CAMHS nearly killed me, and it’s not okay.

I don’t talk about my childhood much. Partly because I don’t want to upset my readers, but also because it is not my story alone to tell. The people who did so much harm to me as a child also caused harm to others that I love immensely. A sad part of my life is…

I don’t talk about my childhood much. Partly because I don’t want to upset my readers, but also because it is not my story alone to tell. The people who did so much harm to me as a child also caused harm to others that I love immensely. A sad part of my life is that as a result of the harm done to me, I made choices in my life that hurt those people I loved. I don’t blame myself, but I also haven’t quite reach the point where I can release myself from the sense that I need to make reparations.

Something that I think is really important to talk about however, is the way I was failed by professionals who very well could have turned my life around. I am happy with my life now, but I do wonder what it might have looked like had I not been left to drown by a service that was meant to be my saviour. That service was the UK’s Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service (CAMHS).

The worst part isn’t even that they ignored my mother’s pleas to assess me for autism. It’s not the time that they tried to put me on Ritalin after a five minute conversation. It’s the way they were nearly complicit in my surrender to the suffering that I experienced. I’m a suicide survivor, and CAMHS didn’t care.

I came to them, beaten and bruised, I laid before them my trauma, my pain, my isolation, my disdain for every aspect of myself. I told them that I couldn’t cope, that I was scared to wake up each day. I told them things about my past that I can’t bring myself to say publicly, even to this day. I was met with silence. Cold, uncaring silence. They did nothing. They labelled me a school refuser. They still refused to assess me for autism.

Is it any wonder then that I found solace in the steel trap of drugs and alcohol? What can one do in the face of unending suffering than desperately scramble to drown out the noise. The noise was inescapable. The voices in my head would scream at me daily. I was paranoid and distrustful of everyone, even those that I loved dearly. CAMHS allowed my psychological wellbeing to deteriorate to the point that I could no longer cope with existing. I resigned myself to an early grave.

Some might ask why this is relevant, I am a man in his thirties, surely this was a long time ago?

No.

This is still happening. Everyday, thousands upon thousands of families are forced to watch on as CAMHS allow their children to suffer. If you want to know why so many Autistic people die by suicide, start by taking a look at this (dis)service. CAMHS are complicit in an untold number of deaths. Each data point in those statistics represents a story untold. A future unrealised. With each child lost by the negligence of those meant to help them, our future becomes a little bit darker.

I am happy today, but it hurts. It hurts to know that my child and millions like them do not have this service in a good working order should they need it. I want a world that protects my child and seeks to heal wounds and change worlds. It’s the least they can do for our precious children.

My name is David, and I’m a CAMHS survivor.

Please help us change children’s lives by signing this petition.

Author

  • David Gray-Hammond

    David Gray-Hammond is an Autistic, ADHD, and Schizophrenic author. He wrote “The New Normal: Autistic musings on the threat of a broken society” and “Unusual Medicine: Essays on Autistic identity and drug addiction”.

    He runs the blog Emergent Divergence (which can be found at https://emergentdivergence.com ) and is a regular educator and podcast host for Aucademy.

    He runs his own consultancy business through which he offers independent advocacy, mentoring, training, and public speaking.

    He has his own podcast “David’s Divergent Discussions” and can also be found on substack at https://www.davidsdivergentdiscussions.co.uk

Responses to “CAMHS nearly killed me, and it’s not okay.”

  1. CAMHS nearly killed me, and it’s not okay. – DGH Neurodivergent Consultancy

    […] post CAMHS nearly killed me, and it’s not okay. appeared first on Emergent […]

  2. CAMHS in crisis: The systemic failing of Autistic people – Emergent Divergence

    […] individuality and the immense suffering it led to in my early adult life (please find the article here). It was a widely shared piece of writing, but one theme has come up that I feel is important to […]

  3. CAMHS in crisis: The systemic failing of Autistic people – DGH Neurodivergent Consultancy

    […] individuality and the immense suffering it led to in my early adult life (please find the article here). It was a widely shared piece of writing, but one theme has come up that I feel is important to […]

  4. NHS services in England’s South West are endangering Autistic children – Emergent Divergence

    […] CAMHS nearly killed me, and it’s not okay. […]

  5. NHS services in England’s South West are endangering Autistic children – DGH Neurodivergent Consultancy

    […] CAMHS nearly killed me, and it’s not okay. […]

  6. CAMHS ignorance of Autistic children runs deeper than refusing to see them – Emergent Divergence

    […] I have mentioned in previous articles (which can be found here and here), there is an ongoing petition which at the time of writing has over 180,000 signatures. […]

  7. CAMHS ignorance of Autistic children runs deeper than refusing to see them – DGH Neurodivergent Consultancy

    […] I have mentioned in previous articles (which can be found here and here), there is an ongoing petition which at the time of writing has over 180,000 signatures. […]

  8. The troubling tale of CAMHS: A service that is not fit for purpose – Emergent Divergence

    […] have personally written about the negative effects that CAMHS failures had on me, I do not wish for another child or young person to experience what I did. Lets not forget that The […]

  9. The troubling tale of CAMHS: A service that is not fit for purpose – DGH Neurodivergent Consultancy

    […] have personally written about the negative effects that CAMHS failures had on me, I do not wish for another child or young person to experience what I did. Lets not forget that The […]

  10. CAMHS misdiagnosed my Autistic burnout and it endangered my safety – Emergent Divergence

    […] found me sat in our living room rocking back and forth, unable to speak. I have written about how CAMHS nearly killed me, but there is more to that story. CAMHS had me labelled a school refuser. They failed to recognise […]

  11. CAMHS and the loss of Jennifer (‘Jen’) Chalkley

    […] reflects my own experience as a neurodivergent teenager, where at the age of 15, deep in crisis, I only received a 5 minute […]

  12. Challenging Mental Health Awareness Week for Autistic People

    […] start by considering Autistic children. CAMHS as a service have failed them miserably. My own experience was awful, and in the almost two decades since, nothing has improved. Autistic people are literally dying due […]

  13. CAMHS: A legacy of pain – Emergent Divergence

    […] these failures represent some of the darkest and most life-changing experiences that can happen. I trace back my life and can see that CAMHS failures sent me down a pipeline towards suffering that too many Autistic […]

  14. CAMHS: “Your child is Anxious because they’re Autistic”

    […] and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) have been failing Autistic children for a long time. I myself was failed by them almost two decades a go, and still we see the issues proliferate and get worse. There are countless […]

  15. CAMHS in Crisis: Wait Times Are Harming Autistic Children

    […] wait times for access to services. Even some 24 years ago, My referral at the age of 10 years old did not come to fruition until I was 15 and missing huge amounts of school. We are only taken seriously when not acting will hurt services. […]

  16. CAMHS treated me like a nuisance, I still feel it as an adult – Emergent Divergence

    […] I want to take us back to the beginning of my writing for this campaign. I wrote an article called CAMHS nearly killed me and it’s not okay. In it, I tried to bring a personal touch to the ways that CAMHS fail Autistic children and young […]

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