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Assessing the experiences of care of children and young people in mental distress in acute care settings: a survey

Assessing the experiences of care of children and young people in mental distress in acute care settings: a survey
Assessing the experiences of care of children and young people in mental distress in acute care settings: a survey
Background/Aims: to date, literature may not be fully representative of the views of all children and young people experiencing mental ill health concerning their experience of attending an acute care setting with mental distress. Research highlights opinions of children and young people known to community mental health services; however, it is estimated that 65–75% of children and young people experience mental health problems are undiagnosed and untreated (Care Quality Commission, 2018). The aim of this study was to compare experiences of patients presenting to emergency settings both known (group 1) and unknown (group 2) to community mental health services.

Methods: a survey was distributed to children and young people experiencing mental distress. Survey responses were categorised into two patient groups: participants known to community children and adolescent mental health services and accessing support (group 1) and those not currently known or receiving support from any children and adolescent mental health services (group 2). Responses were categorised into ‘environment rating’, ‘nurse rating’ and overall ‘acute care rating’.

Results: disparities were identified between groups 1 and 2. Group 1 had negative acute care ratings, mainly resulting from environmental factors. Both groups reported negatively when nurses spoke to parents or carers instead of the young person themselves.

Conclusions: further research is needed into experiences of children and young people not meeting criteria for community mental health support, as there is a data gap. Paediatric nurses must directly communicate with children and young people experiencing mental distress, rather than speaking to parents or carers.
Acute care setting, Children and adolescent mental health services, Emergency care, Mental health crisis, Paediatric nurse, Patient experience
2049-5919
Williams, Sophia
ea066f94-8421-4053-bf4f-346492d8f082
Walker, Dawn-Marie
5d4c78b7-4411-493e-8844-b64efc72a1e8
Williams, Sophia
ea066f94-8421-4053-bf4f-346492d8f082
Walker, Dawn-Marie
5d4c78b7-4411-493e-8844-b64efc72a1e8

Williams, Sophia and Walker, Dawn-Marie (2022) Assessing the experiences of care of children and young people in mental distress in acute care settings: a survey. British Journal of Mental Health Nursing, 11 (3). (doi:10.12968/bjmh.2021.0025).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background/Aims: to date, literature may not be fully representative of the views of all children and young people experiencing mental ill health concerning their experience of attending an acute care setting with mental distress. Research highlights opinions of children and young people known to community mental health services; however, it is estimated that 65–75% of children and young people experience mental health problems are undiagnosed and untreated (Care Quality Commission, 2018). The aim of this study was to compare experiences of patients presenting to emergency settings both known (group 1) and unknown (group 2) to community mental health services.

Methods: a survey was distributed to children and young people experiencing mental distress. Survey responses were categorised into two patient groups: participants known to community children and adolescent mental health services and accessing support (group 1) and those not currently known or receiving support from any children and adolescent mental health services (group 2). Responses were categorised into ‘environment rating’, ‘nurse rating’ and overall ‘acute care rating’.

Results: disparities were identified between groups 1 and 2. Group 1 had negative acute care ratings, mainly resulting from environmental factors. Both groups reported negatively when nurses spoke to parents or carers instead of the young person themselves.

Conclusions: further research is needed into experiences of children and young people not meeting criteria for community mental health support, as there is a data gap. Paediatric nurses must directly communicate with children and young people experiencing mental distress, rather than speaking to parents or carers.

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MA-MAG#bjmh-2021-0025_Sophia - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 2 April 2022
Published date: 2 August 2022
Keywords: Acute care setting, Children and adolescent mental health services, Emergency care, Mental health crisis, Paediatric nurse, Patient experience

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 484133
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/484133
ISSN: 2049-5919
PURE UUID: a142c47a-124d-4fb6-89ba-021501e454e1
ORCID for Dawn-Marie Walker: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2135-1363

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 10 Nov 2023 18:01
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:36

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Contributors

Author: Sophia Williams
Author: Dawn-Marie Walker ORCID iD

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