Enhancing referrals to Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services: the EN-CAMHS mixed-methods study.
National Health Service Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services are specialist teams that assess and treat children and young people with mental health problems. Overall, 497,502 children were referred to National Health Service Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services between 2020 and 2021, and almost one-quarter of these referrals were not successful. Unsuccessful referrals are often distressing for children and families who are turned away usually after a long waiting period and without necessarily being redirected to alternative services. The process is also costly to services because time is wasted reviewing documents about children who should have been referred for alternative help and may prevent young people who need specialist help receiving it in a timely way. The overarching aim of this study was to understand what the problems are with Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services referrals and identify solutions that could improve referral success. A key objective was to talk widely with young people and families, people working in Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services and mental health professionals so that we could understand fully what the problems were and how we might develop their solutions. We gathered individual pseudonymised patient data from nine Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services, and referral data from four National Health Service Trusts to look at what data are available and how complete it is. We report wide variation in the numbers of referrals between and within Trusts and in the proportions not being successful for treatment. Data on factors such as age and gender of children and young people referred into Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services and who made the referral are routinely collected, but ethnicity of the children and young people's reason for referral are not as well collected across all Trusts. We also conducted focus groups with over 100 individuals with differing perspectives on the Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services referral process (children and young people, parents and carers, key referrers, and Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services professionals) and asked about current difficulties within the referral process, as well as potential solutions to these. Problems identified included: confusion about what Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services is for, that is what it does and does not provide; and lack of support provided during the referral process. Possible solutions included: streamlining the referral pathways through digital technologies with accompanying standardisation of referral forms for National Health Service Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services; and early ongoing communication throughout the referral 'journey' for the referrer/family. Should consider the standardisation of and improvement to the Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services referral process following the recommendations outlined in this project. This study is registered on ClinicalTrials.gov with the identifier: NCT05412368. https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT05412368. This award was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health and Social Care Delivery Research programme (NIHR award ref: NIHR131379) and is published in full in Health and Social Care Delivery Research; Vol. 13, No. 21. See the NIHR Funding and Awards website for further award information.
- Research Article
1
- 10.1176/appi.ps.61.5.443
- May 1, 2010
- Psychiatric Services
Mental Health Care Reforms in Latin America: Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services in Mexico
- Research Article
31
- 10.3389/fpsyt.2019.00841
- Nov 26, 2019
- Frontiers in Psychiatry
Background: There is general consensus that child and adolescent mental health services in low- and middle-income countries have an urgent need to be strengthened. However, this require not only a universal understanding of services and service needs, but also in-depth local knowledge to inform relevant service strengthening. This study sought to explore the perspectives of senior child and adolescent mental health service providers and policy-makers in one South African province to identify strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats to child and adolescent mental health services.Methods: A qualitative study was conducted with 13 purposively sampled senior child and adolescent mental health service providers, senior managers, and policy-makers from the Western Cape Province, using a half-day multi-stakeholder workshop format. Verbal and written data were recorded and coded for analysis. Two independent raters performed thematic analysis.Results: The comprehensive bio-psycho-social approach and strong specialist child and adolescent mental health service units were identified as strengths. Limited capacity, workload demands, inadequate and inequitable resource allocation, poor implementation of early detection and preventative policies, and overall neglect of child and adolescent mental health services, were identified as weaknesses. Collaborative working between child and adolescent mental health and pediatric services, and increased provincial government (Department of Health) involvement, were identified as potential opportunities to develop and strengthen child and adolescent mental health services. Silo working of agencies, societal stressors, inadequate infrastructure and other resources, and lack of dedicated funding for child and adolescent mental health, were identified as threats to the development of services.Conclusions: This analysis of strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats reinforced the widespread neglect of child and adolescent mental health services in South Africa and highlighted areas for further research and advocacy. There is a clear need to explore the perspectives and experiences of service users and providers to generate comprehensive multi-stakeholder evidence that may identify positive "tipping points" for improvements and strengthening of child and adolescent mental health service delivery, training, and research.
- Research Article
- 10.1177/13623613251335715
- Apr 30, 2025
- Autism
Autistic children and young people are at increased risk of mental health difficulties, but often face barriers when seeking help from Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services. This study aimed to (1) explore the experiences of parents/carers seeking help from Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services for their autistic child’s mental health difficulties, and (2) gain parents’ perceptions of the accessibility of Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services for their child. A mixed-methods survey design was used. In total, 300 parents/carers took part from across the United Kingdom. Quantitative data were analysed using descriptive statistics, and qualitative data using qualitative content analysis. Findings demonstrated ongoing struggles that parents/carers faced when seeking help from Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services. Those who were referred reported a lack of reasonable adjustments and offers of ineffective or inappropriate therapies. Ultimately, parents felt their child’s mental health difficulties either did not improve or declined to the point of crisis. However, there was a recognition that some professionals were kind and compassionate. There is a need for a more neuro-inclusive and personalised approach in Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services. Further research, funding and training are urgently needed to ensure support is accessible, timely and effective for autistic young people.Lay abstractAutistic children and young people are more likely to experience mental health difficulties than neurotypical peers, but also face more barriers when seeking help from Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services. Findings highlight the need for a more neuroaffirmative approach from the professionals themselves, in the adjustments offered, and in the therapies provided. Barriers to Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services for autistic children and young people include diagnostic overshadowing (i.e. assuming mental health difficulties are part of autism), high thresholds for assessment and a lack of professional knowledge about autism and care pathways. Healthcare policies should ensure that all Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services professionals receive neuroaffirmative training and that resources/funding are provided for appropriate adjustments and early support. There is also a need for further research and funding to develop and evaluate effective neuroaffirmative therapeutic interventions.
- Research Article
- 10.3310/gjks0519
- Nov 1, 2025
- Health technology assessment (Winchester, England)
Emotional disorders are common in children and young people and can significantly impair their quality of life. Evidence-based treatments require a timely and appropriate diagnosis. The utility of standardised diagnostic assessment tools may aid the detection of emotional disorders, but there is limited evidence of their clinical value. To assess the clinical effectiveness and cost effectiveness of a standardised diagnostic assessment for children and young people with emotional difficulties referred to Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services. A nested qualitative process evaluation aimed to identify the barriers and facilitators to using a standardised diagnostic assessment tool in Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services. A United Kingdom, multicentre, two-arm, parallel-group randomised controlled trial with a nested qualitative process evaluation. Eight National Health Service Trusts providing multidisciplinary specialist Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services. Children and young people aged 5-17 years with emotional difficulties referred to Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services, excluding emergency/urgent referrals that required an expedited assessment. In the qualitative process evaluation, 15 young people aged 16-17 years, 38 parents/carers and 56 healthcare professionals participated in semistructured interviews. Participants were randomly assigned (1 : 1) following referral receipt to intervention (the development and well-being assessment) and usual care, or usual care only. Primary outcome was a clinician-made diagnosis decision about the presence of an emotional disorder within 12 months of randomisation, collected from Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services clinical records. Secondary outcomes collected from clinical records included referral acceptance, time to offer and start treatment/interventions and discharge. Data were also self-reported from participants through online questionnaires at baseline, 6 and 12 months post randomisation, and the cost effectiveness of the intervention was investigated. One thousand two hundred and twenty-five (1225) children and young people were randomly assigned (1 : 1) to study groups between 27 August 2019 and 17 October 2021; 615 were assigned to the intervention and 610 were assigned to the control group. Adherence to the intervention (full/partial completion of the development and well-being assessment) was 80% (494/615). At 12 months, 68 (11%) participants in the intervention group received an emotional disorder diagnosis versus 72 (12%) in the control group [adjusted risk ratio 0.94 (95% confidence interval 0.70 to 1.28); p = 0.71]. Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services acceptance of the index referral [intervention 277 (45%) vs. control 262 (43%); risk ratio: 1.06 (95% confidence interval: 0.94 to 1.19)] or any referral by 18 months [intervention 374 (61%) vs. control 352 (58%); risk ratio: 1.06 (95% confidence interval: 0.97 to 1.16)] was similar between groups. There was no evidence of any differences between groups for any other secondary outcomes. The qualitative nested process evaluation identified a number of barriers and facilitators to the use of the development and well-being assessment during the trial, particularly at the assessment and diagnosis stages of the Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services pathway. It was not possible to mask participants, clinicians or site researchers collecting source data to treatment allocation. We found no evidence that completion of the development and well-being assessment aided the detection of emotional disorders in this study. Using the development and well-being assessment in this way cannot be recommended for clinical practice. To determine longer-term service use outcomes and to investigate whether receipt of a clinical diagnosis makes a difference to clinical outcomes and care/intervention receipt. This synopsis presents independent research funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment programme as award number 16/96/09.
- Research Article
1
- 10.1176/appi.ps.61.3.280
- Mar 1, 2010
- Psychiatric Services
Treatment Intensity in Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services and Health Care Reform in Norway, 1998–2006
- Research Article
7
- 10.3389/fpsyt.2022.886070
- May 9, 2022
- Frontiers in Psychiatry
BackgroundResearch has shown a strong association between suicide and mental disorders, and people in contact with services for mental health and substance use are known to be at high risk of suicide. Still, few studies have previously described suicide among young people in contact with Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services.AimThe aim of this study is to examine the prevalence of contact and suicide rates by gender and age groups, and to describe patient demographics and service utilization in secondary mental health services.MethodsAll young people in contact with Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services in the year prior to death in the period 2008–2018 were identified by linking the Norwegian Cause of Death Registry and the Norwegian Patient Registry. We estimated the prevalence of contact and suicide rates among those with and without contact, by gender and age groups. Characteristics of treatment contact were compared between boys and girls. Variables with significant differences were entered into a multivariate logistic regression model using gender as an outcome.ResultsMore girls (39.7%) than boys (11.8%) had contact with Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services in the year prior to death. Among girls, suicide rates per 100,000 patients increased linearly in the age groups 10–13, 14–16, and 17–19 years: 5, 22, and 38 per 100,000 patients, respectively. Among boys, the suicide rate increased sharply from 7 per 100,000 patients in the age group 14–16 years to 40 per 100,000 patients in the 17–19-year-old group. In the age-adjusted multivariate model, boys were 4.07 (1.22–14.44, p = 0.024) times more likely to have terminated contact at the time of death.ConclusionThis study shows gender differences in both suicide rates and service utilization among young people in contact with Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services before suicide, and future studies should focus on identifying the causes of these gender differences in service contact.
- Front Matter
12
- 10.1016/s0140-6736(20)30289-0
- Feb 1, 2020
- The Lancet
Child mental health services in England: a continuing crisis
- Research Article
8
- 10.1111/scs.12859
- Apr 22, 2020
- Scandinavian Journal of Caring Sciences
Mental health problems are one of the most pressing public health concerns of our time. Sweden has seen a sharp increase in mental disorders among children and youth during the last decade. The evidence base for treatment of psychiatric conditions has developed strongly. Clinical practice guidelines aim to compile such evidence and support healthcare professionals in evidence-based clinical decision-making. In Sweden, the national guidelines for the treatment of depression and anxiety disorders in children and adolescents were launched in 2010. The aim of this study was two folded, (i) to explore to what extent these guidelines were known and adhered to by health professionals in Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services and (ii) to investigate factors influencing implementation of the guidelines informed by the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research. A qualitative approach was used, and data were collected through interviews with 18 health professionals in Child Mental Health Services in Sweden and a combination of conventional and directed content analyses was used. The Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research guided and structured data collection and analysis. The guidelines were largely unknown by health professionals in Child Mental Health Services in all the clinics investigated. Adherence to guideline recommendations was reported as very low. Barriers to implementation were found in relation to the characteristics of the intervention, outer setting, inner setting and characteristics of the individuals involved. The government initiative to develop and disseminate the guidelines seems to have made very little impact on health professionals' clinical practice. The guidelines were poorly aligned with the health professionals' knowledge and beliefs about effective mental health services for children and youth with depression and anxiety disorders. Suggestions for future efforts to improve the development and implementation of guidelines in Child Mental Health Services settings are given.
- Single Book
28
- 10.4324/9781315646848
- May 5, 2016
Urban Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services weaves together different strands of mental health work undertaken in one inner-city Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service by professionals working in a range of ways. In particular, it provides examples of how an urban CAMH service has been responsive to, and influenced by, local circumstances, resources and knowledge. The book explores the relationship between professionals and the community context, which provides the background to the lives of individual service users and the families they serve, and how this relationship is integral to the development of a responsive service. The chapters cover a range of settings and approaches, addressing the social, cultural, political and community contexts impacting on children, young people and families. In this way Urban Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services explores challenges and issues emerging in a responsive approach to child and family work in all community settings whether they be urban, suburban or rural. Urban Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services is intended for mental health and social care professionals involved in therapeutic, social and pastoral work with children, young people, families and communities. The book will be of interest to policy-makers, mental health and social care professionals, health visitors, general practitioners, nurses and midwives , as well as to trainees in these professions including trainee clinical psychologists, social workers or psychoanalytic and systemic psychotherapists. It will also appeal to those interested in responsive communities and critical approaches to therapeutic interventions in mental health work, psychology, psychotherapy and counselling.
- Research Article
56
- 10.1111/j.0966-0410.2004.00479.x
- Feb 11, 2004
- Health and Social Care in the Community
While the recommendation issued by the Health Advisory Service in 1995 is for a tiered child and adolescent mental health service, there is little published evidence about the outcomes of such services. Our objective was to evaluate an innovative community-based child and adolescent mental health service in South and East Leeds using before and after measures. The client group of the service was children and families with emotional and behavioural problems and/or parenting difficulties. Standardised assessment of families and young people was followed by brief intervention (solution-focused therapy) to the child and family. Descriptive demographic and referral pathway details were recorded, as were baseline and postintervention Health of the Nation Outcome Scales for Children and Adolescents (HoNOSCA) scores. South Leeds generated almost four times as many referrals in the 9 months after the Tier 2 Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service (CAMHS) was set up. Clinically and statistically significant decreases in symptom scores were found for families completing work with the Tier 2 workers. Families referred on to Tier 3 had complex but not more severe problems. The new service encountered previously unmet need among troubled young people in the community, whilst freeing specialist Tier 3 staff to concentrate on complex, chronic problems.
- Research Article
58
- 10.1111/camh.12207
- Feb 9, 2017
- Child and Adolescent Mental Health
During 12-month period (2012/13) around 21,480 children and young people (CYP) were referred to Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service (CAMHS) in Scotland (NHS Scotland, 2013, Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services waiting times in Scotland). At the end of September 2012, there were 3,602 CYP still waiting for 'start of treatment' or 'removal from the waiting list', 375 (10%) CYP had waited over 26weeks and 1,204 (33%) CYP had waited over 18weeks (NHS Scotland, 2013, Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services waiting times in Scotland). Referral source, referral reason and the sociodemographic characteristics of CYP are not routinely collected, and therefore, associations between these factors and wait times for 'start of treatment' or 'removal from the waiting list' (i.e. the referral outcome) are unknown. In this exploratory study, a retrospective analysis of referral data was conducted in one CAMHS. Data for 476 referrals between 1st May 2013 and 31st May 2014 were initially analysed to define categories for each of the following key variables: referral source, referral reason and referral outcome. Data on CYP sociodemographic characteristics were extracted from referral records, including age, gender and postcode, from which Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation quintile of residence was derived. Descriptive statistics were calculated for referral source, referral reason and CYP sociodemographic characteristics. Regression models were then built to determine predictors of a referral being rejected by CAMHS and waiting time for referrals accepted by CAMHS. Data were analysed in SPSS (Version 20). Of the 476 referrals, 72% (n=342) were accepted and 12% (n=59) were rejected. Most referrals were made by general practitioners. Just under a third of referrals to CAMHS (31%) were for CYP with emotional and behavioural difficulties. The odds of being rejected by CAMHS were significantly higher if referred by teachers and for CYP with emotional and behavioural difficulties. Age and referral reason were significant independent predictors of waiting time after referral to CAMHS, with CYP referred for hyperactivity/inattention waiting significantly longer. Policymakers should consider ways to foster dialogue and collaboration between different groups of professionals making and accepting referrals to CAMHS in order to improve timely access to appropriate mental health support services for CYP. Research is urgently needed to investigate the experiences of CYP who are either rejected by CAMHS or wait lengthy periods of time before starting their treatment with CAMHS.
- News Article
- 10.1016/s2215-0366(15)00138-8
- Mar 31, 2015
- The Lancet Psychiatry
Politics on the mind: assessing the state of mental health after the election
- Research Article
18
- 10.3310/hsdr03220
- May 1, 2015
- Health Services and Delivery Research
BackgroundInpatient child and adolescent mental health services are one part of a complex system, and exist to meet the needs of young people with the greatest mental health difficulties.ObjectivesThe research question was ‘What is known about the identification, assessment and management of risk (where “risk” is broadly conceived) in young people (aged 11–18 years) with complex mental health needs entering, using and exiting inpatient child and adolescent mental health services in the UK?’Data sourcesThe two-phase Evidence for Policy and Practice Information and Co-ordinating Centre approach was used. In phase 1, scoping searches were made using two databases with an end date of March 2013. Phase 2 centred on the search for citations relating to the risks to young people of ‘dislocation’ and ‘contagion’. Searches were made using 17 databases, with time limits from 1995 to September 2013. Websites were searched, a call for evidence circulated and references of included citations reviewed.Review methodsPriority risk areas for phase 2 were decided in collaboration with stakeholders including through consultations with young people and the mother of a child who had been in hospital. All types of evidence relating to outcomes, views and experiences, costs and cost-effectiveness, policies, and service and practice responses in the areas of ‘dislocation’ and ‘contagion’ for young people (11–18 years) using inpatient mental health services were considered. A staged approach to screening was used. Data were extracted into tables following guidance from the Centre for Reviews and Dissemination or tables developed for the review. Quality was assessed using appraisal checklists from the Effective Public Health Practice Project or the Critical Skills Appraisal Programme or devised by previous reviewers. No papers were excluded on the grounds of quality, and all materials identified were narratively synthesised.ResultsIn phase 1, 4539 citations were found and 124 included. Most were concerned with clinical risks. In phase 2, 15,662 citations were found and 40 addressing the less obvious risks of ‘dislocation’ and ‘contagion’ were included, supplemented by 20 policy and guidance documents. These were synthesised using these categories: Dislocation: Normal Life; Dislocation: Identity; Dislocation: Friends; Dislocation: Stigma; Dislocation: Education; Dislocation: Families; and Contagion. No studies included an economic analysis or economic evaluation. The importance to stakeholders of these less obvious risks contrasted with the limited quantity and quality of research capable of informing policy, services and practice in these areas.LimitationsIncluded studies were of variable quality. Data derived could not be used to inform an economic modelling of NHS costs or to analyse cost-effectiveness. Other limitations were the search for only English-language materials and the use of umbrella concepts (‘dislocation’ and ‘contagion’).ConclusionsThe less obvious risks are important, but little evidence exists to support their identification, assessment and management. This has implications for services, and a programme of research is recommended to generate new knowledge.FundingThe National Institute for Health Research Health Services and Delivery Research programme.
- Research Article
- 10.1108/13619322200400013
- Jun 1, 2004
- Mental Health Review Journal
uring the last 10 years or so, there has been a remarkable rise of interest in children’s mental health. This is good news – and we shouldn’t be too shy to celebrate, nor too afraid to dwell on a worry or two lest, in ignoring them, we find the rise begin to fall. Broadly speaking, up until the early 1990s child mental health was pretty much hidden within the preserve of the specialist professional groups. This is not to say that little was going on. A great deal about children was being learned and practised. From Freud onwards, major advances in psychoanalysis, developmental psychology, behavioural and cognitive therapy and family and group therapy were bringing to life our understanding of the minds of children. Of course, much more needed to be known (and still does) but there was undoubtedly an exhilarating sense of inquiry into the nature of children’s mental health problems and family dynamics and into how interventions could be improved to bring about change in people’s troubled lives. What was lacking, however, was any real concerted desire to make these developments known to the wider public. Children’s mental health was simply not a political issue. The fact that it lay at the heart of so many of the prevailing social problems such as crime, drug misuse, teenage pregnancy and homelessness simply didn’t seem to ring a bell. At the time poverty, child welfare and child protection were the key political preoccupations but the concept of child mental health didn’t hit the headlines. If anything, the term carried with it something pejorative – as if it was stigmatising to associate the words ‘child’ and ‘mental health’. What was clearly needed was an effort to make more of a hue and cry about what was known and what was being done – a promotional campaign that would help to make the public more aware. YoungMinds, which I and others formed in the late 1980s, played a major role in taking forward this campaign. Most of us came from within the child guidance movement which in the mid-twentieth century was very involved in D developing multi-disciplinary working. In addition to YoungMinds various similar movements were afoot in the USA and some European countries, and in the UK certain key people proved critical in taking forward the agenda. Virginia Bottomley, for example, secretary of state for health from 1992 to 1995, was a former psychiatric social worker in child guidance clinics in London. Other leading figures at this time were Dr Richard Williams, a consultant child psychiatrist and director of the NHS Health Advisory Service, Dr Bob Jezzard, also a child psychiatrist, employed as a senior adviser in the Department of Health, and Dr Zarrina Kurtz, a public health consultant who had a particular interest in child development and children’s mental health problems. I myself was a child psychotherapist working in child guidance and residential treatment. Together, with one or two others, we joined up almost as if by accident. In effect, we shined as a kind of virtual multi-disciplinary team! We all set about in our own ways to build up and tell the story of the states that children’s minds could get into, of the prevalence of their mental health problems and of the predicament of those who tried to serve them. Most importantly, we brought to much greater light the invaluable findings of Professor Michael Rutter’s and Professor Philip Graham’s epidemiological research in the 1970s. It was, of course, not by chance that the first seminal review of child and adolescent mental health services produced by the Health Advisory Service (1995) was entitled Together We Stand. Let us take just a brief review of what is currently going on. First and foremost, the government now openly acknowledges the existence of child and adolescent mental health services (CAMHS) and is committed to investing considerable sums of money in them and also to introducing an infrastructure designed to support a more systematic and forwardmoving programme. All of this is quite unprecedented and I think it is true to say that the national child and adolescent mental health service is not the Cinderella service it once was some 12 or so years ago. It may not yet be in the prince’s arms, and the ugly sisters are still around, but at least it’s in the court!
- Research Article
- 10.25602/gold.atol.v4i1.311
- Jan 1, 2013
- Art Therapy Online
This paper offers a review of how the role of Art Therapy is represented in four important areas: In Specialist (Tier 3) Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) in England, in government and related documentation and polices, within broader literature pertaining to Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services, as well as in Art Therapy publications. The author found that there are shortcomings in the understanding of the profession including the unique role that art therapy offers, as well as an evident lack of inclusion across the range of literature. The author contends that central factors exerting influence include powerful socio-politico-economic agenda and influence, unprecedented change in the field of psychological therapies, unconscious processes, and limited self-promotion. The paper argues that lack of clarity and effective promotion of the unique role of art therapy may lead to there being a lack of consideration of art therapy or for art therapy to be decommissioned in CAMHS. The review has worldwide relevance to those concerned with practice, promotion and commissioning of art therapy in services that work children and young people with mental health and psychological needs. Keywords: socio-politico agenda, promotion, representation, NHS publications, child and adolescent mental health services
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