mummy, Mummy, don't leave me, please. Don't leave me, Mummy'.
"It's not just like breaking an arm, it's emotionally draining. And to cope with that as well as having to travel - it's the most difficult thing a mother could ever have to deal with."
Dr Michael McClure, consultant child psychiatrist and clinical director of children's and adolescent's mental health services at Central and North West London NHS Foundation Trust, said doctors were faced with this problem every week.
"Sometimes we have to make 50 to 100 phone calls around the country looking for a bed. They [young people] shouldn't be shunted around into inappropriate facilities, however much the staff there try to help them," said Dr McClure.
"It may be the first time they've had a breakdown. They need to stay in touch with the people they know and love, and if they're having to move 200 or 300 miles, it's very difficult for the family to stay in touch."
Dr McClure said funding for mental health services had been cut, particularly for child and adolescent services in the community.
"That means there is more difficultly in looking after these young people in the community so there is greater pressure on the inpatient services," he said.
He added there was "no joined-up thinking" between those centrally who commission inpatient services and GP commissioners who commission community services.
'A strange place'
Nicola, 16, from London, has been admitted to a mental health ward on four occasions, the first time was when she was 14.
Each time she was sent more than an hour from home, making it difficult for her father - her primary carer - to visit and impossible for her friends.
She said it was "uncomfortable and unsettling" and often frightening.
Nicola Mattocks was 14 when she was placed in a unit up to 30 miles away from where she lived
"I couldn't see my dad as often as I'd like and my friends couldn't get there as it was so far away. I felt quite alienated," she said.
'Unacceptable'
A spokesman for the DoH said the experience could "very distressing" for children and their families.
Continue reading the main story
“Start Quote
The lack of help early on means we are letting children's problems escalate to serious levels”
Sarah Brennan Chief executive, Young Minds
"Our mental health crisis care concordat reinforces the duty on the NHS to make sure that people under 18 are treated in an environment suitable for their age, according to their needs," he said.
He said the DoH had invested £54m to improve services "through better monitoring, sharing best practice and improving access to specialist talking therapies for young people".
Dr Jacqueline Cornish, NHS England's national clinical director for children, young people and transition to adulthood, said treating children with mental health problems in adult settings was "totally unacceptable in the majority of cases".
NHS England is conducting a three-month "rapid review" into the situation, she added.
Sarah Brennan, chief executive of the charity Young Minds, said the increase in children placed on adult wards was predictable following cuts to early intervention services over the last four years.
"The lack of help early on means we are letting children's problems escalate to serious levels," she said.
"This, alongside the lack of accurate data about the mental health needs of our nation's children and young people, means commissioning has been based on out-of-date, inaccurate information, leading to out-of-date provision."[/spoiler]
A 12 year old has been admitted to one of these hospitals.
[quote]Data obtained from the Care Quality Commission confirmed that the social care regulator had received an alert about a 12-year-old being admitted to an adult psychiatric unit.[/quote]
Doctors having to make 50 to 100 phonecalls to find a god damn bed for their patients
[quote]Dr Michael McClure, consultant child psychiatrist and clinical director of children's and adolescent's mental health services at Central and North West London NHS Foundation Trust, said doctors were faced with this problem every week.
"Sometimes we have to make 50 to 100 phone calls around the country looking for a bed. They [young people] shouldn't be shunted around into inappropriate facilities, however much the staff there try to help them," said Dr McClure.[/quote]
The best way to care for the mentally ill, is to move them 300 miles away from their friends and family... wait, what?
[quote]"It may be the first time they've had a breakdown. They need to stay in touch with the people they know and love, and if they're having to move 200 or 300 miles, it's very difficult for the family to stay in touch."
Dr McClure said funding for mental health services had been cut, particularly for child and adolescent services in the community.
"That means there is more difficultly in looking after these young people in the community so there is greater pressure on the inpatient services," he said.[/quote]
A spokesman for the Department of Health blows hot air out of his shrektum
[quote]"Our mental health crisis care concordat reinforces the duty on the NHS to make sure that people under 18 are treated in an environment suitable for their age, according to their needs," he said.
He said the DoH had invested £54m to improve services "through better monitoring, sharing best practice and improving access to specialist talking therapies for young people". [/quote]
£54 Million might seem like a lot, but this is how much the government plans to spend on a fast train from London to Manchester and Leeds. £43 Billion.
£54,000,000 vs 43,000,000,000. On a train line.
Good to know they have their priorities straight, we can all move around the country from overcrowded mental institution to marginally less overcrowded mental institution.
Tl;Dr
Just a nice article showcasing how overloaded the UK mental health system is, it continues to have funding cut in various regions and in general it's being sidelined in favour of saving a few million pounds to make the austerity measures seem worthwhile. -blam!-s.
English
#Offtopic
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3 RespuestasThis is a problem in America too. When all of our asylums were shutdown in the 80s and 90s a lot of mentally I'll people we're let free too walk the streets. And it is still a problem. There are plenty of mentally I'll people who should be institutionalized but instead they are in the care of untrained parents. These children/young adults are the people you see commuting the mass shootings on the news. There parents are simply not trained to deal with them.
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1 RespuestaThis explains a lot.
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2 RespuestasHappy days -_-
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>modern society at its finest
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Makes you worry for the future of your kids.
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3 RespuestasIt's them vaccines, I tell you what.
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7 RespuestasEditado por Elrond Hubbard: 2/21/2014 1:10:35 AMI wouldn't be surprised if it has to do with money. There's the above scandal, but also keep in mind that there's already a huge private prison industry that thrives on, well, having people in prison. I also wouldn't be surprised if this has turned into a similar situation.
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This just makes me worry for my future, to be honest.
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1 RespuestaIts a shame there isn't enough space for mental illness patients, in my opinion is just as important to a persons well being as physical health. Understandably, physical illnesses and injuries are easier to diagnose and treat. Which is where stakeholders interests lie, in seeing visible success in patient care.
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2 RespuestasIs this because there's more of these problems in kids, or because we've become more aware of them and better at diagnosing them? (Serious question, not rhetorical; I don't know.)
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3 RespuestasHrrrmmmm..... Could this be related to your rise in depression? I mean, if youth at large are getting a bit unstable (depressed) then what about the people who were already ill?
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12 RespuestasIn regards to funding, a single .22 bullet is really cheap.
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1 RespuestaMeh, I don't see it as a growing problem. Honestly think that the number of people with issues has stayed relatively the same throughout history but the advancements in medicine, along with parents being more worried coped with more people diagnosed, is what makes it seem as if the numbers are rising Example: 30-50 years ago say there were like a million people with issues but only like 3,000 were somewhat diagnosed. Now, the million has stayed the same but something like 300,000 are now diagnosed. Gives off the impression that the number is growing, but due to simple advancments
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29 RespuestasEditado por Capitons Wang: 2/20/2014 2:11:01 PMOur advancements in medical care has created this, along with the fact we arent on an 'evolutionary track', the weak and unfit are allowed to survive and procreate.
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1 RespuestaThat's pretty much exactly what happened to the American Mental Health system in the 80s when Ronald Reagan eviscerated the program. Mental health is a very important matter, but the movers and shakers in the world don't seem to give a rats ass about it. However, our private medical sector in the US is BOOMING. I wonder if there's any connection... I smell shenanigans.
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11 RespuestasPeople these days are too soft, they make excuses for things that are completely normal problems that people face in their everyday lives. I say, suck it up.
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Obvious solution is obvious. [spoiler]Ban guns.[/spoiler]
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3 RespuestasThey need to put more funding into treating mental health conditions, which is quite obvious. I think, however, that the most effective thing that could be done for those people would be to eliminate the source of their problems. That would be fantastic, except for the fact that some disorders simply can't be treated. Thus, more funding would improve research on different treatment methods. Psychiatrists and neuroscientists would be the most effective at doing that; the psychologists that I've seen are absolutely worthless at doing anything about the mentally ill.
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1 RespuestaThe government seem to think making cuts on the things which need more funding is a good idea.
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1 RespuestaAnother reason why this world sucks, it seems everyday another reason shows up to hate this world a little more. How many people are going to be helped by that train line? Shouldn't this be cause for alarm. Young kids are being messed up by the world before they even enter high school.
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2 RespuestasEditado por Ninjas are scary: 2/20/2014 6:44:08 AMI would read the entire thing, but I gotta roll. Edit: Yes I read your Tl;Dr segment. 'cus I'm a nice guy.
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3 Respuestas[quote]UK mental health [/quote] [quote]UK mental[/quote] [quote]UK[/quote]
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6 RespuestasI didn't read all of it, but I had an incident when I was younger. I was misdiagnosed as a child at the age of 13. I was put on many different mood altering drugs, psycotropics, anti-depressants , and stimulants. They kept switching my meds due to them not having the effect they were looking for. In fact making things worse. I never got another evaluation until I was 17. It ended up I was just a -blam!-ing kid going through puberty. I still have long term effects from these cocktails.
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3 RespuestasEditado por MyNameIsCharlie: 2/20/2014 6:48:23 AMI've read a couple of [url=http://www.salon.com/2013/03/14/your_tap_water_is_probably_laced_with_anti_depressants_partner/]conspiracy theories[/url] about this that make a disturbing amount of sense. They have to do with the amount of anti-depressants that you urinate out, and find their way into reservoirs. Appearantly very few water treatment systems can get them out, and they are finding their way into the tap. Some of the side effects of the drugs are just what you are seeing in this influx.