Early Years

Youngest Children Face Longest Waits for Mental Health Support, Commissioner Finds

Published June 29, 2026
A troubling new report from the Children’s Commissioner for England has revealed that children under six are facing the longest waiting times for mental health support compared to any other age group. The findings highlight a significant gap in early years provision, where timely intervention is most critical for lifelong emotional wellbeing and development. The data suggests that despite the early years being a crucial period for establishing foundations for mental health, our youngest children are being left behind in the queue for specialist services. For local authorities and health partners, this raises urgent questions about how early help and universal services can be strengthened to identify and address emerging mental health needs before they escalate to requiring more intensive statutory intervention. This disparity in waiting times underscores the necessity for integrated working between health visitors, children’s centres, early years settings, and mental health services. Ensuring that babies and pre-school children receive prompt support not only improves individual outcomes but reduces pressure on more intensive services and creates better value for the public purse in the long term.

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