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Chamber and committees

Question reference: S6W-06611

  • Asked by: Carol Mochan, MSP for South Scotland, Scottish Labour
  • Date lodged: 15 February 2022
  • Current status: Answered by Kevin Stewart on 4 March 2022

Question

To ask the Scottish Government what its response is to reported calls from the Royal College of Psychiatrists in Scotland to "pull out all the stops" to improve mental health services for children and young people.


Answer

There has been significant pressure on mental health services throughout the pandemic, and the Scottish Government has responded with record-breaking levels of investment, including our £120 million Mental Health Recovery & Renewal Fund. As part of that work, we have made an additional £40 million available this year to improve Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) and to clear waiting list backlogs by March 2023. We are also continuing to work directly with Health Boards with the poorest performance to ensure the 18 week waiting time standard is met.

As set out in the Mental Health Transition and Recovery Plan, we are taking a whole systems approach to improving children and young people’s mental health. Alongside investing in acute CAMHS, we are seeking to ensure community services and school counselling are also available in a responsive and timely manner. We are developing responses to young people experiencing crisis and distress, as well as investing in approaches that promote prevention, early intervention and reducing stigma.

To support this approach, an additional £15 million has been provided to local authorities this year to deliver locally based mental health and wellbeing support for 5-24 year olds in their communities, providing alternative treatment options and pathways to CAMHS, and we have also ensured access to counselling support services in all secondary schools. Additionally, we are committed to supporting every health board in Scotland with development of Infant Mental Health (IMH) provision through £3 million of funding per annum.

This package of commitments is designed to help ensure the right help is available, in the right place, at the right time. This additional investment will contribute towards delivering our commitment to ensure that, by the end of this Parliament, at least 10% of frontline NHS spend goes towards mental health, with 1% going towards CAMHS.