Towards a typology of mental health crisis care services for children and young people in England and Wales: a cross-sectional survey and analysis of implementation practices.
Bennett, Clare ; Fraser, Claire ; Hannigan, Ben ; Sawle, Leanne ; Williams, Jessy ; Jones, Aled ; Pryjmachuk, Steven ; Elliott, Mair B ; Elliott, Martin ; Bennett, Nicola ... show 3 more
Bennett, Clare
Fraser, Claire
Hannigan, Ben
Sawle, Leanne
Williams, Jessy
Jones, Aled
Pryjmachuk, Steven
Elliott, Mair B
Elliott, Martin
Bennett, Nicola
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Publication date
2025-12-08
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Abstract
BACKGROUND: The mental health and wellbeing of children and young people is a global concern. Alongside approaches emphasising mental health promotion in schools, communities and in the home, many countries are also investing in crisis services. These aim to meet the needs of young people experiencing acute psychosocial distress. A recent synthesis of the international evidence found a paucity of research in this area. This study sought to address this gap while simultaneously situating the findings within the international context and drawing out implications for policymakers and practitioners.
METHODS: A cross-sectional study aiming to describe and map approaches to the implementation and organisation of crisis care for children and young people was conducted across England and Wales. Complexity ideas, systems thinking and normalisation process theory conceptually underpinned the study. A bespoke survey captured service characteristics, service organisation and service user characteristics. It also incorporated the NoMAD tool to gather data on implementation. Usable data were received from 124 services. We used descriptive statistics and thematic analysis to summarise service characteristics and to develop a logic model. Typological analysis was used to develop a typology of service responses. NoMAD data were analysed using frequency analysis, item means and mean scale scores for each construct.
RESULTS: The ‘community in-person rapid response’ is the most common approach to provision. However, our analysis captured a patchwork of diverse provision across the system, typified by an absence of consensus regarding definitions of ‘mental health crisis’, lack of common agreement relating to the goals of care, and multiplication of approaches to the organisation and provision of services. Despite this, high levels of within-service coherence, cognitive participation and reflexive monitoring were observed.
CONCLUSIONS: There is significant variation in the organisation and provision of crisis services for children and young people. Through situating our findings in a prevailing international policy context, we suggest that the variation we observe reflects an absence of a developed evidence base and a proliferation of strategies and frameworks which fail to provide clear guidance on how crisis care might best be organised and provided.
PROJECT REGISTRATION: This project is registered with Research Registry (unique identifier: researchregistry8660).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s12913-025-13446-6.
Citation
Bennett C, Fraser C, Hannigan B, Sawle L, Williams J, Jones A, Pryjmachuk S, Elliott MB, Elliott M, Bennett N, Hails E, McMillan I, Vaughan R. Towards a typology of mental health crisis care services for children and young people in England and Wales: a cross-sectional survey and analysis of implementation practices. BMC Health Serv Res. 2025 Dec 8;25(1):1587. doi: 10.1186/s12913-025-13446-6.
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