Abstract

ObjectivesPolicy makers in developed countries have long considered the education system an avenue for supporting mental health care for children. Whilst educators have identified many challenges to providing this support (e.g. non-core role, stigma, overcrowded curriculum), understanding clinicians’ views on the role of educators and schools and how clinicians and schools could work together to achieve good mental health outcomes are important questions. However, clinician voices in how schools and health should work together for children’s mental health care are frequently missing from the debate. We aimed to report clinicians’ views about how the education system could support student’s mental health and improve access to mental health care for children and adolescents.Methods143 clinicians (approximately 35 each of child and adolescent psychiatrists, pediatricians, child psychologists and general practitioners (GPs)) from the states of Victoria and South Australia participated in semi-structured phone interviews between March 2018 and February 2019. Inductive content analysis was applied to address the broad study aims.FindingsKey themes emerged: (1) The role of schools in supporting individual children; (2) School based programs to support children and families; and (3) Challenges of implementing these suggestions. Clinicians across all professional groups suggested the education system could play an important role in improving access to mental health services through harnessing existing staff or co-locating mental health clinicians. They also suggested schools could identify at risk children and implement coping and social skills programs.ConclusionsSchools and educators could play a key role in prevention and early intervention of children’s mental health problems. However, before recommending exactly how to do this, key evidence gaps need to be addressed.

Highlights

  • Reducing the prevalence of common child mental health conditions is a challenge for governments and policy makers

  • 143 clinicians (approximately 35 each of child and adolescent psychiatrists, pediatricians, child psychologists and general practitioners (GPs)) from the states of Victoria and South Australia participated in semi-structured phone interviews between March 2018 and February 2019

  • Schools and educators could play a key role in prevention and early intervention of children’s mental health problems

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Summary

Introduction

Reducing the prevalence of common child mental health conditions is a challenge for governments and policy makers. Education systems have been a focus of policy makers for prevention and early intervention for mental health problems [4, 5, 11,12,13]. In the UK, the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence and the Commission on Children and Young People’s Mental Health expect educators to be able to identify early signs of mental health problems in students and provide early intervention for mental health problems [15, 16]. In Australia, a national government-funded initiative called Be You is providing online training to educators to help them identify signs and symptoms of mental health problems in students but does not call for educators to provide early intervention [17]. The evidence base for this initiative is modest [18]

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