scholarly journals Child and adolescent self-poisoning: service-related characteristics

1997 ◽  
Vol 21 (5) ◽  
pp. 267-269 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ashraf Nasr ◽  
Panos Vostanis ◽  
Linda Winkley

This study presents the pattern of assessment and 6-month out-patient attendance of 54 children and adolescents who took an overdose over a 12-month period, and were assessed by a district child and adolescent psychiatry service. Attempts were precipitated by arguments (67%) or school-related stressors (19%). In 70.4% of cases, analgesic tablets were used. A psychiatric disorder was present in 51% of the cases. At 6 months, 13% of the patients were still attending for follow-up, while three children (5.5%) had taken a second overdose. Admission to a paediatric ward can facilitate the initiation of treatment. Child mental health services should aim at providing prompt assessment, good communication with other agencies, and follow-up arrangements, particularly with high-risk young people and their families

2003 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
pp. 22-24
Author(s):  
Greg Richardson ◽  
David Cottrell

AIMS AND METHODSTo devise a protocol, reflecting best practice, for obtaining second opinions in child and adolescent psychiatry through discussion with consultants in child and adolescent psychiatry within the Yorkshire region at their quarterly meetings.ResultsThe major pressure for second opinions falls upon the Academic Unit of Child and Adolescent Mental Health and on the in-patient units. Other consultants who are considered to have specialist expertise in certain areas may also receive referrals for second opinions. Both consultants requesting and offering second opinions considered a protocol for obtaining them would be helpful to their practice.Clinical ImplicationsAn agreed protocol between consultants in child and adolescent psychiatry within a region ensures that young people with complex problems have access to second opinions on their diagnosis and management by consultants who can be recommended to referrers by other consultants. The network of consultants ensures such opinions are not requested excessively and that ‘rogue’ opinions without therapeutic follow-up are avoided.


2001 ◽  
Vol 25 (12) ◽  
pp. 465-466 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joanne Johnson ◽  
Andrew F. Clark

Aims and MethodChild and adolescent mental health services in north-west England (n=21) participated in a prospective collection of information regarding all instances of new prescribing of medication over the 6–month period September 1999 to February 2000.ResultsA total of 478 new prescriptions were issued to 411 individuals. Eight prescriptions (2%) were for an unlicensed drug and a further 188 (39%) were of licensed drugs but used in a manner outside of their product licence.Clinical ImplicationsThis level of unlicensed and outside-licence prescribing is similar to levels previously found in studies both within paediatric practice and in adult mental health practice. Anxiety about excessive beyond-licence prescribing by child mental health services is unlikely to be justified.


2019 ◽  

Professor Tamsin Ford, Professor of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, University of Exeter Medical School, talks about attachment and early intervention, and explains why schools are an important setting in relation to child mental health.


2020 ◽  

The most recent study of mental health in deaf children in England showed that 26% in a sample of 144 signing deaf children and young people not currently accessing child mental health services had a probable mental health problem and 57% had a possible mental health problem.


Author(s):  
Carol L. Kessler ◽  
Mary Lynn Dell

The clinical issues at the interface of ethics, religion/spirituality, and child and adolescent psychiatry are limitless. This chapter seeks to help fill the void in the literature concerning ethics, religion/spirituality, and child mental health in a way that is most helpful to practicing clinicians struggling with these issues in their daily clinical contacts. Three specific areas are addressed that commonly present challenges: (1) religious/spiritual objections to psychiatric care; (2) ethical issues surrounding the clinician’s relationship with children and families; and (3) ethical issues that may arise when mental health clinicians work with religious/spiritual professionals and institutions. Implications of religious and cultural diversity for both patients and clinicians are also discussed throughout the chapter.


2020 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-19
Author(s):  
Georgina L. Barnes ◽  
Alexandra Eleanor Wretham ◽  
Rosemary Sedgwick ◽  
Georgina Boon ◽  
Katie Cheesman ◽  
...  

Purpose Clinicians working in UK child mental health services are faced with several challenges in providing accurate assessment and diagnosis of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Within the South London & Maudsley (SLaM) NHS Trust, community Child & Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) are developing structured pathways for assessing and diagnosing ADHD in young people. To date, these pathways have not been formally evaluated. The main aims of this evaluation are to evaluate all ADHD referrals made to the service in an 18-month period, including the number of completed assessments and proportion of children diagnosed with ADHD; and investigate adherence to the National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE) guideline for diagnosing ADHD in children and young people. Design/methodology/approach Retrospective data analysis was performed using service databases and electronic patient records. Adherence to the clinical guideline was measured using the NICE data collection tool for diagnosing ADHD in children and young people. All completed ADHD assessments were compared to four key recommendation points in the guideline. Findings Within the time frame, 146 children aged 4-17 years were referred and accepted for an ADHD assessment. Of these, 92 families opted in and were seen for an initial appointment. In total, 36 ADHD assessments were completed, of which 19 children received a diagnosis of ADHD and 17 did not. Aside from structured recording of ADHD symptoms based on ICD-10 criteria (69%) and reporting of functional impairment (75%), adherence to all guidance points was above 90%. The study also found that although a greater proportion of children referred to the service were male and identified as White, these differences narrowed upon receipt of ADHD diagnosis. Research limitations/implications Relationship to the existing literature is discussed in relation to the assessment process, demographic characteristics and rates of co-occurrence. Practical implications The findings demonstrate that in child mental health services, gold standard practice for diagnosing ADHD should be the adoption of clear, protocol-driven pathways to support appropriate access and treatment for young people and their families. Originality/value This article is unique in that it is, to the best of the authors’ knowledge, the first to describe and report clinician-adherence to a structured pathway for diagnosing ADHD in young people within a community CAMHS service in South London.


2015 ◽  
Vol 30 (5) ◽  
pp. 583-589 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Boege ◽  
N. Corpus ◽  
R. Schepker ◽  
R. Kilian ◽  
J.M. Fegert

AbstractBackgroundAdmission rate to child and adolescent mental health inpatient units in Germany is high (54 467 admissions in 2013), resources for providing necessary beds are scarce. Alternative pathways to care are needed. Objective of this study was to assess the cost-effectiveness of inpatient treatment versus Hot-BITs-treatment (Hometreatment brings inpatient-treatment outside), a new supported discharge service offering an early discharge followed by 12 weeks of intensive support.MethodsOf 164 consecutively recruited children and adolescents, living within families and being in need of inpatient mental health care, 100 patients consented to participate and were randomised via a computer-list into intervention (n = 54) and control groups (n = 46). Follow-up data were available for 76 patients. Primary outcome was cost-effectiveness. Effectiveness was gathered by therapist-ratings on the Children's Global Assessment Scale (CGAS) at baseline (T1), treatment completion (T2) and an 8-month-follow-up (T3). Cost of service use (health care costs and non–health care costs) was calculated on an intention-to-treat basis at T2 and T3.ResultsSignificant treatment effects were observed for both groups between T1/T2 and T1/T3 (P < 0.001). The Hot-BITs treatment, however, was associated with significantly lower costs at T2 (difference: −6900.47€, P = 0.013) and T3 (difference: −8584.10€, P = 0.007). Bootstrap cost-effectiveness ratio indicated that Hot-BITs was less costly and tended to be more effective at T2 and T3.ConclusionsHot-BITs may be a feasible cost-effective alternative to long inpatient stays in child and adolescent psychiatry. Further rigorous evaluations of the model are required. (Registration number: ISRCTN02672532, part 1, Current Controlled Trials Ltd, URL: http://www.controlled-trials.com).


2020 ◽  
Vol 66 (4) ◽  
pp. 331-334
Author(s):  
Miyuru Chandradasa ◽  
Layani C Rathnayake ◽  
Madushi Rowel ◽  
Lalin Fernando

Background: Sri Lanka is a South-Asian nation with a multi-ethnic population. A 26-year-old armed conflict ended in 2009 and the relative stability over the last decade was unexpectedly disrupted by the Easter Sunday Bombings of Catholic Churches and luxury hotels in 2019. More than 250 were killed and most of the deaths were reported from the St. Sebastian’s Church in Negombo in the District of Gampaha. This article describes how mental health services of the District of Gampaha, with a population of 2.3 million and only one child and adolescent psychiatrist responded to the psychological trauma in children. Activities: The child and adolescent psychiatry response to the mass trauma was a collaboration between health, educational and voluntary organisations. The psychological support was provided at affected villages, schools and hospital settings. Medical and non-medical personnel were able to refer affected children directly to the child and adolescent psychiatrist. Children who had developed psychological consequences of trauma were provided with evidence-based psychotherapies and psychopharmacology where necessary. In addition, health staff members and teachers were trained to provide psychological support and a booklet was prepared in the local language based on trauma-focused cognitive behaviour therapy. Psychoeducation about the psychological response to trauma was provided through electronic, printed and social media. The limited number of trained psychotherapists and experts in child mental health were a major barrier to implement effective management strategies. Conclusion: Due to the severe shortage of child mental health experts, practical low-cost methodologies were employed to provide an early response to trauma. Traditional ways of mental health service provision were modified to be implemented via non-experts.


2001 ◽  
Vol 25 (6) ◽  
pp. 219-222 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adrian Worrall ◽  
Anne O'Herlihy

Aims and MethodTo obtain a prioritised list of psychiatrists' concerns relating to in-patient child and adolescent mental health services. Four-hundred and fifty-four members of the child and adolescent faculty of the Royal College of Psychiatrists were asked to list their main concerns.ResultsTwo-hundred and seventy-four members responded. The most reported themes included lack of emergency beds; lack of services for severe or high-risk cases; lack of beds in general; poor liaison with patients' local services; lack of specialist services; and poor geographic distribution of services.Clinical ImplicationsThe range of themes identified from this survey have served to focus the National In-patient Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Study (NICAPS) and several design changes have been made to NICAPS as a result.


2017 ◽  
Vol 56 (10) ◽  
pp. S205-S206
Author(s):  
Roshan Chudal ◽  
Norbert Skokauskas ◽  
Ahmed Al Ansari ◽  
Anat Brunstein-Klomek ◽  
Chanvit Pornnoppadol ◽  
...  

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