Which also means that the decision has been made that young rape victims, some suicidal, aren't worth helping and, potentially, keeping alive. Because let's not pretend that the NHS will fill the gap.
Not necessarily if there is funding agreed to a different project also supporting rape victims that was deemed to be better and higher priority.
But funding is limited and finite - no doubt CinN receive applications for funding way in excess of the available funds. It has to prioritise and make decisions and many of those will be extremely tough decisions with highly worthy applications ending up below the funding line. And yes where those decisions mean that an organisation isn't funded it will have a negative effect, just as there is an opposite effect when the decision is positive.
That doesn't mean that rape victims aren't worth helping, but it may mean that CinN has determined that another application will have more impact in helping them. Or that an application supporting severely disabled children, or children facing poverty, or children who are young-carers, or an application to support a project aimed at preventing child suicide etc etc etc is higher priority for their limited available funds.