Written answers
Wednesday, 8 October 2025
Department of Education and Skills
Mental Health Services
Malcolm Byrne (Wicklow-Wexford, Fianna Fail)
Link to this: Individually | In context
218. To ask the Minister for Education and Skills the supports that are available to schools in north Wexford to assist where a student experiences mental health difficulty. [54129/25]
Malcolm Byrne (Wicklow-Wexford, Fianna Fail)
Link to this: Individually | In context
219. To ask the Minister for Education and Skills the supports that are available to schools in south Wicklow to assist where a student experiences mental health difficulties. [54130/25]
Helen McEntee (Meath East, Fine Gael)
Link to this: Individually | In context
I propose to take Questions Nos. 218 and 219 together.
I thank the Deputy for his questions regarding mental health supports in schools.
At the outset, it is important to note that the provision of child and adolescent mental health services lies specifically within the remit of the Department of Health and the HSE. HSE Primary Care Psychology Services and Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) provide a range of clinical supports to children and young people. Where a parent has significant concerns about their child’s mental health, they can request a referral for their child to the CAMHS through their GP. The GP may also be able to signpost to other relevant support services.
My department has built strong links with the Department of Health to explore ways to improve supports for children and young people more broadly, including around increasing awareness, promoting help-seeking behaviour, school staff training, and signposting the wide range of services available to children and young people.
My department has also been working closely with the Department of Health and the HSE to agree a protocol to facilitate referral pathways to local services, on foot of Recommendation 10 of the HSE’s mental health policy Sharing the Vision. This collaboration will assist in the creation of a Single Point of Access to mental health services for children and young people as per the HSE Child and Youth Mental Health Office Action Plan.
I would like to take this opportunity to further outline the work of my department in this area more broadly and the role of my department’s National Educational Psychological Service (NEPS). All schools have access to:
- a NEPS psychologist for general support and advice.
- support from a NEPS psychologist in the event of a Critical Incident.
- National and Regional Support and Development service for school staff, which is advertised through the Education Support Centres of Ireland and covers areas such as trauma informed practice, cluster group support for post-primary special education teachers and special class teachers, training for Student Support Teams and supporting reluctant school attendance/school avoidance behaviour.
- access to either a NEPS psychologist or a SCPA psychologist for individual pupil casework where a priority need is established. SCPA – the Scheme for Commissioning Psychological Assessments - is operated through the use of a panel of psychologists who must meet qualification criteria set by the Department. It is an interim measure intended to supplement the NEPS service and meet current urgent needs for psychological assessment of children and young people.
This framework encourages schools to:
- provide children and young people with opportunities to build core social and emotional skills and competencies,
- provide children and young people with opportunities to experience supportive relationships within the school setting and to learn through those relationships and,
- provide children and young people with opportunities to be part of a school environment and culture that feels both physically and psychologically safe, an environment in which children and young people feel a sense of belonging and connectedness, in which they feel their voice is heard, and they feel supported.
It may also be of interest to the deputy that, in 2023, my department allocated €5 million to establish the Counselling in Primary Schools Pilot, a pilot programme of counselling and mental Health supports for primary schools in 2023. In Budget 2025, the pilot received additional funding to further develop the programme. The Counselling in Primary Schools Pilot 2023-2025 consists of two strands. Strand 1 is provides one-to-one counselling to support small numbers of children in schools in counties Cavan, Laois, Leitrim, Longford, Mayo, Monaghan and Tipperary. The Department of Education and Youth created panels of pre-approved private counsellors to provide counselling supports under the pilot. In October 2024, the department announced the extension of Strand 1 of the Counselling in Primary Schools Pilot to 61 urban DEIS primary schools in Dublin North City and Dublin South-West in areas with some of the highest levels of disadvantage in the State.
All updates on the programme, including any plans for future expansion of this programme into the areas referred to by the Deputy will be published on the program's webpage:
My department continues to review our overall approach to fostering good mental health and well-being in our schools so that children and young people are enabled to reach their potential.
No comments