Abstract
<ns3:p>This article explores the impact of mental health on school attendance. This study is based on PhD research (2020) involving young people referred to the Statutory Irish Education Welfare Service (EWS). These young people were referred to the Service for poor school attendance or non-school attendance and presented with school refusal behaviours. Truancy was not considered a factor in the absenteeism; parents were aware of the absences and admitted that they were unable to get their children to attend school or return to school. This article specifically examines the relationship between mental health and school attendance through a qualitative research piece and uses four of the original seven case study samples from the PhD research. In the original research thirty-five people were interviewed including young people, their parents, agency workers, school staff and a district court Judge. The research indicates how adverse childhood experiences (ACEs), trauma, bereavement, parental mental health and bullying all have significant impact on school attendance and engagement, and how inadequate supports for young people, struggling with complex issues, result in prolonged periods of school absenteeism.</ns3:p>
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Journal | Routledge Open Research |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 17 Dec 2024 |
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