Primary school 'calmer' following pupil training
A primary school is "so much calmer", say teachers, who have started training pupils in Year 5 and 6 to be mental health ambassadors.
St Michael's Church of England primary in Wolverhampton has begun teaching a programme to help children manage emotions, following investment from the West Midlands Violence Reduction Partnership.
A group of 20 pupils, which includes those with special educational needs, are being taught how to be "upstanders", so that they can look out for younger children, the partnership stated.
One of the upstanders, Apryl, aged nine, said: "I don't think nine years old is too young to be thinking about mental health, because everyone is unique, and it's been fun to learn about how people struggle with their lives."
"Sometimes you can just tell them what to do to feel better about it, and then they can get past it as we talk about it.
"It's really helpful to talk about your mental health and your sleep."
She added being an "upstander means looking from others' perspectives to see if they are getting bullied", and it could be "really important to show the other person who's bullying that it's not ok to bully people".
Upstanders wear blue high-visibility jackets on the playground during break times and younger pupils can ask them for help.
Osayi, aged 10, said: "I'm one of these people that gets angry really quickly, so it's not hard for me to spot something bad going on.
"Being an upstander is part of my life. It is all about having that integrity and determination to keep on going and doing the right thing."
Pastoral lead at the school Rachel Vann said having the programme had made children "more confident".
"Physically and mentally they are looking out for things all the time.
"The difference in behaviour at lunchtime and playtime, it's so much calmer."
The West Midlands Violence Reduction Partnership, which leads prevention initiatives, has also invested £70,000 in developing and rolling out the Change Makers scheme to primary and secondary schools.
Police and crime commissioner Simon Foster, who chairs the partnership strategic board, said the scheme would encourage students to take skills "into their everyday life and use them to help their peers, keeping themselves and others safe and improving their wellbeing".
Follow BBC Wolverhampton & Black Country on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.
Child mental health crisis: Better resilience is the solution, say experts
'Many vulnerable children can't get mental health help'
Huge leap in children in mental health crisis
West Midlands Violence Reduction Partnership
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
20 hours ago
- Yahoo
New £24m surgery ward has 'cut waiting lists'
A new hospital unit has cut waiting lists for surgeries by carrying out 5,000 operations in its first year, it has claimed. The £24m Elective Surgery Hub at the Princess Royal Hospital in Telford carries out planned procedures like gall bladder removals and hysterectomies. It opened last June to improve the efficiency of elective surgeries and reduce waiting times. In the past year, Shrewsbury and Telford Hospitals NHS Trust reported a trust-wide fall of 16% in waiting times. The hub itself found surgical activity rose by 34% each month since January. Mr Saurav Chakravartty, a consultant surgeon at the hub who specialises in upper gastrointestinal and bariatric or weight loss surgery, said: "In the last twelve months, we've operated on close to 5,000 patients and you can see [our work] in the reduction of waiting lists," he said. The unit performs gynaecology, vascular, ophthalmology, orthopaedic, breast, upper GI, Ear, Nose and Throat (ENT) and maxillofacial procedures, in addition to general surgery. Ward manager Maj Kaur added that "up to 45" patients could be operated on daily and patients were usually discharged the same day. "Because we're in one space, there's not so many delays," she said. Matron Clare Marsh said the unit was based on a loop where patients moved from admission pods to one of four "state-of-the-art" theatres and finally recovery, where extra space for visitors and staff had received "amazing feedback". The straight-forward nature of the unit makes things simpler for patients, Ms Kaur added. "I think when you're having surgery you're quite stressed and anxious, so this really calms patients down. "Visitors can stay in the pods with their relatives which is nice because sometimes you're waiting a while before you go into theatre." Mr Chakravartty said when staff could do their jobs well and got positive feedback from patients, it boosted morale. "Staff want to do more and get their patients seen early - you can see the enthusiasm," he added. Follow BBC Shropshire on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram. New surgery hub opens at hospital Delays caused staffing issues for new surgery unit GP surgeries to get £900,000 boost
Yahoo
20 hours ago
- Yahoo
New £24m surgery ward has 'cut waiting lists'
A new hospital unit has cut waiting lists for surgeries by carrying out 5,000 operations in its first year, it has claimed. The £24m Elective Surgery Hub at the Princess Royal Hospital in Telford carries out planned procedures like gall bladder removals and hysterectomies. It opened last June to improve the efficiency of elective surgeries and reduce waiting times. In the past year, Shrewsbury and Telford Hospitals NHS Trust reported a trust-wide fall of 16% in waiting times. The hub itself found surgical activity rose by 34% each month since January. Mr Saurav Chakravartty, a consultant surgeon at the hub who specialises in upper gastrointestinal and bariatric or weight loss surgery, said: "In the last twelve months, we've operated on close to 5,000 patients and you can see [our work] in the reduction of waiting lists," he said. The unit performs gynaecology, vascular, ophthalmology, orthopaedic, breast, upper GI, Ear, Nose and Throat (ENT) and maxillofacial procedures, in addition to general surgery. Ward manager Maj Kaur added that "up to 45" patients could be operated on daily and patients were usually discharged the same day. "Because we're in one space, there's not so many delays," she said. Matron Clare Marsh said the unit was based on a loop where patients moved from admission pods to one of four "state-of-the-art" theatres and finally recovery, where extra space for visitors and staff had received "amazing feedback". The straight-forward nature of the unit makes things simpler for patients, Ms Kaur added. "I think when you're having surgery you're quite stressed and anxious, so this really calms patients down. "Visitors can stay in the pods with their relatives which is nice because sometimes you're waiting a while before you go into theatre." Mr Chakravartty said when staff could do their jobs well and got positive feedback from patients, it boosted morale. "Staff want to do more and get their patients seen early - you can see the enthusiasm," he added. Follow BBC Shropshire on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram. New surgery hub opens at hospital Delays caused staffing issues for new surgery unit GP surgeries to get £900,000 boost
Yahoo
21 hours ago
- Yahoo
NHS Grampian submits plan to tackle £45m deficit
NHS Grampian has submitted a recovery plan to the Scottish government in a bid to ease its financial crisis. The health board said in April a plan was needed to reduce a £45m deficit forecast for next year. Since then, NHS Grampian has been escalated to stage four out of five on NHS Scotland's National Performance Framework. The stage warns of "significant risks" to a health board's delivery, quality, financial performance or safety. More stories from North East Scotland, Orkney and Shetland Listen to news from North East Scotland on BBC Sounds The Scottish government has loaned NHS Grampian £90m over the last two years. The health board has confirmed it had provided documentation and continued to liaise with the Scottish government. In a statement to the Scottish Parliament last week, Health Secretary Neil Gray said NHS Grampian's deficit for the 2024-25 financial year was about £65m. He said was the largest of any health board over that time period. Accounting firm KPMG has started what is called a "whole system diagnostic" to help inform a package of support for NHS Grampian. It is due to finish that work by the end of this month. The Scottish government said it continued to support NHS Grampian's board to develop a financial recovery plan in line with the timeframe agreed. Ministers step up scrutiny of NHS Grampian over spending concerns NHS Grampian given £67m Scottish government loan