A third of parents think the cost of living crisis will significantly affect their children’s mental health

A third of parents think the cost of living crisis will significantly affect their children’s mental health

A third of parents think the cost of living crisis will significantly affect their children’s mental health

One in three (34%) parents say they think the rising cost of living could affect the mental health of their children a great deal, while seven in ten parents (72%) say it could affect it at least a little over the coming months, according to a new poll by Savanta ComRes and commissioned by the King’s Maudsley Partnership.

Group of children sitting on the floor and smiling

The poll, which surveyed 2,150 UK parents of children between 5 and 17 years old, between 23rd-29th September – after the Chancellor’s mini Budget – also found a third of parents (33%) feel their child is currently experiencing mental health difficulties. This rises with the age of children to 43% of parents with children aged 16-17.

Amongst these children, parents thought the most common symptom or behaviour parents have noticed is anxiety (68%), which is cited by nearly twice as many parents as the next most common response – which is noticing depression or low mood episodes in their children (37%).

The survey also found that three-quarters of parents (75%) think government funding for children’s mental health services should be increased. 

A significant three-quarters of parents (77%) say they would consider paying for private healthcare services if their children were experiencing mental health difficulties. Only 3% say they definitely would not. 

In some encouraging news, amongst those surveyed, the vast majority of parents (86%) say they feel able to support their children if they are experiencing mental health difficulties. Of those who say their children are currently experiencing mental health difficulties, the majority (56%) have successfully accessed professional help for their child’s mental health. A further 3 in 10 (30%) say they didn’t successfully access professional help but tried to.

The King’s Maudsley Partnership, which is made up of South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust, King’s College London and the Maudsley Charity, aims to transform child and adolescent mental health care through a unique collaboration between world-leading academics and clinicians, to significantly speed up the time taken to bring research breakthroughs into clinical treatment.

Professor Emily Simonoff
Interim Director of the King’s Maudsley Partnership for Children and Young People’s Mental Health

Children and young people’s mental health has already been impacted by COVID-19 and the cost-of-living crisis adds yet another burden. Mental health services are already struggling to meet the demand and the pressure on families’ finances could see an even greater rise. It is all the more important to make interventions available to children and young people to help them navigate stressful life events – the research we will be undertaking in the Pears Maudsley Centre will work towards preventative interventions and targeted treatments.

David Bradley
Chief Executive of South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust

Parents are very worried about how the cost of living crisis will affect their children, just as they begin to recover from a pandemic that affected their education, personal development and ability to deal with mental health conditions. 

 

Together, South London and Maudsley and King’s College London are already leaders in the research and treatment of anxiety. But with the latest figures showing 68 per cent of parents noticing their children experiencing anxiety we need a step change.

 

The expert knowledge and specialist care at the heart of the King’s Maudsley Partnership will drive new treatments and help address many of the complex mental health problems that we are facing.”

Kelly Boone, whose teenage daughter Avella is recovering from severe Body Dysmorphia

“It is a big worry. My daughter is doing well with her recovery but it’s still a daily battle. We try to cut back as much as we can but we have to make sure heating, lighting and water are available to her. She still has BDD which involves daily routines and rituals and she judges herself by very high standards. We can’t compromise her mental health.

 

She dropped out of college last year and thankfully now she’s back, but she can’t face public transport. We drive her there, which is an hour’s round trip. Gas, electricity and fuel are three things for which we’re going to have to pull money out of thin air. Every day we’re bracing ourselves for what’s next, hoping something will change but the costs keep spiralling.”

The Partnership will have its home at the £69m Pears Maudsley Centre for Children and Young People, which will be home to clinicians and academics in the field of children and young people’s mental health from the Trust and from King’s College London’s Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience (IoPPN), as well as the outstanding Bethlem and Maudsley Hospital School and young in-patients. The Centre is due to open in Denmark Hill in early 2024.

It will provide treatment to young people with a range of conditions, from eating disorders and body dysmorphic disorder, to anxiety, ADHD, autism and trauma.

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Pears Maudsley Centre featured on BBC Radio 4

Pears Maudsley Centre featured on BBC Radio 4

Pears Maudsley Centre featured on BBC Radio 4

The Pears Maudsley Centre for Children and Young People has been featured during a broadcast on BBC Radio 4’s World.

Group of children sitting on the floor and smiling

On Monday (25th July), The Pears Maudsley Centre for Children and Young People was featured during a broadcast on BBC Radio 4’s World.  Journalist Sarah Montague met with David Bradley, Chief Executive of our Trust, Emily Simonoff, Professor of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry at King’s College London and Jasmin, an amazing young person who has used services and contributed to the design of the building, for a tour of the new building.

You can listen again here:

 

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Pears Maudsley Centre ‘Highly Commended’ at Design in Mental Health Awards

Pears Maudsley Centre ‘Highly Commended’ at Design in Mental Health Awards

Pears Maudsley Centre ‘Highly Commended’ at Design in Mental Health Awards

The Pears Maudsley Centre received ‘Highly Commended’ in the ‘Outside Spaces’ category at the Design in Mental Health 2022 Awards last night.

Group of children sitting on the floor and smiling

The Centre is specifically designed to help young people manage anxiety and to create the right atmosphere for those with autism, ADHD and other conditions. It is a modern, community-minded space, totally different from traditional mental health clinics and its design has had input from young patients from the start.

The building will have landscaped outdoor terraces with extensive planting on each of the building’s eight floors — capped by a roof terrace. It is hoped this will provide the calming, relaxing spaces that is sometimes difficult to achieve in a traditional inner-city hospital building.

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Pears Maudsley Centre featured on ITV London News

Pears Maudsley Centre featured on ITV London News

The construction progress of the Pears Maudsley Centre for Children and Young People was featured on ITV London News yesterday evening.

Jasmin, an amazing young person who has used our services and contributed to the design of the building, explained what the centre means to her. Dr Bruce Clark spoke about how the partnership between the Trust and King’s College London will take a completely new approach to combining research and care when the building opens. The lead architect Graham Harris from IBI, shared his hope that the design of the building will provide the calming, relaxing spaces that is sometimes difficult to achieve in a traditional inner-city hospital building.

You can watch the news feature below;

Topping Out celebration marks a milestone for £65 million Pears Maudsley Centre

Topping Out celebration marks a milestone for £65 million Pears Maudsley Centre

The building of a centre providing world-class research and better mental health services for children and young people in London and beyond reached a significant milestone today, with a celebratory ‘topping out’ ceremony attended by young people who helped design the building, local people and dignitaries.

Today’s event marks the completion of the construction of the frame of the £65 million building, partly funded by an ambitious fundraising campaign to address the urgent demands for an increased need in mental health provision for children and young people. It is being built by Integrated Health Projects, an alliance between VINCI Construction UK and Sir Robert McAlpine.

The Pears Maudsley Centre for Children and Young People is due to open in Denmark Hill in 2023. The centre is the result of a “bench to bedside” partnership between South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust, King’s College London and the Maudsley Charity, which aims to transform child and adolescent mental health care through a unique collaboration between world-leading academics and clinicians, which will significantly speed up the time taken to bring research breakthroughs into clinical treatment.

The event included ceremonial pouring of concrete to complete the roof of the eight-storey building and the placement of an evergreen bough – a tradition which dates back to Roman times, when tree boughs were used to protect buildings from evil spirits and bring in blessings from the tree spirits.

Trust Chair, Sir Norman Lamb said:

It is fantastic to see this unique building taking shape, giving an insight into the life-changing facility it is going to become.

The centre will support our local south London community, which has some of the highest levels of deprivation in the country, together with specialist national children’s mental health services that are available to everyone in England.

David Bradley, Chief Executive of South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust added:

After so many years of hard work, it is incredibly exciting to see the Pears Maudsley Centre coming to fruition.

This project is rooted in partnership and collaboration and the Centre will enable us to develop ground-breaking treatments that will transform the lives of children and young people at a time when improving their mental health has never been more important.

The Pears Maudsley Centre will be home to clinicians and academics in the field of children and young people’s mental health from the Trust and from King’s College London’s Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience (IoPPN), as well as the outstanding Bethlem and Maudsley Hospital School and young in-patients.

It will provide treatment to young people with a range of conditions, from eating disorders and body dysmorphic disorder, to anxiety, ADHD, autism and trauma.

President and Principal of King’s College London, Professor Shitij Kapur, said:

There is no other Centre like this in the world. Bringing together King’s College London’s world class researchers in mental health with clinical expertise, will enable us to find solutions together and change the landscape for children’s mental health.

This will benefit our communities locally and nationally and lead to sharing best practice across the world, influencing global policy and mental health outcomes.

It is this spirit of collaboration, innovation and creativity that will drive the culture at the Pears Maudsley Centre.

The Maudsley Charity, which backs better mental health, has contributed £10m to the project and with the partners, has also generated significant support from charitable foundations including Pears Foundation, the Rayne Foundation and individual donors.

Chief Executive Officer of the Maudsley Charity, Rebecca Gray, said:

Today’s ceremony is another significant milestone for The Pears Maudsley Centre and the partnership behind this innovative development.

But this is more than just a building. With support from philanthropists and the public we can improve mental health outcomes now and for the future. Our commitment is that we can ‘Change The Story’ on children’s mental health – and the centre is the physical embodiment of that vision.

Young patients and their families, as well as researchers and clinicians, have been involved in designing the Pears Maudsley Centre, which features connections with nature as a key aspect of the design through landscaped outdoor terraces and extensive planting on each of the building’s eight floors.

Around half of adult mental health conditions begin by the time a child reaches 14, rising to 75 per cent by the age of 24.

Body Dysmorphic Disorder — how do I know if I have it?

Body Dysmorphic Disorder — how do I know if I have it?

Body Dysmorphic Disorder — how do I know if I have it?

Body Dysmorphic Disorder (BDD) is a condition which is common in children and young people. It is a mental health condition where people spend a lot of time worried and upset over their appearance and spend lots of time trying to fix it. BDD impacts around one or two people in every 100 people and can be treated. But how do you know if you have it?

a young girl holding a leaf

Dr Amita Jassi is Consultant Clinical Psychologist National and Specialist OCD, BDD and Related Disorders Clinic, South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust.

Dr Jassi said: “As you’re developing and growing it’s normal to think about your appearance or identify a part of your appearance you don’t like very much. But for some people this can be more distressing and upsetting and have a big impact on your life. It is important to remember that having BDD does not mean you are vain or obsessed with yourself.”

To raise awareness for Children’s Mental Health Week, Dr Jassi has shared three points which may help people to recognise the symptoms of BDD.

1. You are concerned about a perceived flaw in your appearance

BDD is a preoccupation with a flaw or something wrong with your appearance that you see but other people might say they can’t see or don’t think its big deal.

It is important to remember that everyone spends time thinking about their appearance. People with BDD tend to worry about specific areas or features.

2. You are spending a lot of time thinking or worrying about it

People with BDD will spend a lot of time and headspace thinking and worrying about their appearance. These concerns may be distressing may even stop you doing things your friends are doing and impact your social life and relationships.

3. The things you are doing to make you feel better cause you more distress

People with BDD work hard to fix or hide their appearance. Some people with BDD find the steps they take to make them feel better can cause more distress, they don’t help to fix the appearance and take up lots of time. This could include going to a lot of effort with makeup, spending a lot of time choosing clothes or checking the mirror a lot. Young people with BDD may find they are spending a lot longer than their friends to leave the house or get ready for school. They may realise they are avoiding lots of situations because of their appearance worries too.

Help and support

Dr Jassi said: “Help and support is available. People with BDD sometimes feel the best thing is to change your appearance or alter it. We know this is not helpful and may only make you feel better in the short term, may not make you feel better at all or even make you feel worse. Getting help is important because symptoms probably will not go away without treatment and may even get worse.

“Support available for people with BDD including talking therapies (Cognitive Behaviour Therapy), with or without medication. We know this can make people feel much better.”

If people think they have BDD, the first step is to speak to a GP and ask to be referred to a mental health team.

South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trusts provides assessment and treatment for young people with Body Dysmorphic Disorder across the UK. Find out more https://slam.nhs.uk/national-services/child-and-adolescent-services/body-dysmorphic-disorder-service/

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