New well-being tool heralded for helping children’s mental health

teacher helping student

A new tool is being heralded by experts as a game-changer for children’s mental health by reducing stigma, detecting those who are struggling and linking them to early support services. 

The Children’s Wellbeing Continuum, designed by the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute and recommended in the National Strategy for Child Mental Health and Wellbeing, is an evidence-based tool created to start conversations around children’s well-being and assist in identifying those who are struggling at an early stage where intervention may prevent progression to more serious mental health problems.

Murdoch Children’s Professor Frank Oberklaid said the tool, a first in the child mental health space, provided a snapshot of a child’s social and emotional well-being at a point in time.

“A continuum-based model recognizes that children’s mental health and well-being is dynamic and often changes over time,” he said. The model destigmatizes child mental health issues, builds bridges between the education and health sector and addresses some of the barriers in seeking help before problems become more severe.”

National Mental Health Commission Executive Director Alex Hains said, “Using the continuum focuses on a child’s functioning rather than whether they meet certain diagnostic criteria. This approach will help promote a system that intervenes earlier and is more approachable for children and their families.”

Professor Oberklaid said the tool was already being used as a successful conversation starter in classrooms, households and GP clinics and hoped it would be widely adopted across Australia.

“The feedback we have received has been overwhelmingly positive and the tool has been described as a real game changer,” Professor Oberklaid said. “The creation of a shared language has given teachers and parents the confidence to promote and nurture good mental health, recognize emerging problems and access appropriate support in a timely manner.”

Professor Oberklaid said the terminology for the continuum, designed for children aged two to 12 years, had been carefully considered and tested by health workers, educators, parents and caregivers.

The four anchor points of the continuum range from “Good” through to “Coping,” “Struggling” and “Overwhelmed.”

About one in seven children experience a mental health diagnosis in any 12-month period and another 10 percent are struggling with symptoms that impact everyday activities. Half of all mental health conditions start in childhood, with COVID-19 lockdowns exacerbating or triggering symptoms.

Professor Oberklaid said, “The language used to describe a child’s mental health and well-being has an important effect on how mental health is understood,” he said. For many families mental health is not an easy topic to discuss, so tools that help to open up a conversation about how a child is feeling shifts the dialogue to a focus on the child and not a diagnosis. Normalizing conversations about children’s well-being provides an opportunity to move the pendulum towards prevention and early intervention.”

The tool was recently introduced in schools involved in the Mental Health in Primary Schools Program (MHIPS). The program embeds a child mental health and well-being coordinator within classrooms to help identify and manage emerging mental health issues. By 2026 it will be expanded to every government and low-fee non-government primary school in Victoria.

Thomastown West Primary School Mental Health and Wellbeing Coordinator Gita Peterson said her school had found the tool to be extremely helpful, giving them the confidence to better identify when students may be struggling or feeling overwhelmed.

Ms. Peterson said many Prep to Grade 2 students, in particular, were displaying stress and anxiety symptoms due to a lack of social awareness, largely due to the impact of COVID-19 lockdowns. Many students from all grade levels also struggled with work stamina when on-site classes resumed, she said.

“The tool has been a great resource to alert teachers to when they should be concerned about a student and take the next steps,” Ms. Peterson said.

“It can take months before a child is medically assessed and diagnosed but this resource is user-friendly, giving non-mental health experts the ability to track a child’s mental state.”

Ms. Peterson said several students had been identified as struggling and overwhelmed through using the continuum.

“With teachers as busy as they are many students are at risk of falling through the cracks,” she said. However, we have now been able to tailor classroom support and make referrals to external agencies for the students who aren’t coping.”

Ms. Peterson said she highly recommended other schools adopt the tool, which had become the cornerstone of their school’s mental health plan.

Rachel Smith said the tool helped with initial conversations when explaining her son’s mental health problems to pediatricians and teachers.

Her son, 8, has challenges with regulating his emotions, negative thoughts about himself, trouble with sleeping and learning in a classroom environment.

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