Is Children’s Mental Health a School Issue or a Parent Issue? - Michael Gurian
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Is Children’s Mental Health a School Issue or a Parent Issue?

June 19, 2023

We’ve  been alerting our readers to issues in suicide prevention this last few  weeks, and I want to follow up with a plea for community partnership on  the issue of children’s mental health.
 

The newest national  estimate for mental health medication-use among children sits between 1  in 4 and 1 in 5.  It is likely, though, that more children use these  medications.  Also likely:  more than 20% of American children struggle  with depression, anxiety, ADD/ADHD, substance abuse, and other mental  health issues.  As suicide rates among our youth increase—for both boys  and girls—our schools and families are challenged with a growing  crisis.  Your child or your neighbor’s child may be struggling.
 

When  I travel and speak in communities, I hear the crisis framed as a  “school” issue or a “parent/family” issue.  Because federal, state, and  local governments have limited funds to devote to suicide prevention,  mental health counselor training in the schools, and  teacher/administrator training in student mental health, many students  fall through the cracks.  While IDEA and IEP funding can help, it is  just not enough.
 

In some school districts, suicide prevention  programming of four hours is provided to students in 10th grade yet the  district is seeing suicides in 8th grade.  The lack of funding and  training puts schools in a bad position as community members get angry  at the schools for not doing enough.
 

On the other hand, school  systems are acutely aware that a child’s home-life and lack of  parent-knowledge about the signs of mental health crisis play an equal  or larger role in the crisis.  As parents, we adore our children.  We  will sacrifice anything for them.  But we are not sure what they need  nor how to help them get assistance, services, or medicine.  We are also  desperately unsure of what limits to put on their social media use,  eating and sleeping habits, and relational dramas. 
 

In the article of the week from Medline here  (September 18, 2017), you’ll see survey-results from the C.S. Mott  Children’s Hospital at the University of Michigan that show the dilemma  we all face.  The survey reveals that most parents do not believe  schools can respond well enough to their child’s mental health issues.   Parents believe that school nurses and other medical staff can do well  with cuts and band aids—physiologic fixes—but not mental health.   Meanwhile, school systems are saying, “We don’t have the funding, we  need help from legislatures and parents.”  And the schools are right.
 

In Saving Our Sons  (2017) you’ll find a detailed section on negligence of mental health  assistance for boys, parents, and schools, as well as what we can all do  to deal with the mental health crisis among our sons. 
 

In The Minds of Girls (January  2018), I will present similar research and strategies to help with the  significant increase in anxiety and depression among our daughters.
 

One strategy that works for all children is parent/school/legislative partnership. 
 

Whoever  you are, I plead with you to meet with three other people right away to  raise awareness of the issue, then meet with three others and three  others.  This really can happen! If you have had a suicide in your  school district, it can be the impetus for you to meet in living rooms,  classrooms, and elsewhere to form a plan.  This plan—perhaps a petition,  or an email campaign, or Town Hall meetings about social emotional  learning and children’s mental health–will help legislatures, community  members, and school systems all get on the same page.
 

We must  remember (and point out to lawmakers and funding organizations):  mental  health issues are far more debilitating to school budgets, grades, test  scores, discipline systems, and every other marker of success than are  physical cuts and scrapes, scuffles and disagreements, and even physical  bullying. 
 

Really? 
 

Yes. 
 

What is happening in the brain is far more indicative of a child’s future success than most of what is happening in the body.  
 

The  Gurian Institute is actively involved in facilitating this conversation  in any community that wants to move forward.  Please contact us as you  need us, and please do anything you can to help spark community-wide  protection of your children’s mental health. 
 

–Michael Gurian 

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