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Children across Britain are worried about their parents being squeezed by the cost of living crisis.
Children across Britain are worried about their parents being squeezed by the cost of living crisis. Photograph: Dominic Lipinski/PA
Children across Britain are worried about their parents being squeezed by the cost of living crisis. Photograph: Dominic Lipinski/PA

Children stressed and self-harming over UK cost of living crisis

This article is more than 1 year old

Mental health problems are linked to financial squeeze on families, according to new Childhood Trust report

The impact of the cost of living crisis on children has led some to start self-harming, a new report by a leading children’s charity has claimed.

According to the Childhood Trust, a third of the 608 parents questioned in a survey said their under-18s had raised concerns about the crisis. Of these 208 parents, 30% said their children felt stressed, 21% said their children smiled less, and, most concerning, 17% claimed their children had started self-harming. This last figure represents just under 6% of all the parents surveyed.

The cost of living crisis risks plunging many previously financially stable families into poverty for the first time and the outcomes could be “disastrous”, according to the charity’s chief executive, Laurence Guinness.

“A lot of kids are finding themselves in this appalling situation for the first time,” he said. “They are deeply, deeply ashamed and embarrassed and worried about their predicament …

“One little boy told me he can only shower once a week now and his mum stands by the side of the shower to make sure it isn’t a long one either.”

The cost of living crisis is compounding a mental health crisis among children in Britain brought on by the Covid pandemic, Guinness said.

The relentless concern from parents about being able to heat their homes or put food on the table is having a profound negative impact on children, the report said.

“When I feel hungry, I ask my mother if we have any food and then she’ll tell me if there’s enough money or not,” said seven-year-old Esham. “If there isn’t then I just go in the cupboards and see if there’s something and if there’s a snack, then I’ll just eat it and try to go to bed.”

For the trust, there is little doubt about the underlying cause of the mental health crisis among children. McGuinness said: “After a decade of cuts and shrinking welfare support, the government’s response to the cost of living crisis amounts to a sticking plaster on the gaping wound of growing inequality.”

He referred to the Conservative government’s decision not to increase child benefit as a “major failing” that has led to more children dealing with clinical depression.

Susan Rudnik, a director and lead arts psychotherapist at Latimer Community Arts Therapy in west London, believes a lack of early intervention resources has caused the biggest children’s mental health crisis she has seen.

“Self-harming is very complex but very often young people feel it is a way of coping when there is nothing else that is going to help them,” she said. “It is quite a worry when they are relying on unhealthy mechanisms of coping because there is nothing or no one else available to help, whether that’s a professional, or a parent, friend or teacher.”

“But teachers are overstretched, mental health professionals are overstretched, therapists are overstretched, the third sector is being cut. We are heading into a disaster.”

She added that girls are most likely to be referred for self-harming and that, although it is predominantly primary schoolchildren likely to be affected, charities are working with secondary schoolchildren “more and more”.

With more than 8% of all the parents of under-18s saying their children appear angrier than before, food poverty was highlighted as one of the biggest issues facing poor families in Britain at the moment.

One single mother-of-three said: “At the moment, everything is really crazy. Everything is hard. When I used to go shopping for the week it was £30, maybe £35.

“Now if you go to pick up a few things that you need it’s £60 or £70. It’s a shock. We’re trying to reduce. There’s a charity behind where I live, so sometimes I go there to get food.”

The report’s findings were published as part of The Childhood Trust’s Champions for Children fundraising campaign, which aims to raise £3.5m by 28 June. The survey questioned 1,144 UK resident parents, 608 of whom had children aged 17 years or younger.

This article was amended on 18 and 20 June 2022, and - following a review - amended further on 8 July 2022. The original version said “the impact of money worries for British families has caused 47% of children to feel stressed” and that “9% of children were found to be self-harming as a direct result of the cost of living crisis”. This was based on a statement issued by the Childhood Trust. However, the charity had made errors in presenting the findings of its survey and, as the raw data showed, the survey in fact counted responses from parents, not the numbers of children involved. Furthermore, as addressed by the 20 June amendment, the given percentages related only to the third of parents who reported their children being concerned about the crisis. It was later also brought to our attention that parents with children over-18 were included in the original survey numbers. During a review of the article by the readers’ editor, the Childhood Trust obtained from the research company a breakdown of data for parents of children under-18 and the article was corrected and clarified accordingly.

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