News

Extra £25m for NHS organisations in England to improve mental health services for children and young people

An extra £25m has been allocated to Clinical Commissioning Groups (CCGs) across the country to accelerate plans for improving mental health services for children and young people, helping to cut waiting times for treatment, reduce waiting list backlogs and minimise the length of stay for those in inpatient care.

This year £149m was awarded to CCGs following a commitment by the Government to improve mental health services for children and young people in the 2014 Autumn Statement and 2015 Spring Budget. The new money has been allocated by the Government to ensure that by 2020, an extra 70,000 children and young people will be able to access evidence based treatment.

In July, NHS England published a detailed plan – Implementing the Five Year Forward View for Mental Health – that set out how new funding should be invested to increase access and improve quality, with a clear aim to meet 35 per cent of children and young people’s mental health needs in the community by 2020/21.

Funding received by CCGs increases each year to 2020/21, with the objective of maximising the amount available for frontline services that benefit children, young people and their families.

In keeping with this aim, and recognising the pressures which are faced by local areas in transforming their services, NHS England has reprioritised spending on national programmes to identify an additional £25m for CCGs to spend in 2016/17.

In order to secure release of the additional £25m, CCGs will be asked to provide details of how they intend to improve average waiting times for treatment by March 2017.

Clare Murdoch, NHS England’s National Director for Mental Health, said: “This additional funding is evidence that improving mental health services is an absolute priority for the NHS. We hope this year to see some real headway being made on ensuring that children and young people with mental health needs are seen and treated as quickly and as close to home as possible.”

It is expected that this funding will also support CCGs to continue to invest in staff training and progress plans to pump-prime crisis, liaison and home treatment interventions suitable for under 18s, with the goal of minimising inappropriate admissions to in-patient, paediatric or adult mental health wards.
CCGs are free to pool this funding across NHS organisations in their area to help deliver local transformation plans for mental health (LTPs) as well as sustainability and transformation plans (STPs).

3 comments

  1. l homayon-jones says:

    it would help if there wasnt an abrupt cut off for access to CAMHS at 16 in some areas
    is this money ringfenced? why are c&yp shipped hundreds of miles away from families because of lack of local provision? cuts to local authority social care funding just causes crises to already vulnerable families
    drop in ocean

  2. Wendy Minhinnett says:

    Please can you tell me if this funding is ring fenced for children’s mental health services? or if CCG’s can use the funding for other priorities
    Many thanks

  3. Anonymous says:

    Any extra money has to be welcomed, however, given that during the year my daughter became acutely ill our local services were cut by £14 million, and if you extrapolate that cut nationally I don’t feel reassured that funding for MH services and treatment has caught up with where it was ten years ago. I am very saddened but not surprised to hear that 26% of young women are suffering from mental health problems now. If that is not an epidemic then I don’t know what is. Is the research being done to find out why this is happening, and are new service models responsive to the gendered aspects of this epidemic?