Severity of mental health concerns in pediatric primary care and the role of child psychiatry access programs

19Citations
Citations of this article
94Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

Objective: To describe the clinical severity of patients for whom Primary Care Providers (PCPs) requested consultation from Maryland's Child Psychiatry Access Program (CPAP), and examine the proportion and associated characteristics of severe cases being managed alone by PCPs versus co-managed with mental health specialists. Methods: Data were collected for 872 cases based on calls received between October 2012 and December 2016. Severity was measured by consultant-assigned Clinical Global Impression-Severity (CGI-S) score. The unadjusted odds of a PCP managing a case alone for select patient and provider characteristics was calculated in a sub-sample of 229 severe cases. Results: 73.8% of cases were categorized as mild-moderate (CGI-S 1–4) and 26.3% as severe (CGI-S 5–7). 67.3% of severe cases were managed by a PCP alone; 32.8% were co-managed. The unadjusted odds of a severe case managed alone was lower for cases with greater numbers of psychotropic medications (OR 0.76, 95% CI 0.6, 0.96), prescription of antidepressants (OR 0.51, 95% CI 0.28, 0.95), or antipsychotics (OR 0.45, 95% CI 0.22, 0.94) compared to co-managed cases. Conclusions: PCPs manage patients with severe mental health concerns, often without assistance from specialists. CPAPs should systematically consider how to support the PCPs’ role managing clinically severe cases.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Platt, R., Pustilnik, S., Connors, E., Gloff, N., & Bower, K. (2018). Severity of mental health concerns in pediatric primary care and the role of child psychiatry access programs. General Hospital Psychiatry, 53, 12–18. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.genhosppsych.2018.02.010

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free