Child Psychiatry Consult

‘Never worry alone:’ Expand your child mental health comfort zone using supports


 

That mantra echoed through my postgraduate medical training, and is shared with patients to encourage reaching out for help. But providers are often in the exam room alone with patients whom they are, legitimately, very worried about.

Dr. Margaret Spottswood is a child psychiatrist practicing in an integrated care clinic at the Community Health Centers of Burlington, Vt; she is the medical director of the Vermont Child Psychiatry Access Program. Margaret Spottswood

Dr. Margaret Spottswood

Dr. Rettew’s column last month detailed the systems that are changing (slowly!) to better facilitate interface between mental health and primary care. There are increasingly supports available at a clinic level, and also a state level. Regardless of where your practice is in the process of integration, there are some key resources available now that can be used by child psychiatrists and pediatricians alike. This moment in time seems like a great opportunity to review a few favorites.

Who you gonna call?

Child Psychiatry Access Programs, sometimes called Psychiatry Access Lines, are almost everywhere!1 If you haven’t called one yet, click on your state and call! You will have immediate access to mental health resources that are curated and available in your state, child psychiatry expertise, and a way to connect families in need with targeted treatments. A long-term side effect of CPAP utilization may include improved system coordination on behalf of kids.

What about screening?

The AAP has an excellent mental health minute on screening.2 Pediatricians screen thoughtfully for psychosocial and medical concerns. Primary and secondary screenings for mental health are becoming ubiquitous in practices as a first step toward diagnosis and treatment. Primary, or initial, screening can catch concerns in your patient population. These include common tools like the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ, ages 2-17), or the Pediatric Symptom Checklist (PSC-14, ages 4-17). Subscale scores help point care toward the right direction.

Once we know there is a mental health problem through screening or interview, secondary mental health screening and rating scales help find a specific diagnosis. Some basics include the PHQ-A for depression (ages 11-17), the GAD-7 for general anxiety (ages 11+), the SCARED for specific anxiety (ages 8-18), and the Vanderbilt (ages 6+) or SNAP-IV (ages 5+) parent/teacher scales for ADHD/ODD/CD/anxiety/depressive symptoms. The CY-BOCS symptom checklist (ages 6-17) is excellent to determine the extent of OCD symptoms. The asQ (ages 10+) and Columbia (C-SSRS, ages 11+) are must-use screeners to help prevent suicide. Screeners and rating scales are found on many CPAP websites, such as New York’s.3 A site full of these can seem overwhelming, but once you get comfortable with a few favorites, expanding your repertoire little by little makes providing care a lot easier!

Treating to target?

When you are fairly certain of the diagnosis, you can feel more confident to treat. Diagnoses can be tools; find the best fit one, and in a few years with more information, a different tool might be a better fit.

Some favorite treatment resources include the CPAP guidebook from your state (for example, Washington’s4 and Virginia’s5), and the AACAP parent medication guides.6 They detail evidence-based treatments including medications, and can help us professionals and high health care–literacy families. The medication tracking form found at the back of each guide is especially key. Another great book is the DSM 5 Pocket Guide for Child and Adolescent Mental Health.7 Some screeners can be repeated to see if treatment is working, as the AIMS model suggests “treat to target8 specific symptoms until they improve.

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