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Keep up the momentum

Posted: 05 December 2002 | Subscribe Online


 
As we come to the end of our Changing Minds campaign, we are delighted to say that we and our readers have done just that: we changed minds. Our campaign petition, which collected more than 5,000 signatures, was presented this week to health minister Jacqui Smith, who has welcomed the campaign for promoting debate on the future of child and adolescent mental health services and promised that the National Service Framework for Children will address many of the points raised when it is published next year.
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The government has shown that it is at last serious about improving child and adolescent mental health services (CAMHS) by pledging an extra £140m over the next three years and the indications are that this will be ring-fenced in line with the aims of our campaign. There is every sign that another of our campaign aims, a national strategy, is also in the offing. When we launched our campaign in August we published the results of a survey showing that 80 per cent of professionals believed mental health services for children and young people were in crisis, with nearly all of them saying that resources were the problem. A newly published review of social services inspections also highlights concerns among social workers that CAMHS have been "unresponsive" in the past.

If things are beginning to change for the better it will only happen with the sustained commitment of local agencies, including social services, education and health. Initiatives aimed at tackling social exclusion must make their contribution in terms of preventive work, especially if the Department of Health wants CAMHS to expand at the rate of 10 per cent a year. It is an ambitious target, but it can be achieved if the professional will is there.
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There is one more step the government should take. It has said that it will listen to a range of concerns before it publishes a mental health bill. It would be an enormous inspiration to CAMHS practitioners if it were to contain a chapter, absent from this year's draft, placing costed and paid-for duties on agencies to answer the needs of children and young people.


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