Shropshire Star

Number of children seeking mental health help rises

The number of under 18s battling mental health problems across Shropshire has risen, new figures show.

Published

More than 3,600 children and teenagers were in contact with mental health services in the region in January this year, up by 11 per cent on the year before.

A total of 3,250 under 18s sought mental health help in January 2018.

It has been claimed the increase in the number of children and teenagers needing help is down to the rise of social media, exam stress and poverty.

At Shropshire Clinical Commissioning Group, the number of under 18s accessing mental health services is up by 12 per cent. Analysis of NHS data by the Liberal Democrats shows 1,660 young people needed help in January this year, compared to 1,480 the year earlier.

At Telford and Wrekin CCG, the number has increased by 10 per cent. 1,950 children and teenagers sought help for mental health problems this year compared to 1,770 last year.

Mental health services covers a range of illnesses such as depression and psychosis, as well as eating disorders.

Liberal Democrat campaigner Nick Machnik-Foster said: "This research by the Liberal Democrats lays bare just how broken children’s mental health services are in much of our region. Families are left in a state of acute anxiety, desperately hoping no harm will come to their child whilst they wait.

"It is frankly not good enough, the government have failed in this area, lets make no bones about it. I cannot bare to hear more vacuous warm words from the government while young people in our area are facing real anguish, pain and suffering. One young person that is failed is one too many, it literally breaks my heart to see people fall through the cracks in the system.

"We have a mental health emergency and the government, local councils and the NHS need to do something real and concrete before its too late."

Across the border in the Black Country the number of under 18s battling mental health problems across the Black County has more than doubled.

In Dudley and Walsall, the number seeking help has increased by 200 per cent or more.

Latest government figures, released in 2018, show the number of children with a mental health disorder is on the rise, with one in eight under the age of 19 across England now affected.

Despite this, the number of under 18s seeking mental health help in Staffordshire has dropped year on year.

There were 3,700 in contact with mental health services in January 2018 compared to 3,545 in January this year.