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Child and Adolescent Mental Health Needs Assessment and Service Implications in an Inner City AreaSouth London and Maudsley NHS Trust/Guys, Kings & St Thomas School of Medicine, London, UK
South London and Maudsley NHS Trust/Guys, Kings & St Thomas School of Medicine, London, UK
Guys, Kings & St Thomas School of Medicine, London, UK
Ray Williams Institute of Paediatric Endocrinology, Parramatta, Australia A random sample of 253 parents and young people were interviewed to elicit: (i) the number, type and severity of psychosocial problems in children/young people; and (ii) the number and type of risk factors for mental health in a very deprived inner city locality. The results suggest high levels of need for mental health services, with, for example, 37% of children having three or more problems, and over 51% having three or more risk factors. From subjective case-by-case analysis, preliminary criteria were derived for judging the level of required service response and the numbers likely to present appropriate to the various tiers of service. Of the 25% of the sample expressing a need for help, 6% were judged to be manageable by community staff (e.g. health visitors) with support from child mental health specialists, 4% by specially trained community staff (e.g. parent advisers), 8% by solo child and adolescent mental health specialists and 7% by generic or specialist child mental health teams.
Key Words: child and adolescent mental health needs assessment tier criteria tiered system
Clinical Child Psychology and Psychiatry, Vol. 5, No. 2,
169-188 (2000) This article has been cited by other articles:
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