My heart goes out to all the parents who are suffering because the parents do suffer too, they Don't sleep, they may have to reduce hours, they may themselves become ill. This is collateral damage that costs the NHS in tax and further treatment.
If young people got support early on it would prevent escalation and safeguard the wellbeing of their carers. There would be better outcomes for the child, the family, society and the NHS/state.
Littlegug you claim to be a CAMHS clinician can you tell me please who in school can diagnose MH conditions, who in school can refer to a specialist therapist, who in school can prescribe when things get insurmountable?
Also CAMHS clinician, what exactly does that mean? Are you a psychiatrist, a psychologist, a specialist therapist, a counsellor, a nurse, a PMHW? It is a very broad term and I was extremely disappointed to have to interrogate to find out just who my dd was being assessed by and what decisions that person could take independtly at every turn.
As the CAMHS professionals on this thread should know there was a taskforce looking into CAMHS, commissioned by NHS England. It was not commissioned to establish how fantastic CAMHS is.
In my opinion, schools exist to educate, the NHS exists to heal. They need to work collaboratively but they need also to stick to their knitting.
I hope 2018 brings peace, happiness and healing to all your young people.