Access to and perceived unmet need for mental health services and support in a community sample of UK adolescents with and without experience of childhood adversity
Aims. Children and adolescents with a history of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) are more likely than their peers to develop mental health difficulties, but not enough is known about their help-seeking behaviours and preferences. We aimed to determine whether and how ACEs are associated with access to and perceived unmet need for mental health services and support amongst secondary school students.
Methods: We used multi-level logistic regression with data from the 2020 OxWell Student Survey to assess whether ACEs were associated with (1) prior access to mental health support and (2) perceived unmet need for mental health services in a community sample of English secondary school students. We assessed ACEs as a cumulative score from the Center
for Youth Wellness Adverse Childhood Experiences Questionnaire: Teen Self-Report version and accounted for current mental health difficulties as measured by the 25-item Revised Children’s Anxiety and Depression Scale (RCADS).
Results: Our analysis included 2018 students across 64 schools, of whom 29.9% (598/2002) reported prior access to mental health support and 34.1% (469/1377) reported a perceived unmet need for services. In the unadjusted models, the cumulative ACE score was significantly positively associated with both prior access to mental health support (odds ratio (OR)=1.36; 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.29–1.43) and perceived unmet need for mental health services (OR=1.47; 95% CI 1.37–1.59), meaning that students who had experienced adversity had a greater chance of having previously accessed support as well as perceiving an unmet need for services. After adjusting for mental health difficulties and other sociodemographic variables, cumulative ACE scores were positively associated with prior access (adjusted OR (aOR)=1.25; 95% CI 1.17–1.34 with a significant interaction between RCADS and ACE scores, aOR=0.88; 95% CI 0.84–0.93) as well as perceived unmet need (aOR=1.32; 95% CI
1.21–1.43 with a significant interaction between RCADS and ACE scores, aOR=0.85; 95% CI 0.78–0.91).
Conclusions: Although it is encouraging that adolescents with experience of adversity are more likely than their peers with similar levels of depression and anxiety symptoms to have accessed mental health support, there remains a concern that those who have not accessed support are more likely to perceive an as-yet unmet need for it. Mental health support must be available, accessible, and acceptable to all who need it, especially for those groups that traditionally have not accessed services, including the more marginalised and vulnerable populations