Infants Crying out for Help
New Zealand babies and toddlers are missing out on mental health care because of staff shortages and lack of awareness, say experts. They warn disturbed babies as young as a few months old can become seriously troubled adolescents.
Denise Guy, a Wellington child and adolescent psychiatrist with 20 years’ experience, told the Herald on Sunday New Zealand lagged most countries in providing psychiatric treatment for very young children and their families…
Guy said babies who needed help weren’t “mad”. “We’re just talking about babies and toddlers whose social and emotional health is compromised, most often because they’re in compromised relationships. And it’s not because the parents don’t want the best for them.”
She said mental health problems could affect babies “under 6 months”. Basic training in how to read a baby’s signals “should just be available to every parent“.
Guy stressed treatment always involved the baby’s family. “It’s not about taking the baby or toddler off and doing something with them separately.” …
Auckland child and adolescent psychiatrist Craig Immelman said the idea of babies having mental health issues shocked some people, but he pointed out that “up until maybe 30 years ago there was the view that children and teenagers didn’t get depressed”, and 50 years ago it was thought infants too young to talk didn’t feel pain.
Source: New Zealand Herald, New Zealand
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=204&objectid=10473867