Policy

A million young lives on hold: The urgent case for earlier mental health intervention

Published June 30, 2026
The Children's Commissioner for England has issued a stark warning that one million young people currently find their lives on hold as they struggle to access adequate mental health support. In a piece originally published in Schools Week, the Commissioner draws upon direct testimony from young people participating in The Big Future consultation, including a 17-year-old girl who pleaded for authorities to "take young people's mental health seriously and intervene much earlier." The article highlights a growing consensus among children and adolescents that the current system fails to act swiftly enough, leaving many to languish on waiting lists or escalate to crisis point before receiving help. This represents not merely a health service issue but a fundamental challenge for education and children's services, requiring local authorities to rethink how mental health support is embedded within schools and community settings. The call for earlier intervention aligns with Early Help principles, suggesting that investment in preventative mental health support—delivered in educational settings and through universal services—could prevent the surge in referrals to specialist CAMHS. For Lead Members, this underscores the urgency of prioritising mental health funding and cross-agency working to ensure children receive support at the first sign of difficulty, rather than when problems become entrenched and statutory intervention becomes necessary.

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