Children and young people are experiencing a mental health epidemic. While this聽health issue is no longer so stigmatised, the resources are not being made available for the treatment and the causes are not being tackled.
Suicide is the leading cause of death for people aged between 15 and 49, reports, and nearly one-fifth of all young people, aged 11鈥17 years, experience high 鈥減sychological distress鈥.
Young First Nations people are twice as likely to die by suicide and are 鈥渢hree times more likely to be psychologically distressed鈥.
LGBTI聽youth, culturally and linguistically diverse youth and disabled young people are also disproportionately affected.
Professionals all say the COVID-19 lockdowns have exacerbated mental health disorders. Compared with last year, hospitalisations for for children and teenagers rose by 31% this year in New South Wales. In Victoria, the same figure was a massive 88%.
This trend is repeated worldwide. , a report from the United Nations Children鈥檚 Fund (UNICEF), said the pandemic-induced rise in poverty and homelessness and young people鈥檚 inability to attend schools were contributing factors. From a study of 21 countries, one in five young people experienced depression during the first half of this year.
UNICEF also said this was 鈥渢he tip of the iceberg鈥. Children and young people everywhere experience 鈥渘eglect, abuse, and childhood trauma,鈥 it said. Many children and teenagers are forced into child labour and many grow up in war zones.
Over the past decade, there has been a significant rise in reported and diagnosed mental illnesses in Australia. said over this period there had been a 25% rise in deaths by suicide for people aged 15鈥24.
Why is this happening?
The late 聽that mental health is a political issue with social and material causes and cannot be understood through psychiatry or psychology alone. 鈥淚t would be facile to argue that every single case of depression can be attributed to economic or political causes; but it is equally facile to maintain 鈥 as the dominant approaches to depression do 鈥 that the roots of all depression must always lie either in individual brain chemistry or in early childhood experiences.鈥
It makes sense that young people experience psychosocial distress, hopelessness and depression. They have to contend with the existential threat of the climate crisis, precarious employment, insurmountable university debt, stratospheric rent and downward economic mobility. Many also have to contend with colonial violence, police brutality and racism.
The 鈥檚 report for the United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP26) said the 鈥渕ental health effects of climate change will become more devastating as the severity and frequency of natural disasters increases and global average temperatures rise鈥.
It said 20鈥50% of those living in unpredictable and extreme weather events 鈥渃an develop immediate elevated rates of anxiety, depression, PTSD, sleep disruption and suicidal ideation鈥. As many as 10-20% may experience post-traumatic stress disorder in the years following such disasters.
鈥淐oncern for the environmental, political, and health effects of climate change, also known as eco-anxiety or climate anxiety, has been rising as people develop intense emotions including uncertainty, anxiety, grief and hopelessness about the future.鈥
This is a wake-up call. But without sustained public pressure, the capitalist class will not take serious climate action, let alone take mental health seriously.
Historically Western countries, including Australia, have stigmatised mental illness. Since the industrial revolution and the onset of capitalism, 鈥渁bnormal鈥 psychology or 鈥渋nsanity鈥 has been stigmatised and subjected to extreme forms of social control.聽 It represented a threat to productivity.
From the 17th century, the mentally 聽in confinement houses and later kept in custom-built insane asylums, along with the poor, unemployed and disabled.
Those with mental illness are not so stigmatised today, but the causes are not discussed, nor dealt with, and there is not enough support for sufferers: specialists still focus treatments on and most are too expensive.
It is still very difficult for young people to find, let alone afford, specialist treatment. Even under a Medicare-subsidised Mental Health Care Plan, for a psychological consultation is around $130 and doctors can only prescribe up to 10 sessions. Now with significantly increased demand for services, wait times are often 6 months.
For First Nations young people, the situation is . First Nations researchers at Curtin University found mental health services are not only inadequate, they are failing young people because they 鈥渃ontinue to reinforce colonial ideologies in service provision鈥.
The NSW government has allocated an extra . This is not only a pitiful amount but, given the demand, it does not address the dire shortage of in-person psychologist and counselling services.
Mental health experts, including are pushing for the coronavirus supplement to JobSeeker to be reintroduced as well as a rebooted JobKeeper.
91自拍论坛 will continue to focus on the material causes of the rise in mental health disorders. Really tackling the climate crisis, precarious employment and homelessness would go a long way to ensure young people feel more confident about their future. If you like our work, please become a supporter or make a donation.