The state is failing children. (Francois LE DIASCORN/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images)

Josh’s mum finds it hard to understand him. At school, her son is puppyish, friendly: a 12-year-old who still has the excitability of a primary school child rather than the jadedness of other Year Eights. But at home, his mum explains, it can be a different story. He has no sense of consequences, no situational judgement — and if he gets frustrated, he will sometimes lash out physically. He once wrestled his little brother into the pond. When chastised, he didn’t seem to understand why it was such a big deal.
That same little brother, who has just turned seven, is already catching up with Josh in English and Maths. And unlike Josh, he’s able to regulate his emotions and follow instructions. Their mum fears that Josh may never get there. She knows he needs specialist support, and she knows, at least in theory, how to get it.
His school’s Special Educational Needs and Disability Coordinator — or SENDCo — referred Josh to the NHS’s Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) for an autism spectrum assessment. CAMHS rejected the referral. The SENDCo then put in a referral for an ADHD assessment. Both times, Josh’s mum did the parenting courses that you have to do to indicate that a child’s home environment isn’t the problem. Having two other children who were doing well both socially and at school wasn’t enough evidence that she’s a competent parent. She kept a three-month diary of Josh’s behaviour, and made notes about the ways in which she and her husband tried to support him. But it was all for nothing: CAMHS rejected the second referral as well.
It can sometimes seem as though CAMHS’s primary job is saying no. Josh’s story is far from unusual. Working as part of an NHS early intervention team, I met the family of another boy, of a similar age, who keeps getting excluded at school because he can’t sit still and stay focused in lessons — but who excels on every sports pitch and behaves well at home, where he can move around and go outside whenever he needs to. That boy got rejected from CAMHS five times.
The team I work in can’t diagnose ADHD or autism. Neither can the SENDCos in schools, even though they’re often experienced and knowledgeable. Diagnoses can only come from a clinical psychologist, a psychiatrist or a highly trained specialist nurse. For most families, this means going to either CAMHS or whatever’s left of their local authority’s educational psychology team. In our small county, that team amounts to one employee. The waiting time for an assessment is between one and two years, which colleagues in neighbouring areas say isn’t too bad.
But to get onto the waiting list, you have to be accepted first. One way for CAMHS to keep waiting times down is to just say no to most referrals. Getting a child the support they need from the NHS is an arduous, exhausting process for schools as well as families — and, of course, for the children, who know that there is something different about them that keeps on causing problems, but can’t be offered any solutions without a diagnosis. SENDCos face rejection after rejection if they request either CAMHS involvement or funding for Education Health Care Plans (EHCPs), which pay for the resources and support some children need to cope with mainstream education.
If, however, parents can afford a private assessment, a booming industry of psychiatrists and educational psychologists is on hand to provide their child with a diagnosis within a week or two. It’s a frictionless, even pleasant experience: you go online, book an appointment and chat to a friendly, highly credentialed specialist. I know this because I’ve done it myself: a few years ago, I had some problems at work, and an ADHD diagnosis helped make sense of them. While Josh’s mum has to justify herself to an institution that holds all the power — an institution that can demand she take courses multiple times and jot down observations for months, all in the hope that her child will be accepted for an initial conversation — paying clients can expect a service that works for them.
Join the discussion
Join like minded readers that support our journalism by becoming a paid subscriber
To join the discussion in the comments, become a paid subscriber.
Join like minded readers that support our journalism, read unlimited articles and enjoy other subscriber-only benefits.
Subscribe