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Meet the Team: Service for Complex Autism and Associated Neurodevelopmental Disorders (SCAAND)

Meet the Team: Service for Complex Autism and Associated Neurodevelopmental Disorders (SCAAND)

Roundtable discussions
Meet the Team: Service for Complex Autism and Associated Neurodevelopmental Disorders (SCAAND)

SCAAND is a specialist CAMHS Service and a recognised leader in mental health care for children and young people with neurodevelopmental needs. They provide outpatient mental health services for young people with a wide range of neurodevelopmental, neurological and genetic conditions and support for emotional and behaviour difficulties in the context of Autism Spectrum Disorder (autism), Intellectual Disability (ID), ADHD, Language Disorder, brain injury and epilepsy.

Dr Matthew Hollocks

Dr Matthew Hollocks

Senior Clinical Lecture at the Department of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry and Clinical Psychologist at SCAAND

What is your role within the King’s Maudsley Partnership?

As a clinical academic I work across both the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience (IoPPN) and the South London and Maudsley Trust and conduct research into common co-occurring mental health conditions that are experienced by autistic people. I also work clinically with this population.

In both parts of my job, I focus on finding ways to better understand and treat co-occurring mental health difficulties. I am particularly interested in how we can support children and young people who experience anxiety and depression through adapting existing psychological treatment approaches such as Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) and developing new approaches that are more specifically designed for working with neurodiverse people.

What mental health comorbidities commonly occur with autism within children and young people?

Autistic children and young people tend to experience higher rates of mental health difficulties across the board. Anxiety is the most common, with around 40% of young people having at least one anxiety condition with social anxiety and generalised anxiety tending to be most common. Rates of depression and OCD are also particularly high compared to those without autism.

How do children with autism experience anxiety and how is it different from how neurotypical children might experience anxiety?

This is an area which is still being researched, but I think it is safe to say that it varies a lot depending on the individual. For many, their anxiety will be experienced similarly compared to those without autism, but difficulties with communication can mean it can be difficult to describe this to others and make sit much harder to find ways to cope.  For others, the triggers of anxiety may be different, for example, with sensory differences making noisy or crowded spaces very anxiety provoking.

What is the partnership doing to support children through research and clinical work?

There is a lot of great clinical and research work happening across the Partnership to support autistic children with anxiety and other co-occurring mental health difficulties. For example, Professor Emily Simonoff and her group have developed Molehill Mountain, a self-help app for anxiety problems which is currently being trialled with young people. Across SCAAND we have been running several group interventions to support the development of emotion regulation skills, and another for autistic girls. One of my own recent projects has been to co-design, with autistic adolescents, an adapted intervention for depression which we have now piloted and hope to develop further.

For more information on the SCAAND Service, visit https://slam.nhs.uk/service-detail/service/scaand

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Meet our volunteers: Stephen’s Story

Meet our volunteers: Stephen’s Story

Roundtable discussions

Meet our volunteers: Stephen’s Story

The CAMHS Mentoring Project matches volunteers on a one-to-one basis with a child or young person currently using one of our services. The pair meet regularly to access community activities together and build a relationship. Volunteer mentors are someone the service user can have fun with, try new things with, and talk to for informal pastoral support. 

Stephen, currently a volunteer, shares his experience of the project and how he believes the programme can support young people with their mental health.

Stephen Ayayi-Brown

Stephen Ayayi-Brown

CAMHS Volunteer Mentor

What made you volunteer for the project?

I decided to volunteer as I’d like to have varied experience in the mental health sector. Additionally, I am particularly passionate about mental health in young people. I sought out volunteer opportunities online which is how I found this opportunity. I have been a part of the programme for 10 months now. Initially you have to attend a training session before you’re paired up with a mentee. The training was incredibly insightful and accessible.

What have you learnt during this experience?

I graduated from De Montfort University in the summer of 2021 with a BSc in Psychology. I currently work as a trainee Mental Health Wellbeing Practioner (a new psychological practitioner role introduced recently by the NHS). During the mentoring journey, I was able to learn a lot about OCD and Autism, as my mentee had both diagnoses. This was an invaluable experience, as I was able to apply theoretical knowledge I have previously acquired and also learn new information, while busting the many myths surrounding OCD and Autism.

How do you think your mentee has benefited from your mentoring?

I believe my mentee gained skills to make them more confident in social interactions/settings and gained advice on how to protect their mental health as they navigate the future.

How were you able to build a relationship with your mentee?

My mentee and I discussed many things. Our main topics of discussions were politics, social justice, history and social lives. We often met at my mentee’s house, but we frequently took walks for our sessions. We found that this provided a neutral environment that allows both of us to speak candidly. We also took the time to have fun and went to the cinema too!

I checked in with my mentor regularly by text message, even if we hadn’t scheduled to meet up. We both saw it as important to be accountable and this fostered a good relationship between us. To my surprise, we shared a lot of the same interests, so we got on straight away like a house on fire! That really helped the mentoring process as we were on the same page from the start.

Why should people take part in the mentoring project?

Aside from the fact that you will gain experience to add to your CV, the mentoring experience is incredibly rewarding. You’re given the opportunity to support a young person 1:1 at one of the most crucial times of their life. I think it’s even more important because young people who need support with their mental health can often feel ostracised and alienated. It was an amazing experience for me to be able to be there for a young person and provide them with a form of comfort and to make their life that much easier.

I would absolutely recommend this programme to other mentors. The experience you will gain is absolutely invaluable. It is amazing to connect with young people and to help them realise and actualise their own potential. It is such a rewarding feeling, and I would happily volunteer again.

Aside from supporting a young person with mental health difficulties, I was able to learn so much from my mentee. They were incredibly smart and their perspective on life was refreshing and really got me thinking. It was an intriguing experience indeed.

You can find out more information on how to join the CAMHS Mentoring Project and other volunteering schemes the South London and Maudsley Trust has to offer: https://slam.nhs.uk/camhs-mentoring-project.

 

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Meet the Team: Southwark CWP Team

Meet the Team: Southwark CWP Team

Roundtable discussions
Meet the Team: Southwark CWP Team

The Children and young people’s Wellbeing Practioners (CWP) Programme spans across all the four community boroughs served by the South London and Maudsley Trust (Southwark, Lambeth, Lewisham, and Croydon).  The aims of the programme include providing a service to young people, parents and carers with close links to the local community, with focus on prevention and early intervention and to increase accessibility and see young people who might not meet the threshold for current CAMHS provision.

Felicia Oshin

Felicia Oshin

Children's Wellbeing Practitioner

Who are the Southwark CWP Team?

Children and young people’s Wellbeing Practitioners (CWP) for Southwark. We are an early intervention team who see parents of children and YP who might need some support with their mental health. Being an early intervention team, we aim to see young people and support them at an early stage to provide preventative support.

What interventions do the team offer?

We offer access to Guided self-help interventions which are eight sessions based on Cognitive Behavioural therapy principles, otherwise known as CBT. We do this by offering some education about what the difficulties are, introducing new ideas and arrange powerful coping strategies and also creating a staying well plan. These sessions will be collaborative between yourselves and your CWP, working together to help reduce the concerns. We hope to leave parents and young people with a toolbox of methods to help them.

Can CBT help with anxiety?

CBT sessions can be done on a 1-2-1 basis, but we can also offer workshops to support groups of parents or young people. Workshop topics cover areas such as how to deal with exam stress, managing anxiety relating to the pandemic, managing anxiety relating to transiting from primary school to secondary school, GCSES or A levels, and also a healthy self-esteem.

How can CWP support young people?

If you are aged between 12 to 18, the focus will be to meet with you rather than your parents. We can help with worries, or fears that are getting in the way of their day-to-day life, for example worries about academic performance, health, or social relationships.

We also see young people who are feeling low and unmotivated which may have had an impact on their sleep, activities, relationships or school and it may result in constant feelings of sadness.

Do you support parents too?

Yes! We see parents of children between the age of 5 and 11 years who’s fears or worries are starting to affect their daily lives. As well as parents with children aged between 5 and 8 years old who would like help on how to respond to their children’s behaviour such as temper tantrum or difficulties following rules.

What other workshops do you offer?

 Alongside support with managing anxiety, we offer.

      • Self-esteem // body image / social media (for secondary school aged children)
      • Transitions (For Year 6, Year 7 or Year 11/12)
      • Low mood (Secondary School age)
      • Emotional regulation (for parents) Exam stress (Any secondary school year but most helpful for those doing GCSEs or A levels)

 How can young people or parents access support?

 If you would like to access support from Southwark CWP Services, talk to your local Children’s centre, GP, a member of school or college or professional in the community. Let them know you would like to access support from the Southwark CWP services, they will then make a referral to our service. Once we have received the referral, we will be in touch. Or you can access the referral form from our website.

Remember everyone deserves to be the best version of themselves and it is okay to not feel like it sometimes. We really look forward to working with you and we hope we can work together to support you.

For more information on the Southwark CWP Service, visit https://slam.nhs.uk/southwark-cwp

 

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CAMHS Body Dysmorphic Disorder: How this unique service is supporting young people

CAMHS Body Dysmorphic Disorder: How this unique service is supporting young people

Roundtable discussions
CAMHS Body Dysmorphic Disorder: How this unique service is supporting young people

Body Dysmorphic Disorder (BDD) is a condition which is common in children and young people. It is a mental health condition where people spend a lot of time worried and upset over their appearance and spend lots of time trying to fix it. BDD impacts around one or two people in every 100 people and can be treated.

For Mental Health Awareness Week, the team at the BDD Clinic explain who they are and how they’re supporting young people at a time when the need has never been greater.

a young girl holding a leaf

We are the Maudsley National and Specialist Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD), Body Dysmorphic Disorder (BDD) and related disorders service for young people. It is the only specialist BDD clinic in the UK for those aged 5-18 years old. We offer highly specialist assessment and treatment, as well as teaching and training.

Our clinic is made up of a multi-disciplinary team of clinicians with decades of collective experience in assessing and treating BDD. This includes psychiatrists, clinical psychologists, and a parent peer support worker. We provide evidenced-based, NICE recommended psychological and pharmacological therapy including Cognitive-Behaviour Therapy (CBT) and Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors (SSRI) medication.

What is Body Dysmorphic Disorder (BDD)?

BDD is a common mental health condition and affects at least 1-2 per cent of young people. It is a psychological condition where a person becomes very preoccupied with one or more perceived flaws or defects in their physical appearance. These appearance concerns cause significant distress and lead to engagement in behaviours to try to ‘fix’ or hide the perceived flaw that are difficult to resist or control (e.g., frequently checking mirrors or seeking reassurance). BDD can seriously affect a person’s daily life, including school, social life, and relationships.

What other mental health conditions can commonly occur for young people with BDD?

Social Anxiety Disorder, Obsessive Compulsive Disorder, Eating Disorders, and Depression are some examples of commonly occurring mental health conditions. It is very common for people with BDD to feel anxious, depressed and suicidal and many sufferers experience low self-worth and low self-esteem.

How do young people with BDD experience anxiety? 

BDD involves a cycle of anxiety where young people experience preoccupying worries about their appearance which cause strong feelings of anxiety, shame or sometimes disgust. These difficult thoughts and feelings lead to repetitive behaviours such as mirror checking, seeking re-assurance, hiding under baggy clothing, or avoiding leaving the house. These behaviours are often an attempt to try to fix or hide their appearance. These thoughts, feelings and behaviours can result in significant disruptions to a young person’s relationships, school, and home life. For example, feeling too anxious to leave the house without spending a long time on their make up or checking their appearance in the mirror.

How does the King’s Maudsley Partnership support children with BDD through research and clinical work?

Alongside evidenced-based treatment to support young people in overcoming BDD, we deliver a national teaching programme to raise awareness of BDD by highlighting the key signs and symptoms and the available treatment approaches. As a team, we also conduct a number of research studies to learn more about BDD and improve the treatments we offer. For example, we are currently researching how we can best adapt CBT for BDD for those with Autism Spectrum Conditions and exploring the role of difficult life experiences such as bullying in the development of BDD.

Once open, the Pears Maudsley Centre will accelerate research and clinical advancements with the closer partnerships that will form between the clinical and research groups.

How can young people be referred to your service?

We accept referrals from local CAMHS teams across the country. If you think you or someone you know might have BDD and would like advice please contact the National and Specialist OCD, BDD and Related Disorders CAMHS on:

020 3228 5222

Please speak to your local CAMHS team if you would like to seek a referral to our service.

Are there any resources that can support parents and young people?

If you would like to find out more about BDD, we recommend the book ‘Appearance Anxiety’ by the National and Specialist OCD, BDD and related disorders service. Further information regarding our service can be found at: Service Detail – South London and Maudsley (slam.nhs.uk). You can also read more about BDD here: www.bddfoundation.org

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When bad experiences trigger anxiety: childhood trauma and PTSD

When bad experiences trigger anxiety: childhood trauma and PTSD

Roundtable discussions
When bad experiences trigger anxiety: childhood trauma and PTSD
Professor Andrea Danese

Professor Andrea Danese

Professor of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry and Consultant Child and Adolescent Psychiatrist

Shockingly, up to 80% of children are exposed to trauma by the age of 18 in the UK. With the theme of World Mental Health Awareness Week being ‘anxiety’, we have an opportunity to unpack how childhood trauma can lead to anxiety – and in some of the more serious cases, a particular type of anxiety disorder called Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD).

a young girl holding a leaf

Traumas are events that involve danger of death, serious injury or sexual assault. After experiencing trauma, it’s not unusual for children to develop emotional and behavioural symptoms: they might become tearful, upset or clingy; struggle to pay attention or to sleep; or even get headaches and tummy aches. This is a normal psychological response and not a psychiatric disorder. However, by age 18, around one in four children exposed to trauma will have developed PTSD. This means they will begin to experience very severe, impairing or persistent symptoms, such as re-living the trauma, developing avoidance strategies, and experiencing physiological hyper-arousal.

Because not all children who experience trauma develop PTSD, it is important to understand how to identify the more vulnerable children in order to provide adequate support and treatment. Through my work in the Stress & Development Lab at King’s College London’s Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience (IoPPN), my team and I aim to understand how traumatic experiences in childhood affect mental and physical health, how to identify those children at greatest risk of developing PTSD, and how to support children who have experienced trauma.

How traumatic experiences in childhood affect health

In PTSD, abnormal processing of traumatic memories leads to persistent re-experiencing of the event through unwanted and distressing memories or nightmares, particularly when there are triggers that resemble the context in which the traumatic event occurred.

Traumatic experiences require significant adaptations by the developing child. At a molecular level, the hormonal and immune systems are overactive to support facing or escaping from danger and recovering from injuries. At a neurobiological level, the brain becomes more aware of potential threats. At the psychological level, the traumatic experiences are encoded in autobiographical memories to minimise future threats. At the social level, the threats in the environment may lead to withdrawal and reduction in social connections.

The association of childhood maltreatment with biomarkers of inflammation. Graph from ‘Childhood maltreatment predicts adult inflammation in a life-course study’, Danese et al. (2007).

Although these adaptations can be helpful to reduce threats, they may lead over time to maladaptive outcomes including mental health problems. For example, inflammation levels are higher in individuals who have experienced maltreatment compared to those who haven’t, and are associated with mental health problems later on.

In the Stress & Development Lab, we have conducted several detailed epidemiological studies based on large population-based birth cohorts to, firstly, investigate the impact of childhood trauma exposure on mental health outcomes, and secondly, identify which children are most at risk of developing PTSD.

Through analyses in the Environmental Risk (E-Risk) Longitudinal Twin Study (which observed twins born between 1994-95 until they were aged 18 years), in a paper led by Dr Stephanie Lewis, Clinical Lecturer at the IoPPN, we found that children with PTSD are eight times more likely to self-harm and 10 times more likely to attempt suicide than those without PTSD. In absolute terms, this means that about half of children with PTSD report self-harming and one in five report attempting suicide. Children with PTSD are also significantly more likely to have a violent offence record and not be in education, employment or training (NEET). This is alongside being at increased risk of co-occurring psychiatric diagnoses, including depression, generalised anxiety disorder, conduct problems, substance misuse or attention deficit and hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).

 

These findings highlight that childhood traumas are key modifiable risk factors for psychopathology in childhood and onwards – if we target the processes involved in responding to trauma, we may then be able to reduce the prevalence of mental health disorders and other negative health outcomes. As a result, childhood trauma is a major focus for research and clinical practice in mental health.

How to identify children most at risk of PTSD

We know that childhood trauma is associated with negative outcomes. But why are some children resilient in the face of trauma, while others develop complex psychopathologies like PTSD?

From our research, we have identified several key factors which influence the risk of developing PTSD in individual children exposed to trauma. Firstly, the quantity and nature of the trauma has an impact: children exposed to more traumatic events are at greater risk of developing persistent PTSD. In particular, those children who are exposed to ‘interpersonal traumas’ (such as physical or sexual assault) are more likely to develop PTSD than children exposed to ‘non-interpersonal traumas’ (such as accidents or natural disasters).

Secondly, individual differences in the child impact risk for PTSD: research suggests that girls are at greater risk of developing PTSD than boys following trauma. Different children also have different responses both during and after trauma: during the trauma, children who believed that they were about to die, and those who believe they are to blame for the occurrence of the traumatic event, may be at greater risk for developing PTSD. Children who try to cope with trauma by pushing memories away, withdrawing or distracting themselves may also be more likely to develop PTSD.

Interestingly, the memory of trauma also influences risk of developing mental health problems. Research has shown that individuals who were maltreated as children but do not have memories of these experiences have the same rates of mental health problems as individuals who were not maltreated individuals. This suggests that biases in memory, core beliefs, and decision-making influence risk for PTSD and other psychiatric responses to trauma.

Autobiographical memory may be a risk factor for trauma-related psychopathology. The subjective experience (‘s’) of child maltreatment (including memory) is more strongly associated with psychopathology than the objective experience (‘o’) measured through official court records. Graph from ‘Objective and subjective experiences of child maltreatment and their relationships with psychopathology’, Danese & Spatz Widom (2020).

Although these factors are more common in groups of children who develop PTSD than those who do not develop PTSD, much more research is still needed to make accurate risk prediction for individual children.

Dr Alan Meehan, Lecturer in Psychology at the IoPPN, and others in my team are working to develop accurate prediction models to identify which trauma-exposed children are at greatest risk of developing psychopathology. This will enable interventions from the earliest stages, even before symptoms occur, in children who have experienced trauma.

Identifying the symptoms of PTSD and what we can do to reduce them

Many children (around 50%) fail to recover from the symptoms of PTSD without treatment. Yet, despite the high prevalence of trauma in childhood, our research found that only a small fraction of children who have PTSD end up seeing a GP or mental health professionals. Around one in three sought help from a GP and only one in five, ultimately, were in contact with a mental health professional. This seems to be because children can struggle to report the symptoms or even the traumatic experiences themselves, and it’s difficult for parents and teachers to really understand when a child has developed PTSD.

 

As part of my work to reduce the negative impact of childhood trauma and PTSD, I co-lead the National & Specialist CAMHS Clinic for Trauma, Anxiety, and Depression at South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust, where we deliver assessment and treatment to children and adolescents who experience severe and/or treatment-resistant PTSD, anxiety disorders and depression.

The Maudsley Hosptital

When we undertake assessments of PTSD in children who have been exposed to traumatic experiences, we look at a cluster of symptoms that are typical of developing PTSD. For example, asking:

  • Does the child relive traumatic experiences through distressing memories or nightmares?
  • Do they show avoidance of anything that reminds them of their trauma, such as context or people that reminds them of their trauma?
  • Do they express feelings of guilt, isolation or detachment?
  • Do they still feel under threat, as we can understand because they continue expressing irritability, impulsivity or difficulty concentrating, for example?

There are several evidence-based psychological treatments for PTSD in children that have been endorsed by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) and that we use in the CAMHS Clinic. These include trauma-focused psychotherapies which target cognitive and behavioural factors that contribute to the reinforcement of PTSD. These therapies generally include psychoeducation to provide information to children and families about PTSD symptoms and the treatment rationale, coping skills training to better manage intense negative emotions, gradual exposure to trauma memories and reminders to address avoidance and build a coherent trauma narrative, and cognitive restructuring to address biased appraisals related to the trauma memory. Consultant Clinical Psychologist and Reader, Dr Patrick Smith, and others at IoPPN have developed one form of this evidence-based treatment.

There is also limited but growing evidence to indicate that eye movement desensitisation and reprocessing (EMDR), which involves recalling traumatic events while performing tasks that generate bilateral sensory stimulation, may be beneficial for young people with PTSD.

Barriers to support and how to overcome them

We know it is impossible to implement interventions if child trauma and trauma-related psychopathology go undetected. As a result, our team is currently trying to map barriers to access healthcare to improve recognition of PTSD in children and adolescents.

One of the barriers to getting professional support for childhood PTSD are the symptoms and thought patterns themselves. Children may experience trauma-related avoidance, low motivation, hopelessness, distrust, shame, guilt, or fear of not being believed or being reprimanded by the perpetrators of the trauma. These factors may make them less likely to open up about the traumatic event or how they are feeling.

Another key barrier relates to the parents or caregivers’ response to their child’s trauma. For example, deliberate concealment of trauma by perpetrators or to avoid reprisal by perpetrators, fear of being blamed, fear of having their child taken by child protective services, or poor understanding and stigma around mental health. There may also be structural barriers, including lack of insurance, access to mental health care facilities or transportation.

Family can act as a great support system for children exposed to trauma. Children who received a family intervention which taught parents and caregivers about trauma symptoms, how to improve family communication, and coping skills to manage symptoms were significantly less likely to have a PTSD diagnosis three months after the intervention.

It is also important to remember that PTSD is not the only or even the most common mental health problem in children exposed to traumatic events, and parents and professionals need to also monitor symptoms of other anxiety disorders, depression and substance misuse in particular.

The future of mental health care and research: The King’s Maudsley Partnership for Children and Young People

Through his work in the Stress & Development Lab and National & Specialist CAMHS Clinic for Trauma, Anxiety, and Depression, Professor Andrea Danese is one of the many experts who are transforming our understanding and treatment of young people’s mental health as part of the King’s Maudsley Partnership for Children and Young People. The Partnership, which will have its home in the Pears Maudsley Centre for Children and Young People, is a unique collaboration between specialist clinicians from the South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust and leading academics at King’s College London.

Together, King’s and The Trust host the largest group of mental health scientists and clinical academics in Europe. Through the Partnership, clinicians and researchers will collaborate even more closely to find new ways to predict, prevent and treat mental health disorders, such as childhood trauma and PTSD. This will enable us to translate research into practical treatments in the shortest possible time, and will benefit children locally, nationally and across the globe.

The Pears Maudsley Centre for Children and Young People

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