Mandatory Screenings Help Identify More At-risk Kids

Article

A new court-ordered mental health screening and intervention program has led to more children being identified as behaviorally and emotionally at risk.

Massachusetts’ new court-ordered mental health screening and intervention program has led to more children being identified as behaviorally and emotionally at risk, according to a study published in the Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine.

The study, led by researchers from MassGeneral Hospital for Children (MGHfC), looked at Medicaid well-child visits that included behavioral screens from 2008-2009. They found that, under the new mandate, the number of screens completed in the state increased from 80,000 a year to 300,000 per year. The number of children with emotional/behavioral problems identified by the screens also more than tripled, from about 6,000 per year to more than 20,000 per year. A separate set of analyses showed that referrals for mental health evaluations for children with Medicaid also increased significantly in Massachusetts at this time.

“Increased screening is a first important step in assuring that children get the mental health services that they need,” said the study’s lead author, Karen Kuhlthau, PhD, of the MGHfC Center for Child and Adolescent Health Policy.

Study co-author Michael Murphy, EdD, MGH Psychiatry, noted, “Childhood psychosocial issues are among the most common and disabling conditions of children and adolescents, both in this country and in the rest of the world. Routine screening as a part of well-child care can enable pediatricians to recognize problems sooner and to provide help, preferably at an earlier point in time when intervention would be more effective and/or less costly.”

The Pediatric Symptoms Checklist (PSC) was used as the primary mental health screening tool for the study. Developed by the study's authors at Massachusetts General Hospital, the PSC is a 35-item questionnaire given to parents at their child’s well-appointment visit. Parents check off “never”, “sometimes,” or “often” when asked questions pertaining to their child’s’ emotional and behavioral well being. Questions include whether a child “has school grades dropping,” “gets hurt frequently” or “acts younger than children his or her age.” The PSC can be easily scored to alert the pediatrician to a child’s likely emotional difficulties.

The PSC has been used throughout the United States for more than two decades, and recently received national recognition when it was endorsed by the National Quality Forum, a voluntary organization that advises the federal and state governments on the best ways to measure outcomes. With NQF endorsement, the PSC may be used to evaluate parts of the new US health care plan.

Source: Massachusetts General Hospital

Related Videos
Insight on the Promising 52-Week KarXT Data with Rishi Kakar, MD
Sunny Rai, PhD: “I” Language Markers Do Not Detect Depression in Black Individuals
Rebecca A. Andrews, MD: Issues and Steps to Improve MDD Performance Measures
A Voice Detecting Depression? Lindsey Venesky, PhD, Discusses New Data
Daniel Karlin, MD: FDA Grants Breakthrough Designation to MM120 for Anxiety
Leesha Ellis-Cox: Steps to Closing the Bipolar Disorder Diagnosis Gap for Blacks
Daniel Greer, PharmD: Reduction in Rehospitalizations with Antipsychotic Injections for Schizophrenia
© 2024 MJH Life Sciences

All rights reserved.