A Psychiatric Service for the Disturbed Adolescent
- 1 April 1972
- journal article
- Published by Royal College of Psychiatrists in The British Journal of Psychiatry
- Vol. 120 (557) , 429-432
- https://doi.org/10.1192/bjp.120.557.429
Abstract
The recognition of the need for psychiatric services for disturbed adolescents led to the opening of the first two adolescent in-patients units in Great Britain in 1949. As a result of community pressures and active encouragement by the Department of Health and Social Security since 1964, an increasing number of units have opened. Although the provision of psychiatric services specially designed to cater for the adolescent has gained momentum only in the past three to five years, the demands of this section of the population is underlined by Rosen et al. (1965) who showed, in an American survey of 750,000 clinic patients seen in 1962, that approximately one-quarter were aged between ten and nineteen years—a number representing 6 · 2 per thousand adolescents of the population served. Similar figures, namely, 6 · 6 per thousand (Kidd et al., 1968), were found in Aberdeen, and 5 · 6 per thousand (Henderson et al., 1967) were found in Edinburgh. Since an adolescent psychiatric service was opened in Edinburgh in 1967, there has been a continual increase in the demand for its services, as follows:This suggests that the previous figures were an underestimate and that psychiatric disturbance amongst adolescents may be much greater than formerly estimated. Furthermore, such referrals do not indicate the demands for help that Approved Schools and children's homes have made. The authors believe that psychiatric skills are most effectively deployed in these settings if the psychiatrist acts as a consultant to the staff, rather than by assessing and treating individual children (Evans, 1963). Even so, demands have far outstripped the available supply of psychiatric time.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- A RELIABILITY STUDY OF PSYCHIATRIC DIAGNOSIS IN CHILDHOOD AND ADOLESCENCEJournal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 1971
- Abnormal PersonalityThe British Journal of Psychiatry, 1970
- A Six Year Follow-Up Study of Sixty-Five Adolescent Patients: Predictive Value of Presenting Clinical PictureThe British Journal of Psychiatry, 1969
- Survey of mental illness in adolescence.BMJ, 1967
- Adolescent patients served in outpatient psychiatric clinics.American Journal of Public Health and the Nations Health, 1965
- A STUDY OF ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRIC IN-PATIENTS AND THE OUTCOME SIX OR MORE YEARS LATER.Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 1965
- HAS THE PSYCHIATRIST A USEFUL FUNCTION AT AN APPROVED SCHOOL?*The British Journal of Criminology, 1963
- Psychiatric Illness in Adolescence: Presentation and PrognosisJournal of Mental Science, 1961