As reported by ITV X, a charity urges the government to provide funding for a mental health specialist in every school, citing the increasing number of children facing mental health challenges
There are now one in five children across the country who have been diagnosed with a mental health condition up from one in six in 2020.
Place2Be, a charity which provides mental health support in more than 500 schools across the country, believes having a mental health specialist in every school would help.
A YouGov survey, released at the start of Children’s Mental Health Week, found that 55% of eight to 16-year-olds have something that would prevent them from speaking out about their mental health. Of those, 29% said they would not seek support due to feeling uncomfortable speaking to someone they do not know.
School work and exams were found to be the top concern for the cohort (57%), closely followed by physical appearance, with more than half (54%) reporting concern for how they look.
The initiative has already been implemented in Seascape Primary School, in Peterlee, with children encouraged to discuss their feelings in specialist classes, led by the school’s permanent counsellor Lyndsey Baxter.
“That early intervention of being able to support a child to know that talking about how you feel is a good thing to do and a brave thing to do,” she explained. “If you hold your feelings inside they get bigger and bigger and bigger.
“If you talk to the adult you trust or friend that you trust then they will be able to help you.”
The school’s assistant headteacher, Caroline Stuart, believes the role of the mental health specialist is now more important than ever due to the impact of the coronavirus pandemic.
“Since the Covid pandemic things have changed for the children of our country,” she said. “They need more support and they need that as a matter of course. They need access to it across the country when things occur.
“Things can happen in children’s lives and having a place to be in school means they’ve got that support at their fingertips when they really need it.”
The theme for this year’s Children’s Mental Health Week is ‘my voice matters’, encouraging young people to make their voice heard for the rest of their lives.
CBBC presenter Rhys Stephenson has been encouraging children to speak out throughout his career and believes the current generation can help set the standard for those to come.
“I think this generation is going to be the one that hopefully sets the new example that your mental health is important at this age now because what affects you as a kid will affect you as an adult,” he explained.
“We want to spread that message that your voice is actually an important thing. It has been given to you for a reason – use it.”
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