Written answers

Wednesday, 29 March 2017

Department of Health

Mental Health Services Data

Photo of Tom NevilleTom Neville (Limerick County, Fine Gael)
Link to this: Individually | In context | Oireachtas source

144. To ask the Minister for Health the number of children and adolescents who were admitted to the adult section of the Mid-Western Regional Hospital in 2016; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [15578/17]

Photo of Helen McEnteeHelen McEntee (Meath East, Fine Gael)
Link to this: Individually | In context | Oireachtas source

As this is a service issue, this question has been referred to the HSE for direct reply.

Photo of Tom NevilleTom Neville (Limerick County, Fine Gael)
Link to this: Individually | In context | Oireachtas source

145. To ask the Minister for Health the number of children and adolescents who were admitted to adult psychiatric hospitals in 2016; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [15579/17]

Photo of Helen McEnteeHelen McEntee (Meath East, Fine Gael)
Link to this: Individually | In context | Oireachtas source

The HSE Service Plan 2017 has as one of its priorities the improvement of access to Child and Adolescent Mental Health services, including maximising placements in age appropriate acute units.

In regard to admission of child and adolescent cases to adult units, there has been significant progress on age appropriate admissions since 2008 when there were 247 such admissions to adult units in that year. This declined to 68 admissions in 2016, out of a total of 380 admissions of child and adolescents, despite increasing demands overall. The number of admissions does not necessarily equate to the actual number of children involved, as an individual child may be admitted on more than one occasion in any given year. There has to be some operational flexibility surrounding emergency placements in Adult Units, particularly where very short-term placements occur, and where full account is taken of all relevant factors such as the preferences of all those involved, or geographical factors relating to access or visiting. The HSE closely monitors on a weekly basis all child admissions to adult units, with a view to minimising these.

Additional resources over recent years means that we now have 67 CAMHS teams, and 3 Paediatric Liason Teams, supported by 66 operational CAMHS beds across the country. A lack of funding for the mental health care programme is not a difficulty at present for the HSE, but there are acknowledged staff recruitment and retention difficulties across the health care system, including CAMHS, that the Executive is addressing. A new Standard Operating Procedure introduced in June 2015 has provided greater clarity and consistency on how this specialist mental health service for children should be delivered nationally. Despite increasing demands overall on CAMHS, irrespective of the source of referrals, individual cases professionally assessed as requiring urgent access to services receive priority.

The HSE Service Plan 2017 provides for further development of the CAMHS service, including better out-of-hours liaison and seven-day response cover, against a background where the population of children is expected to increase by around 8,500 over 2016-17. Around 18,500 children will attend the HSE CAMHS service this year, including around 14,000 referrals. Detailed activity data on CAMHS is published by the Executive in its monthly Performance Reports available on the HSE website. This shows, for example, 68% of children referred are seen within twelve weeks. My objective, and that of the HSE, is to further improve all aspects of mental health care nationally for those under age 18, including those relating to age appropriate care settings.

Comments

No comments

Log in or join to post a public comment.