We are child and adolescent psychiatrists who work in the National Health Service (NHS) with abused and neglected children and their families. Our jobs involve multidisciplinary and multiagency working, complex assessments and cutting-edge interventions. We find this work fascinating and deeply satisfying, although we are aware that this has not in the past been a popular area for psychiatrists and other mental health specialists in which to engage, resulting in a lack of clinical research and stilted service development. As a result of some of the government policies, some child and adolescent mental health services (CAMHS) now support children ‘looked after’ and ‘in care’; however, mental health input for this population remains patchy across the country.
We are writing now because it is a classic moment of opportunity and threat. We are encouraged by The Munro Review of Child Protection, Reference Munro1 which tries to free social workers from bureaucracy and encourage more autonomous use of clinical judgement. We also see potential in the government's drive to raise the profile of public health. 2 On the other hand, the chief medical officer's initiative, ‘Bearing Good Witness’, 3 to promote multidisciplinary expert assessments in the family court, has been slow to get off the ground. Reference Tucker, Moorehead and Doughty4 Furthermore, in the present adverse economic environment the government is considering reducing the involvement of experts in the family court 5 and cutting their fees. 6 Financial restraint also threatens the continued development of looked-after children (LAC) teams, which has been a very welcome initiative.
A public health perspective
Child abuse and neglect affect a substantial number of children. In their study of children in high-income countries, Gilbert et al Reference Gilbert, Widom, Browne, Fergusson, Webb and Janson7 discovered that about 4-16% of children are physically abused and one in ten is neglected or psychologically abused every year. Further, the study revealed that between 5 and 10% of girls and up to 5% of boys ‘are exposed to penetrative sexual abuse and up to three times this number are exposed to any type of sexual abuse’.
Abuse and neglect have an immediate impact on mental health and well-being. The most recent survey by the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (NSPCC) suggests that ‘severely maltreated’ young people aged 11-17 years are six times more likely to have current suicidal ideation than their counterparts who have not been maltreated. 8
Childhood abuse and neglect is important from a public health perspective because it has long-lasting effects on adult mental health, drug and alcohol misuse, obesity and criminal behaviour. Reference Gilbert, Widom, Browne, Fergusson, Webb and Janson7 In women, there is a particularly strong link between penetrative sexual abuse in childhood and adult mental health disorders. For example, using data from a cross-sectional national psychiatric survey, Jonas et al Reference Jonas, Bebbington, McManus, Meltzer, Jenkins and Kuipers9 found that women who had experienced non-consensual sexual intercourse before the age of 16 had increased rates of common psychiatric disorders (e.g. depression), drug dependence, alcohol dependence, post-traumatic stress disorder and eating disorders, with odds ratios (ORs) ranging from 4.1 to 8.83 (in other words, they were four to nine times more likely to be ill than if they had not been abused). The link was even stronger between non-consensual sexual intercourse before the age of 16 and psychosis (OR = 10.14). Reference Bebbington, Jonas, Kuipers, King, Cooper and Brugha10 Using a very different method, Cutajar et al Reference Cutajar, Mullen, Ogloff, Thomas, Wells and Spataro11 followed a large cohort of sexually abused children over a number of decades. They found that rape in early adolescence by more than one perpetrator increased the risk of adult psychotic syndromes by 15-fold.
Whereas odds ratios provide a measure of the strength of the association between a risk factor and a disorder, the population attributable fraction represents the proportion of disorders that can be ascribed to exposure to a particular risk. In theory, the population attributable fraction indicates how much the prevalence of a disorder would be reduced if the risk factor was eliminated in the population. Reference Northridge12 Analysing data from the Christchurch Health and Development Study in New Zealand, Fergusson et al Reference Fergusson, Boden and Horwood13 concluded that eliminating childhood sexual abuse (involving attempted or completed sexual penetration) would reduce the overall rates of mental disorder by 13.1%. In a later study in England, Bebbington et al Reference Bebbington, Jonas, Kuipers, King, Cooper and Brugha10 found that reducing contact and non-contact child sexual abuse would reduce the rate of psychosis by 22%.
In real life, particular forms of abuse or neglect rarely occur in isolation. Instead, they are strongly associated with each other and other adversities that harm children's health and development such as domestic violence, parental substance misuse, parental mental health problems, parental intellectual difficulties, parental offending, housing problems, social isolation, displacement and/or persecution. Kessler et al Reference Kessler, McLaughlin, Greif Green, Gruber, Sampson and Zaslavsky14 examined joint associations of 12 childhood adversities with first onset of 20 DSM-IV disorders in the World Health Organization's World Mental Health Surveys in 21 countries. They found that parental mental illness, child abuse and neglect were the strongest predictors of disorders; that the effects were across all the disorders and countries; and that collectively childhood adversities account for 29.8% of all mental health disorders. This is almost certainly an underestimate because psychosis was not among the 20 disorders the researchers looked at.
It follows that prevention and early intervention with child abuse and neglect presents a clear opportunity to improve lifetime mental health. Reference Read and Bentall15 In this editorial, we examine the role of CAMHS in its current reality and in its potential to do more.
CAMHS’ involvement with children who are neglected or abused
A large proportion of abused and neglected children have a psychiatric disorder. An epidemiological study of children and adolescents in Great Britain Reference Ford, Vostanis, Meltzer and Goodman16 found significantly higher rates of difficulty among ‘looked-after’ children (children in foster care) compared with other socioeconomically disadvantaged children or children in the remaining private household sample; the proportion with at least one ICD-10 psychiatric diagnosis was 46%, 15% and 9% respectively in each of these categories. We know less about the abused and neglected children who are not yet looked after but it seems reasonable to assume that rates of psychiatric disorder would also be high.
Many children will present with diagnoses (attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, anxiety, conduct disorder) for which the evidence base developed in the CAMHS clinic population is applicable. There is also a growing evidence base for effective treatments specifically targeting children with a maltreatment background or aimed at parent-child interventions. Reference MacMillan, Wathen, Barlow, Fergusson, Leventhal and Tuassig17 Cognitive-behavioural approaches are often recommended, and there are now some randomised controlled trials, for example in the treatment of PTSD in sexually abused children. Reference Cohen, Deblinger, Mannarino and Steer18,Reference Macdonald, Higgins and Ramchandani19 Interventions based on a theoretical understanding of attachment difficulties are very popular, but relatively few have been systematically evaluated. Reference Van Horn, Lieberman, Brom, Pat-Horenczyck and Ford20 Evaluated parent-child interaction studies have successfully targeted physical abuse. Reference Tanaka, Jamieson, Wathen and MacMillan21 Multidimensional Treatment Foster Care is an ambitious and effective treatment programme targeting children in foster care through working with their carers and supporting network. Reference Chamberlain and Reid22
Barriers to CAMHS’ involvement
Child and adolescent mental health services have historically tended to regard child abuse and neglect as a social problem, requiring a social care solution. Research in the past decade highlighting the high prevalence of mental health problems has contributed to a gradual shift in this attitude. However, despite repeated initiatives such as ‘Working Together’, 23 there has been a failure to clarify processes for interagency working and collaboration between CAMHS and Social Services tends to be clumsy. We believe there are complex emotional, historical, political and economic reasons which act as a deterrent to CAMHS’ involvement.
The emotional demands of the work can act as a psychological barrier. Abused and neglected children feel very anxious, angry, helpless and hopeless. These feelings are difficult to bear and contribute to splits and rivalries in the professional network. Reference Conway24 We find that clinicians working in a well-functioning, multidisciplinary team are better able to cope, especially where there are clear structures for interagency working. The work is challenging also because abused or neglected children find it harder to trust and develop a therapeutic relationship. Similarly, it takes great clinical skill to maintain a therapeutic alliance despite sharing child protection concerns with Social Services. Clinicians can also be reluctant to begin work that could be disrupted by placement moves, although short-term interventions are becoming more widely accepted. Reference Wakelyn25
The relatively low referral rate of abused and neglected children to CAMHS may relate to a number of factors, Reference Golding26 including the absence of advocacy for the child, under-recognition of mental health problems, and a perception among adoptive parents that common CAMHS treatment approaches such as family therapy may focus on parental difficulties, without fully understanding or acknowledging the extent of the child contribution. Reference Rushton27 Issues of stigma and shame can make young people reluctant to seek help.
Although there are examples of excellent practice across the country, many overstretched CAMHS’ clinics cannot give the work the attention it needs. Tensions exist at the interface between CAMHS and Social Services and also the family justice system. Because nearly all court assessments are done privately or by assessment-only NHS teams, there is frequently a disjunction between the recommendations and the reality of the local CAMHS provision. Moreover, waiting times for CAMHS are usually not dynamic enough to respond to the demands of the court and local authority. We believe major structural changes are needed in the way assessments are carried out and treatments are offered.
What should the role of CAMHS be?
An effective public health strategy for child abuse and neglect requires primary, secondary and tertiary prevention (Box 1). Primary prevention aims to prevent maltreatment in the first instance. It includes education and health promotion among groups at risk. We accept that primary prevention is unlikely to require CAMHS.
Secondary prevention seeks to detect maltreatment at an early stage, when the effect on the child is more limited and reversible. It requires interventions not only to help the child but also to address difficulties in the parent and the parent-child relationship. We believe this is an area where CAMHS has significantly more to offer. We advocate the development of multiagency working with the family court, Social Services, adult treatment services, probation, housing and others to improve outcomes for children. Very often social workers have collected the necessary evidence to initiate care proceedings but lack the training to analyse the evidence. There are cases when children could remain at home if a timely, well-coordinated, multiagency intervention could be deployed. Child mental health professionals have a great deal to offer here.
The Family Drug and Alcohol Court (FDAC) is an example of a more complex secondary prevention programme. It helps families where children are in care proceedings as a result of their parent's substance misuse. It involves collaboration between the family court, child and adult mental health experts, treatment services, social workers, housing services and many more. Parents are given ‘a trial for change’ to provide the best possible chance to overcome their problems and meet their children's needs in an appropriate timeframe. Interventions include supporting abstinence and lifestyle change, intensive treatment to help parents address the problems driving their substance misuse, treatments to improve the parent-child relationship and treatment of individual children. The programme has been shown to not only improve children's chances of remaining with their family, but also ensure a permanent alternative placement is found more swiftly when staying with their family is not possible. Reference Harwin, Ryan, Tunnard, Pokhrel, Alrouh and Matias28
Tertiary prevention targets children already damaged by abuse and neglect; these are children in long-term foster care, kinship placements and adoptive families. This is an area where CAMHS’ role needs to be consolidated. We agree with the authors Reference Romanelli, Landsverk, Levitt, Leslie, Hurley and Gries29-Reference Street and Davies31 who advocate universal mental health screening for children entering care.
Rao et al Reference Rao, Ali and Vostanis32 argue that CAMHS should only see looked-after and adopted children with an identifiable psychiatric disorder. We believe impairment is not always well captured by psychiatric diagnosis, as children with early abuse or neglect often present with a complex array of developmental deficits. Reference DeJong33,Reference Tarren-Sweeney34 This is not surprising, considering the range of aetiological factors at play, for example: prenatal exposure to drugs and alcohol, the effects of early trauma on brain development, disrupted or distorted attachment processes, and loss of the biological family. A service with acceptance criteria requiring a threshold of psychiatric diagnosis will therefore not meet all the mental health needs of this population.
Box 1 The role of CAMHS in prevention and early intervention with child abuse and neglect
Primary prevention:
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• aims to prevent maltreatment in the first instance
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• involves education and health promotion among at-risk groups
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• unlikely to require direct CAMHS involvement.
Secondary prevention:
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• early intervention when the effect on the child is more limited and reversible
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• helping children directly and also addressing difficulties in the parent and the parent-child relationship
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• requires development of CAMHS-led multiagency interventions working with the family court, Social Services, adult treatment services, probation, housing and others to improve outcomes for children
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• possible to improve outcomes for children but also save money in the short term.
Tertiary prevention:
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• targeting children already damaged by abuse and neglect
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• aims to reduce suffering, promote quality of life and prevent the onset of adult mental health disorders
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• requires introduction of universal screening for psychiatric diagnosis and developmental deficits in all children coming into care
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• strengthening and extending the role of looked-after children (LAC) teams to assess, treat and monitor children picked up by screening
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• requires improved capacities to work with children in short-term placements as well as long-term monitoring of complex cases
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• will require additional funding but strong public health argument for long-term savings to the public purse.
Good-quality mental health assessments of children and treatment of mental health disorders is a generally undisputed role for CAMHS. More controversial is the timing of interventions, with many CAMHS still arguing that they are unable to offer anything until a child's care situation is stabilised with a long-term care plan in place. Prompt intervention (e.g. for ADHD) can prevent foster placement breakdown. Reference Wakelyn25
The introduction of LAC teams in the UK has been welcome, in that it encouraged the development of specialist expertise and also close working across health and social services. However, interventions in LAC services are short term, ending once a child is either rehabilitated or placed in alternative long-term care such as a kinship placement or adoption. We agree with Tarren-Sweeney Reference Tarren-Sweeney30 that services for looked-after and adopted children should have the capacity to offer long-term monitoring and treatment, unlike the acute intervention model of generic CAMHS. Not only is this a better model for children with long-term and complex needs, but it improves the likelihood that we will be able to prevent the onset of adult mental health disorders.
A coherent framework to provide adequate mental health support for this vulnerable population of children requires an agreed referral pathway, clear procedures for interagency working and interdisciplinary structures that facilitate close cooperation between disciplines working within social care, health and the family justice system. A good model would build on current LAC teams, creating specialist teams within CAMHS with expertise in this area. These teams could provide regular consultation to social workers, foster carers, residential workers, and adoption support social workers. An outreach component may help to overcome barriers relating to access. The team could liaise with adult mental health services over child protection issues relating to mental health in a parent. Where appropriate, they could refer children with psychiatric disorders to generic CAMHS for management and treatment. Strong links between the specialist team and generic CAMHS would be needed to prevent fragmentation of care. Reference Street and Davies31 The model would be one of triage and consultation as well as implementing treatment in areas that relate specifically to experiences of maltreatment and neglect. There is a need to develop and evaluate new interventions in this area in addition to continued outcome-monitoring of established evidence-based interventions.
Commissioning changes: a challenge and an opportunity
A period of financial restraint may seem an odd time to be promoting a utopian vision of service restructuring within CAMHS. However, the landscape of commissioning is changing rapidly. This is a time when other agencies, such as social care and the family justice system, are carefully re-evaluating their own approach to their work in this area. Changes within the NHS will lead to new developments in mental health commissioning. If ‘health and well-being boards’ are introduced, services with a clear public health benefit are more likely to be funded. 2 Money currently being paid to private experts by local authorities could be diverted into developing local CAMHS. There are some precedents for this in different parts of the country where local multidisciplinary expert witness teams have been initiated. Use of health economists can be invaluable in making the argument for restructuring. An evaluation of the FDAC by an international accountancy firm found that it saves the public purse more than it costs within a year. 35
It therefore seems an opportunity for CAMHS clinicians and managers to think through how we can best meet the needs of this population by clarifying roles, responsibilities, operational criteria and care pathways. Without this vision there is a risk that commissioning will take place without the benefit of the thoughtful expertise of clinicians and that as a result lack of clarity and patchy provision will prevail. More importantly, an opportunity to link CAMHS to a clear public health strategy will be missed.
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