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Embracing the mental health of our children and young people

Embrace – a new research collaboration based at The Kids – will bring a new focus to understanding and improving the mental health of children and young people.

Dr Ashleigh Lin and Fiona Bailey

Embrace – a new research collaboration based at Telethon Kids – will bring a new focus to understanding and improving the mental health of children and young people.

Fiona’s son Sam was just 17 when he took his own life.

“When I realised Sam was gone, everything stopped. It was like my world had ended,” Fiona said. “Never in a million years did I think this would happen. He was always so happy.

“I look back and I look for signs in his eyes or some sign that he was sad, but I can’t see it. Sam wasn’t bullied, he wasn’t on drugs, he hadn’t split up with his girlfriend. It’s so confusing because you don’t understand.”

Sadly, Sam’s story is not an isolated one. Suicide is the leading cause of death in 15-24 year olds in Western Australia, accounting for one in three deaths in young people.

Now a new collaboration based at Telethon Kids – called Embrace – will become the first research centre in the state devoted to the mental health of children and young people aged 0-25.

Led by some of Australia’s top mental health researchers, Embrace will find new ways to help kids at the lowest times in their lives – when they’re experiencing trauma, depression, anxiety, or thoughts of suicide or self-harm. Co-lead, Associate Professor Ashleigh Lin, said Embrace would bring together clinicians, service providers and government stakeholders to tackle the issue of mental health with a collaborative, holistic approach.

It would also seek to prevent crisis before it starts, by giving kids and communities the tools they need to better cope with challenges they face, including bullying, unsafe cyber behaviours, and stressful experiences.

“Embrace will work towards deeply understanding the experiences and needs of children and young people by listening to their voices and evaluating innovative ways of helping them,” Dr Lin said.

“We’ll then promote these solutions to mental health service providers and policymakers to create real and effective change.”

Dr Lin said mental health was a complex issue that was still not fully understood.

“That’s why research is so important,” she said. “It’s how we come to understand where problems originate, create new ways of helping vulnerable kids, prove which therapies work best, make sure kids get the right support, and discover how best they thrive in their families, schools and communities.”

It was essential, she said, to find new ways to prevent and treat mental health issues in order to keep children and young people on the right trajectory, so they could develop into happy and productive adults.

“Embrace will find answers to our most pressing mental health problems, and will push boundaries to not only create a more effective mental health system, but make a genuine difference for those vulnerable to suicide, self-harm, trauma, depression and anxiety.”

The #SupportEmbrace Campaign

Embrace Ambassadors Maggie Dent and Nic Naitanui led a campaign to rally the community behind Embrace, raising both awareness and donations for mental health research. The campaign encourages people to post a photo of their younger self on social media to show today’s young people that you know what it feels like to go through tough times.

"Every single young person is struggling and vulnerable around the things that knock them down. We really have to look at: what are the things that genuinely support our teens? How do we support them in school journeys? How do we support them at a community level? How do we support them in families? I really believe today’s world is giving our young people on that adolescent journey more challenges on so many levels and we need to work out how do we create the safe base around them, so they can come out the other end."

- Parenting author and Embrace ambassador Maggie Dent

Embrace Ambassador Maggie Dent
Embrace Ambassador Nic Naitanui

“We need to prioritise mental health. The longer we take, the more lives are lost and that’s the reality of it. We need to fight as soon as we can and get as much help into it as we can. Let’s all rally behind the Embrace team to help give kids a brighter future.”

- AFL player and Embrace Ambassador Nic Naitanui