Showing posts with label child psychotherapist London. Show all posts
Showing posts with label child psychotherapist London. Show all posts

Friday, 27 February 2015

Concerning children's mental health


A recent government task-force review sheds some rather disturbing light on the state of child mental health services in England. The review focuses on concerns highlighted by a survey of Clinical Psychologists working across 43 separate specialist Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) in 2014.

According to the Psychologists, in the last three years some 62% of services have decreased their staffing levels, with a bias towards the loss of more highly skilled professionals. In addition, further cuts are being planned for 42% of services.

Other findings showed that:
  • 71% of services have tightened their acceptance criteria and raised severity thresholds for being seen
  • 54% of respondents were concerned about the deterioration in provision for young people in crisis
  • 66% of services reported a decrease in the quality of treatment provision
  • 56% said the availability of psychological therapies had decreased in the last three years
  • 53% had noticed a more medicalised approach to treatment
On this last point, Professor Jamie Hacker-Hughes, President-Elect of the British Psychological Society commented:
"We are seriously concerned that over half the respondents reported a move to more diagnosis-led, medicalised approaches given the significant weight of evidence in favour of psychological interventions for the majority of child mental health issues."
He has a point. There is a substantial and growing body of outcome research from the UK and abroad demonstrating the efficacy of child and adolescent psychotherapy, which is one of the reasons why the National Institute of Clinical Excellence (NICE) clearly recommends it. And while medical treatment has its place, it would be a tragedy to see it become the mainstay of treatment for conditions such as childhood depression.

Corroborating the survey findings, figures released last month showed that NHS spending on children's mental health services in England has fallen, in real terms. by 6% since 2010. The charity Young Minds has also recently found that over half the councils in England cut or froze budgets for child and adolescent mental health spending between 2010-2011 and 2014-2015.

These are troubling times for mental health services in general, but it is especially upsetting to think that our children, who are our future, are being let down in the critical area of mental health service provision. And as the culture around them becomes increasingly dysfunctional, we can only expect the crisis to deepen.

Do you have thoughts on this important topic? If so, we'd love to hear them.


Written by Jacqui Hogan

Tuesday, 30 October 2012

We're opening the door to kids!

Source: National Children's Bureau

We love kids at number 96, so we're delighted to introduce one of the latest additions to our psychotherapeutic team - Renee Thurston, a highly qualified Child Psychotherapist.

Renee specialises in helping infants, children and adolescents, as well as their parents, families and carers, with a wide range of mental health difficulties, including ADHD, autism, eating disorders and challenging behaviours of all kinds.

Tavistock trained, Renee has been involved in the assessment and treatment of children with psychological difficulties for over 20 years. Alongside her clinical outpatient work she has spent a great deal of time in hospital neonatal units and school nurseries, amassing a vast amount of experience working with children at the younger end of the age spectrum.

Renee works with many different types of families, including single parents, blended families, separated families, same sex couples, IVF families and their wider social networks. Her treatment interventions may be short- or long-term, involve family, group and/or parent-child psychotherapy and deploy psychodynamic, cognitive bahavioural or other evidence-base techniques. It very much depends on the historical and developmental processes that have shaped the young person concerned, and there are few therapists more qualified than Renee to accurately assess patients'  needs.

You can find out more about Renee at 96harleypsychotherapy.co.uk, and in the meantime, we'll be stocking up on soft toys for our cosy waiting room which you can preview here!

Written by Jacqui Hogan