Sharp mental ill health rise in under-11s
Posted 7 years ago
There has been a sharp rise in the number of children under the age of 11 that have been referred for mental health treatment by schools over the past four years.
The NSPCC has gathered data that shows schools in England have made a total of 123,713 referrals for specialist help since 2014-15.
The issues children were referred for consisted mainly of depression and anxiety, and sometimes these cases were so severe that it leads them to the brink of suicide, states Esther Rantzen president of NSPCC’s Childline.
More than half of the children referred for specialist help were from primary schools. In 2017-18, some 18,870 children aged under 11 were referred for specialist support. This was a rise of 5,183, or more than a third, on those referred in 2014-15.
Over half a million 11-year-olds sat their SATs tests in English and maths last week. Despite the results mainly being used to hold primary schools across the country to account, there are concerns about the pressure pupils feels to achieve good results.
Mental Health Awareness Training
Ill mental health is a serious problem in the U.K. Almost two-thirds of people say that they have had a mental health issue and evidence suggests that ill mental health is responsible for almost 13% of all sickness absence days in the U.K.
We’ve developed a Mental Health Awareness Training course and a Mental Health Awareness Training for Managers course.
These Mental Health Awareness Training courses raise awareness of mental ill health (particularly stress, depression and anxiety), and provides tools and guidance for daily wellbeing-management, and aims to remove the stigma that surrounds ill mental health.
Both courses can be completed in under an hour and provide you with a certificate upon completion. You can try both of the courses for free today!
Jack Rosier
Content Executive
Related articles
Opt-in to our newsletter
Receive industry news & offers