Kansas faces mental health crisis for kids suffering from COVID-19 pandemic, anti-LGBTQ legislation

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Kansas lacks adequate mental health resources for teenagers

TOPEKA — Kansas mental health needs are at a crisis point, especially for teenagers, and increased funding could help the state move forward. 

Kimberly O’Connor-Soule, senior vice president for Camber Children’s Mental Health, said Kansas teens and youths were already struggling before the pandemic, and school shutdowns exacerbated the problem with isolation.

“We’re living in a society that’s never been more connected in some ways, because of social media, but more disconnected in other ways,” O’Connor-Soule said. “That can create isolation and challenges with relationships.”

In Kansas particularly, mental health needs outstrip mental health resources, with a shortage of health care workers and mental health beds. The state currently has an estimated 954 mental health beds, an increase from the previous four years, but not enough to meet demand. A 2023 Mental Health America report ranked Kansas last in terms of meeting overall mental health needs, with low access to care and a prevalence of mental health conditions among Kansans of all ages.

Child suicide attempts in Kansas led to a 68% increase in emergency department visits between 2019 to 2021, according to the Kansas Department of Health and Environment statistics. In the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic, global prevalence of anxiety and depression increased by 25%, according to the World Health Organization, with women and youths experiencing the greatest mental health effects.

Teenagers in the LGBTQ community also experienced a heightened risk of harm. Fifty-two percent of LGBTQ high schoolers reported poor mental health, and 45% of these youths seriously considered suicide, according to a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report on youth risk in 2021.  

Meredithe McNamara, an assistant professor of pediatrics at Yale University, said the mental health of transgender youths in particular has been negatively affected nationally by a wave of restrictions, such as transgender student athlete bans and bathroom bans.

In Kansas, Senate Bill 180, labeled a “women’s bill of rights,” became law. Despite its name, the legislation targets the trans community.

The state also passed a transgender student athlete ban into law in April, after lawmakers were able to scrape up enough votes to override the governor’s veto.

“These bans are discretely harmful,” McNamara said. “They threaten the mental health and well being of youth everywhere.”

McNamara said debate on these issues often took attention away from a larger conversation on mental health resources.

“The past three years were really hard, and things are getting better,” McNamara said. “But I think it doesn’t help that we don’t have enough mental health resources to support youth of all ages. The amount of resources that go into advancing these bans, whether it’s sports, bathrooms, school expression, medical care, the resources are astronomical, both in time and money.”

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While the Legislature has focused debate on transgender rights in recent months, the state has begun to work toward closing the mental health care gap, with Gov. Laura Kelly prioritizing behavioral health funding. In May, the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services distributed $37.7 million from the state’s federal COVID-19 recovery funding to add 122 mental health beds in Sedgwick County and Olathe.

A lack of psychiatric beds has been one of the largest barriers to providing mental health care in our state,” Kelly said.

In Olathe, KVC Health Systems has received $12.7 million to build a 72-bed psychiatric hospital operated by Camber. O’Connor-Soule said the hospital would help address needs for Kansas youths.

“Our hope is that this hospital will help fill some of the gaps and meet some of the community needs so that adults and children can come in at a time of crisis, get the care and treatment that they need, get support in a state-of-the-art healing environment and then be able to return to their communities with coping skills and aftercare plans that allow them to remain successful,” O’Connor-Soule said.

Kansas Reflector is part of States Newsroom, a network of news bureaus supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Kansas Reflector maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Sherman Smith for questions: info@kansasreflector.com. Follow Kansas Reflector on Facebook and Twitter.

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Get mental health help in Lawrence

These resources are available 24/7 if you or someone you know needs immediate mental health help:

• Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center: 785-843-9192
• Kansas Suicide Prevention HQ (formerly Headquarters): 785-841-2345
• National Suicide Prevention Lifeline: Dial 988; veterans, press 1
• SAMHSA Behavioral Health Treatment Services Locator and Helpline: 1-800-662-HELP (4357)

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