Children's mental health — the social, emotional, and behavioural wellbeing of children from birth through adolescence — lays the foundation for lifelong mental health. Australia has significant gaps in children's mental health services: long waiting lists for child psychiatry, insufficient school counsellors, inadequate infant mental health services, and many children with trauma histories who don't receive appropriate support. Half of all mental health conditions emerge before age 14. Grant funding supports infant and early childhood mental health, school-based mental health, trauma-informed care for children, and the family-centred approaches that support children's mental health where children are.
Scale
Service gaps
Determinants of children's mental health
Department of Health
Medicare
State mental health services
CAMHS — variable funding and capacity by state.
Oranga Tamariki (NZ equivalent)
Child welfare including mental health.
Black Dog Institute
Research and programme for children's mental health.
Beyond Blue
Children's and youth mental health (schools programmes).
Headspace
12-25 year olds — some child coverage.
Australian Childhood Foundation
Trauma-informed care for children.
The Healing Foundation
Trauma-informed care for Aboriginal children.
Smiling Mind
Digital mindfulness for children — mental health prevention.
Infant and early childhood mental health (0-5)
Preschool and early education
School-based mental health
Trauma-informed care
Anxiety and depression
ADHD and neurodevelopmental
Parent-based programmes
Family violence recovery
Indigenous children's mental health
Digital and universal
Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) — including abuse, neglect, household dysfunction — are among the most powerful predictors of adult mental and physical health. The ACE study (Felitti et al., 1998) showed a dose-response relationship: more ACEs = worse outcomes.
Australian children in poverty, in out-of-home care, or from families experiencing domestic violence accumulate high ACE scores. Trauma-informed care — that recognises and responds to the impact of these experiences — is the appropriate framework for children's mental health.
Infant mental health priority
The first 1,000 days (conception to age 2) are the most sensitive for brain and mental health development. Applications for infant mental health — parent-infant therapy, early attachment — have the highest long-term impact.
Trauma-informed schools
Schools are where children spend most of their time — and where trauma shows up as behaviour. Applications that create trauma-informed school environments — through teacher training and systemic change — have wide reach.
Parent programmes
Parents are the most powerful influence on children's mental health. Applications that support parents — particularly parents with their own mental health challenges — have a multiplier effect on children.
Workforce shortage
Australia has a severe shortage of child psychiatrists and child psychologists. Applications that build workforce capacity — training, supervision, rural reach — address the bottleneck.
Tahua's grants management platform supports children's mental health funders and youth wellbeing organisations — with programme participant tracking, mental health outcome measurement, family support data, and the reporting tools that help children's mental health funders demonstrate their investment in the emotional wellbeing of Australian children.