24 Summary of Children and Young Peoples Mental Health and Wellbeing update PDF 168 KB
Minutes:
The Board received a report from the Executive Director Children, which provided a summary of the key work taking place locally and at a regional level, to support children and young people’s mental health and wellbeing.
An accompanying presentation was provided which
gave an overview of work taking place in Halton by a variety of organisations and teams.
It also included an overview of preventative work that aimed to keep
children and young people mentally well, and services that provided direct
interventions and support when children and young people were struggling.
Members were also provided with details of the The Resilience Framework and details of the
core/statutory services available in Halton.
It was noted that this was not a definitive list of support that was
available, as there were many other services that had a positive impact on
children and young people’s mental health – these examples were listed.
The
following additional information was provided in response to Members questions:
·
The
nurturing agenda was connected to this as all services were encouraged to be
part of the network of support, as they all complimented each other;
·
Training
was a rolling programme as staff members changed all the time;
·
Not
all schools were using the service, as they chose not to. Some felt they
did not need the support; some were doing their own work in the mental health
area; and some were dependent upon the availability of funding;
·
It
was thought that 1 in 6 children had a probable mental health disorder;
·
Outcomes
of services were measured but varied across organisations/teams and were dependent on the intervention utilised;
·
The
remedial role of the service was understood and it was commented that schools
and mental health services approach was also prevention, as outlined in the
presentation;
·
It
was recognised that teachers leaving and joining different schools could be
unsettling for children; and the same could be said for the staff members losing
colleagues;
·
It
was commented by one Member that a simple way of encouraging good mental health
in students was to encourage sports – it was felt that extra-curricular
activities were becoming exclusive due to the costs involved. It was noted that all schools’ curriculums
did include sports and HBC employed a Schools Games Officer, who worked with
schools to encourage sporting activities, events, competitions and support for
children and young people with disabilities;
·
Access
to the Baby Infant Bonding Service was explained;
·
The
main transition period for pupils dealt with by the Team was children
transferring from primary to secondary school; any other significant periods
would be checked and reported after the meeting; and
·
The number of Educational Phycologists
in Halton would also be reported back.
RESOLVED:
That the Board
1) receive the presentation; and
2) note the key work and services
contributing to the positive mental health and wellbeing of children and young
people.