Social media bullying and homework worries have seen number of girls self-harming DOUBLE
Department of Health and Social Care is investing £300m to provide more help in schools as figures for girls and boys attempting to overdose rise
![Social media bullying and homework worries linked to increase in girls self-harming](http://www.mcb777.site/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/NINTCHDBPICT000352561543.jpg?w=620)
SOCIAL media and exam pressures have been linked to an massive increase in girls self-harming.
Figures show twice as many girls were being treated in hospital as leading mental health experts said social media could be to blame.
The number of hospital admissions for girls who self-harm jumped from 7,327 in 1997 to 13,463.
And those being treated for attempting an overdose rose more than ten-fold from 249 in 1997 to 2,736 last year, according to the NHS data.
Reacting to the rise, Jon Goldin, vice-chairman of the child and adolescent faculty at the Royal College of Psychiatrists, told : "I think there are a range of factors putting pressure on young children - academic pressure, exam pressure, social media....with fear of missing out and comparing yourself unfavourably to images you see online.
"If you look at social media, my hunch is that girls are probably more sensitive to some of those factors than boys."
Admission numbers for boys self-harming stayed relatively the same from 2,236 in 1997 to 2,332 last year.
The number attempting to overdose jumped from 152 in 1997 to 839 last year.
The NSPCC said it provided 15,376 counselling sessions about self-harm last year, equivalent to 42 per day.
A spokesman for the Department of Health and Social Care said the figures for admissions did not represent the number of patients treated as some were admitted more than once within the period.
The figures now also include private hospitals.
The department is investing an extra £300 million to provide more help in schools including trained staff to provide faster support to children.
Javed Khan, chief executive of Barnardo's, said: "We are sleepwalking into a mental health crisis and these disturbing new figures show too little is being done too late to help vulnerable children and young people across England.
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"Self-harm is often an expression of a deeper problem, which is why early intervention is vital.
"We want to involve children in discussions about mental health before they have an issue.
"That’s why Barnardo’s runs wellbeing programmes in schools, so children learn that stress, anger and other uncomfortable feelings are normal, along with techniques to help cope with them.
"It is unacceptable that 3 in 4 children with a diagnosable mental health condition do not get access to the support they need and the average waiting time for CAMHS services in England is six months for a first appointment and 10 months until the start of treatment."
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