Recognition of the scale of mental health problems in children and young peopleReference Green, McGinnity, Meltzer, Ford and Goodman1 and the implications that childhood mental health has for mental disorder in adulthoodReference Kessler, Berglund, Demler, Jin, Merikangas and Walters2 have led to increasing emphasis on prevention and early intervention. There has been a particular focus on schools as a universal access point for mental health support from research and policy alike.Reference Fazel, Hoagwood, Stephan and Ford3 A recent green paper from the British government and a set of proposals arising out of it4, 5 highlights the role of schools in supporting the mental health of children and young people and proposes the introduction of mental health leads in every school, alongside mental health support teams working with schools to offer individual and/or group-based support, as well as making referrals to more specialist services.
Such proposals drew heavily on prevalence data collected over a decade ago suggesting that one in ten young people experience mental health problems.Reference Green, McGinnity, Meltzer, Ford and Goodman1 However, one very recent report published after submission of the current paper reports slightly higher rates of one in eight6 and further studies indicate there may be higher rates in some populations (for example adolescent girlsReference Fink, Patalay, Sharpe, Holley, Deighton and Wolpert7, Reference Patalay and Fitzsimons8), with a range of groups showing increased odds of experiencing such difficulties (such as children from more deprived backgrounds and those with additional learning needsReference Merikangas, Avenevoli, Costello, Koretz and Kessler9). The current study draws on a recent, large-scale survey of a community-based sample of adolescents to explore prevalence of mental health problems in schools and characteristics that increase the odds of children and young people experiencing them.
Method
The full sample for the current analyses was 28 160 out of a possible 30 866 adolescents with complete data on all study variables (46.2% male), 51.2% of whom were in Year 7 (age 11–12) and 48.8% of whom were in Year 9 (age 13–14) in 97 state-maintained secondary schools across six geographical locations in England. Of 2726 not included in these analyses, 2016 were missing demographic data and 710 were missing relevant survey data, with those missing survey data being more likely to be eligible for free school meals (FSM), have a statement of special educational needs (SEN) and less likely to be Asian. Comparisons with national datasets show that the sample (a) was slightly more deprived than the national average, based on FSM eligibility (study sample FSM: 4576, 16.3% v. national figures of 13.8%); (b) had a slightly lower proportion of children with a statement of SEN (study sample: 3194, 11.3% either has a statement of SEN or SEN support v. national figures 12.6% with either a statement of SEN, an education, health and care plan or SEN support); and (c) had a greater proportion of young people classified as White (study sample: 21 979, 78.1% v. national figures of 75.1%).
Measures
The child self-report Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ)Reference Goodman, Meltzer and Bailey10 was used to broadly indicate the proportions of young people in schools reporting mental health difficulties. The SDQ is a 25-item measure comprising four problem scales (emotional symptoms, conduct problems, peer-relationship problems, hyperactivity/inattention problems) and a prosocial behaviour scale. The four problem scales have thresholds for ‘borderline’ and ‘abnormal’ scoring ranges indicating children and young people at elevated and high risk of experiencing mental health problems.Reference Goodman, Meltzer and Bailey10 The ‘abnormal’ thresholds were used to create binary variables of above (1) versus below (0) threshold. Findings presented here relate only to the four problem scales.
The following potential risk factors were derived from the National Pupil Database: SEN status; FSM eligibility; child in need status (CIN, this is a child who either (a) is unlikely to achieve/maintain a reasonable standard of health and development without local authority provision; (b) is likely to be impaired without local authority provision; or (c) is disabled); and ethnicity (Asian, Black, Chinese, Mixed, White or any other ethnic group).
Procedure
Children in Years 7 and 9 in participating schools completed surveys online in a usual school lesson. Survey data were collected using a secure online system as part of a teacher-facilitated session during a usual school day. Consent for participation in the research was sought from parents prior to, and from children and young people at the outset of, the survey sessions. Parental opt outs were received by post, phone or email and child assent was recorded via computer at the beginning of survey sessions. Schools were selected to be involved in the study by virtue of their involvement in the HeadStart programme (this is a National Lottery funded programme and the data described here are part of the baseline data collection for the programme). This research was approved by the UCL ethics committee (reference: 8097/003).
Results
Across the 97 schools, 18.4% scored above the abnormal threshold for emotional symptoms, 18.5% for conduct problems, 25.3% for inattention/hyperactivity and 7.3% for peer-relationship problems; 42.5% scored above threshold for any one of the first three problem scales (emotional symptoms, conduct problems or inattention/hyperactivity). Odds ratios calculated in Stata using multilevel logistic regression models showed many similarities across different types of mental health problems and revealed that very little variance in mental health problems were accounted for by schools (intraclass correlations ≤0.02; Table 1).
a. Each column represents a new regression model.
***P < 0.0001, **P < 0.001, *P < 0.05.
Having SEN significantly increased the odds of experiencing any of the four mental health problems, as did FSM eligibility. With the exception of peer-relationship problems, being in the older year group significantly increased the odds of experiencing a mental health problem. Being male significantly increased the odds of scoring above threshold for behavioural problems and inattention/hyperactivity, whereas being female significantly increased the odds of experiencing emotional symptoms. In terms of ethnicity, relative to the White ethnic group (as the largest ethnic grouping in the sample): being Asian significantly reduced the odds of experiencing any of the four mental health problems; and being Black significantly reduced the odds of experiencing all mental health problems, except conduct problems, for which the odds were comparable with being White. Being a CIN significantly increased the odds of experiencing all mental health problems with the exception of emotional symptoms.
Discussion
Findings reported here indicate the scale of mental health problems in children across many schools in England is much higher than previous estimates, with around two in five young people scoring above ‘abnormal’ thresholds for three of the four problem areas measured (emotional problems, conduct problems and hyperactivity).
Although this sample was slightly more deprived on average than all schools nationally, the higher proportion of children eligible for FSM does not fully account for the extent of the increased rates of self-reported mental health problems. Moreover, these findings are consistent with other recent reports of increasing rates of mental health problems in children.Reference Fink, Patalay, Sharpe, Holley, Deighton and Wolpert7, Reference Pitchforth, Fahy, Ford, Wolpert, Viner and Hargreaves11 Such increases may reflect potential improvements in accuracy in young people's reporting because of greater recognition of mental health issues.Reference Pitchforth, Fahy, Ford, Wolpert, Viner and Hargreaves11 Alternatively, increases may represent an actual rise in difficulties. It is beyond the scope of this paper to speculate as to what might drive such a rise but many factors have been suggested including the impact of austerity,12 increasing experience of academic pressures,Reference Hutchings and Kazmi13 reduced rates of sleepReference Smaldone, Honig and Byrne14 and increased use of social media.Reference Kushlev, Proulx and Dunn15 Rates were particularly high for attention problems, a finding which, though surprising, is not inconsistent with other recent studies employing the same measures.Reference Fink, Patalay, Sharpe, Holley, Deighton and Wolpert7 It is possible that this increased rate is partly explained by measurement issues and that a diagnostic tool may not have revealed such high proportions.Reference Polanczyk, Salum, Sugaya, Caye and Rohde16 Also, it may be that child report of feeling ‘restless’ or not being able to ‘sit still for long’ reflect increased expectations of them to sit still and concentrate rather than changes in the behaviours themselves.Reference Polanczyk, Salum, Sugaya, Caye and Rohde16 Rates of peer problems were low compared with the other problem domains, suggesting that the increases in other difficulties are potentially not adversely affecting peer relationships in this age group. However, all these suggestions await further rigorous research.
In terms of risk factors for mental health problems, odds ratios also indicate that gender, deprivation (FSM eligibility), CIN status, ethnicity and age all significantly altered the odds of experiencing mental health difficulties. Where risk factors are in higher concentration in schools, such as those with high proportions of FSM eligibility, the prevalence of mental health problems is likely to be even higher.
In addition to the skew towards a more deprived population noted above, the reliance on child self-report data from a very brief assessment tool should be acknowledged as a limitation of this study and may contribute to the high estimates reported. There generally is low to modest agreement between different reporters of child mental health problemsReference Cheng, Keyes, Bitfoi, Carta, Koç and Goelitz17 and any brief assessment tool such as the SDQ is unlikely to have the sensitivity and specificity of a diagnostic interview6 in its detection of mental health problems, increasing the likelihood of false positives (i.e. identification of mental health problems where there are none) and false negatives (no identification of mental health problems where these do in fact exist). Nevertheless, it remains the most feasible and practical means for large-scale school-based population estimates.Reference Goodman, Ford, Simmons, Gatward and Meltzer18
Findings from this study suggest two things. First, attempting to address the mental health need in at least some schools will require significant resourcing and additional support provision, over and above any provision based on the longstanding estimate of one in ten young people experiencing mental health problems. Second, creating more systemic solutions tackling ingrained risk factors implicated in a range of poor outcomes for children, such as deprivation, may be important to explore, since the same root causes appear to underlie a range of outcomes.Reference Patalay, Moulton, Goodman and Ploubidis19 Opportunities arising from an increased interest in prevention and early intervention, such as the proposals in the green paper described previously, may best be realised by close attention to these common factors.
Funding
The data used in this study was collected as part of the HeadStart learning programme and supported by funding from the Big Lottery Fund. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and it does not necessarily reflect the views of the Big Lottery Fund. This research was also supported by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care North Thames at Bart's Health NHS Trust (NIHR CLAHRC North Thames). The views expressed in this article are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of the NHS, the NIHR, or the Department of Health and Social Care.
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