
In response to a parliamentary question from Labour MP Bambos Charalambous, the Department of Health and Social Care revealed that, in 2017/18, there were 27,487 attendances to A&E departments by young people aged 18 or under with a recorded diagnosis of a psychiatric condition.
This is almost triple the number in 2010/11, when there were 9,372 attendances, and almost double the figure for 2012/13, when there were 13,800 attendances.
Emma Thomas, chief executive of young people's mental health charity YoungMinds, described the figures as "alarming".
"One of the main reasons that crisis services are overstretched is that young people who are struggling don't get help soon enough, which means that problems often escalate," she said.
"We often hear from young people who've gone to hospital because they don't know where else to turn. The problem is that A&E can be a crowded and stressful environment, and is often not the most appropriate place for children and young people to go in a crisis.
"That's why the new NHS Long Term Plan must lead to increased funding for children and young people's mental health services, and also a new approach to crisis care."
Bambos Charalambous said: "I have spoken to utterly distressed parents during my constituency surgeries, who have been unable to access crisis care for their children. The Secretary of State's response to me reveals some devastating statistics.
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