We need more than ambulances to help kids’ mental health in the UK

We need more than ambulances to help kids’ mental health in the UK

We need more than ambulances to help kids’ mental health in the UK

Children’s mental heath has never been so critical, in the next five years, 1.5 million childlren will need new support with their mental health.

a young girl holding a leaf

Our Interim Partnership Director, Professor Emily Simonoff, discusses how clinicians and academics will work together to deliver effective, timely and inclusive mental health care for those who need it most in the new Pears Maudsley Centre when it opens in 2024.

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Is ADHD being over-diagnosed?

Is ADHD being over-diagnosed?

Is ADHD being over-diagnosed?

In conversation with Sarah Montague on BBCRadio4 World at One, Professor Emily Simonoff and Professor Dinesh Bhugra explain that although ADHD is more common in adults than we previously thought, it must be diagnosed by a professional with expertise in adult ADHD.

a young girl holding a leaf

Professor Simonoff, Director of the King’s Maudsley Partnership, said: “It may be helpful for some people to complete online screening questionnaires to help them determine if some of the things they’re experiencing might be related to ADHD, but the next step would be to get a professional opinion.”

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Maudsley Hospital: Celebrating 100 years

Maudsley Hospital: Celebrating 100 years

Celebrating 100 years

This month the South London and Maudsley are celebrating Maudsley Hospital which opened to the public 100 years ago today.

a young girl holding a leaf

The hospital had first been requisitioned by the War Office before its completion in 1915 to deal with the military casualties of the First World War. Their organisation has changed in many ways over the last century, but thanks to their staff and partners, Henry Maudsley’s vision, of a hospital in an urban centre where mental healthcare, teaching and research would come together, endures.

A vision we intend to continue and develop when the Pears Maudsley Centre for Children and Young People opens next year.

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New mental health research project for young people in India

New mental health research project for young people in India

New mental health research project for young people in India

Funding has been awarded by Grand Challenges Canada for a new global mental health project which aims to co-design and evaluate a bilingual web-based storytelling intervention intended to reduce anxiety, depression and social disability for young people aged 16-24 years in India.

a young girl holding a leaf

The 2-year project, called ‘Baatcheet’ (Hindi for ‘conversation’), is supported by an award from the ‘Global Mental Health Grand Challenge: Mental Health and Wellbeing of Young People’ scheme, launched in December 2022.

Baatcheet will be led by the non-profit organisation Sangath, one of India’s leading mental health research institutions. Dr Daniel Michelson, Clinical Senior Lecturer at the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience (IoPPN), will lead King’s contributions to the project with Pattie Gonsalves as Principal Investigator/Project Director in India.

India comprises 20% of the entire global population of 16-24-year-olds. Young people in this age group are the earliest adopters of digital applications worldwide, with uptake and sustained use strongly determined by cost and usability of technologies.

“We’re delighted to take forward the Baatcheet project with support from Grand Challenges Canada, funding from the Government of Canada and in partnership with Sangath in India. Sangath and King’s have a long track record of collaboration and this project will harness the expertise of both partners in scalable, mental health practice innovations.

Dr Daniel Michelson

Clinical Senior Lecturer at the Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience (IoPPN)

Baatcheet builds on Dr Michelson’s and Ms Gonsalves’ work across several Wellcome-funded public engagement and research projects in India (PRIDE, It’s Ok To Talk and Mann Mela) over the last seven years. Self-care approaches, including the use of personal narratives, have featured prominently in these adolescent mental health initiatives. A related Wellcome-commissioned systematic review looks at evidence for the therapeutic benefits of young people’s self-disclosure about mental health problems.

Following from this evidence, the Baatcheet research team have opted for a simplified digital platform that is appropriate for harnessing the intimacy and immediacy of storytelling.

“We will establish a digital storytelling platform – designed with and for young people – that can help users to better understand and respond to their own mental health difficulties. This approach has the potential to strengthen self-management and reduce self-stigma in a group of highly stressed and disadvantaged young people.

Dr Daniel Michelson

Clinical Senior Lecturer at the Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience (IoPPN)

Baatcheet will incorporate the mental health narratives of young people from low-income communities in New Delhi into a user-friendly website. Participants will be offered structured support to engage with the story-based content. The innovation is intended to improve mental health and social outcomes by building capacity for reflective self-care and enhancing a sense of personal control that is particularly lacking for chronically stressed and socially marginalised young people.

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Parenting intervention improves behaviour in autistic children and reduces parental stress

Parenting intervention improves behaviour in autistic children and reduces parental stress

Parenting intervention improves behaviour in autistic children and reduces parental stress

New research from the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience (IoPPN) at King’s College London shows that ‘Predictive Parenting’, a group-based behavioural parenting intervention for parents of autistic children reduces children’s emotional and behavioural difficulties as well as parental stress in the long term.

a young girl holding a leaf

The study, published in the Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, followed-up parents of autistic children during the 2020 COVID-19 lockdown to investigate the longer-term effects of the intervention that was first delivered pre-pandemic .

Predictive Parenting provides parents with information about autism and combines it with hands-on, active skills training to help them better understand and manage common co-occurring difficult emotions and behaviour.

Researchers conducted follow-up questionnaires and interviews with 49 parents of autistic children who participated in the Autism Spectrum Treatment and Resilience (ASTAR) pilot trial in 2017-18. Parents were randomly assigned to receive either the Predictive Parenting intervention or Psychoeducation (information about autism and signposting to resources without specific guidance on managing emotions or behaviour).

Parents who received Predictive Parenting reported a significant reduction in child irritability and parenting stress during the COVID-19 pandemic, two years after the intervention. In contrast, child irritability and parenting stress reported by those who received Psychoeducation had returned to pre-intervention levels two years later. The findings show that Predictive Parenting may be a viable intervention to support children with autism and their families.

“The COVID-19 pandemic and ensuing lockdown provided uniquely disruptive conditions to see how families with autistic children were adapting to a change in their routines. We re-contacted parents who took part in our pre-pandemic pilot trial to assess the longer-term impact of the Predictive Parenting intervention, and see how these families were coping during the pandemic.

Dr Melanie Palmer

Research Associate at King’s IoPPN and the study’s joint first author with Dr Virginia Carter Leno

Dr Melanie Palmer, Research Associate at King’s and the study’s joint first author with Leno, said,

“Our study shows that Predictive Parenting provided families with useful tools that were effective two years later during the unprecedented circumstances of the pandemic.”

In the follow-up questionnaires and interviews, parents shared positive feedback on both interventions and reported utilising strategies from Predictive Parenting during the COVID-19 lockdowns.

The findings suggest that Predictive Parenting may have a positive impact on child behaviour and parenting stress in the longer-term. The strategies taught in Predictive Parenting may be particularly beneficial during periods of uncertainty and stress such as the COVID-19 pandemic, as it aimed to help parents promote predictability. It is also noted that during the COVID-19 lockdowns, parents and children spent more time together so using strategies during this time may have had greater impact.

Professor Emily Simonoff, Interim Director of the King’s Maudsley Partnership for Children and Young People’s Mental Health and senior author on the paper, said: “Our initial pilot trial, which was completed two years before the pandemic began, showed favourable but not statistically significant outcomes for those parents in Predictive Parenting in comparison to Psychoeducation immediately after the intervention was completed. The findings of this follow-up study are welcome as any beneficial effects of many interventions tend to erode over time. Here we found increasing benefits at follow-up which suggests that some families need time to embed new strategies into their home routine for this to translate to improvements in child behaviour. This is a promising intervention for some of the most common co-occurring problems experienced by parents of autistic children. Now, we want to confirm our findings in a large-scale clinical trial.”

A parent who participated in the study said: “Trying to break down why they’re doing something has been really helpful. Before I would be stressed out because I don’t understand [his behaviour]. Now I take a step back and think ‘OK, why is he doing this?’. Then from there I can react a bit better. I have more patience and can figure out, ‘OK is it attention?’, then I need to spend some time with him. It has helped a lot.”

Another parent said: “There was just a single route that she wanted to take [to school]. One of the specific successes for me was I started introducing slight differences in route and that worked. When we were home during the lockdown and even subsequently, we used to go for walks and it was good to see that she continued saying ‘let’s explore a new route’. So that has been a very positive thing.”

The study was led by researchers at the IoPPN and involved clinicians from South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust and the Newcomen Centre at the Evelina Children’s Hospital. It was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) with additional support from the Maudsley Charity. Professor Emily Simonoff and Professor Andrew Pickles (another co-author) are supported by the NIHR Maudsley Biomedical Research Centre and are NIHR Senior Investigators.

‘Effects of a parenting intervention for emotional and behavioral problems in young autistic children under conditions of enhanced uncertainty: Two-year follow-up of a pilot randomized controlled trial cohort (ASTAR) during the UK COVID-19 pandemic’ (Melanie Palmer, Virginia Carter Leno, Victoria Hallett, Joanne Mueller, Lauren Breese, Andrew Pickles, Vicky Slonims, Stephen Scott, Tony Charman, Emily Simonoff) was published in the Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry (DOI:10.1016/j.jaac.2022.09.436).

For more information, please contact Patrick O’Brien (Senior Media Officer).

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