The Bridge – Mental Health in Schools Issue

Avatar photo
I am a Consultant Child and Adolescent Psychiatrist working clinically in a North Yorkshire CAMHS team. I am Associate Director of Medical Education in the trust I work in, also Training Program director for CAMHS higher training in Yorkshire.

Posted on

Foreword from the Editor

Welcome to “The Bridge”. In this edition we are focussing on young people’s mental health in school settings. As I am sure you are all aware, there is a Green Paper with proposals for improving young people’s mental health which include more mental health provision in schools. When considering the development of services it is always important to examine the evidence base for any considered intervention. In this edition we review the Department of Education’s report on what is currently being provided and look at a systematic review of School Based Interventions (SBIs). The authors of the review have looked at the type of SBIs being used, its effectiveness and how practical it is to deliver SBIs to children in need of mental health support in school.

We also have an interview with Professor Dame Susan Bailey who is immersed in this work at present. This interview is available on the ACAMH website as a podcast. You can subscribe to ACAMH podcasts through iTunes or SoundCloud.

Email publications@acamh.org with details of what you’d like to see in future issues. A pdf of The Bridge Mental Health in Schools issue is available to download. Please feel free to share this and the direct links below with colleagues.

Articles in this edition

Barriers to sharing information with schools

Teaching about Tics

Positive news on the Peer Education Project

School-based interventions are effective, but are they efficient?

Supporting Mental Health in Schools and Colleges – a summary of UK Department of Education’s report

Worth-it: focussing on positive mental health, resilience and wellbeing interventions

Schools need more specialist support

The early ASD screening debate continues

Add a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*