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More cash needed to reduce offending

Posted: 19 December 2002 | Subscribe Online


The Youth Justice Board's push for child and adolescent mental health services to help reduce offending rates will only be achieved by increasing funding, a leading psychiatrist has warned.

Dr Lynne Daly, consultant adolescent forensic psychiatrist at Salford mental health services, told a conference on children with complex mental health needs: "The Youth Justice Board is focused on the reduction of offending rates and has clear expectations on CAMHS to achieve that. Given their current resources and staffing levels this is unrealistic."
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She added that the board was too focused on finding "bed-based" solutions for children and young people with mental health problems and placing them in in-patient secure psychiatric care.

"I challenge the view that this offers a solution to their difficulties," Daly said.

The social care secure commissioner for the NHS north west, Carol Elford, told the conference, which was organised by the Harrogate Management Centre, that national policy should emphasise prevention and inclusion.
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She said: "It has got to look at improving access and responsiveness and move away from being about crisis response because by that stage it is too late for many young people."

Elford added that services need to measure positive outcomes for young people, and ask them what they want, and not assume they will be the same as for practitioners.


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