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Mental Health Screening and Assessment in Primary Care

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Title: Mental Health Screening and Assessment in Primary Care


1
Mental Health Screening and Assessment in Primary
Care
  • Penny Knapp MD
  • Medical Director, Childrens Services, CA DMH,
    Professor Emeritus, Psychiatry Pediatrics, UC
    Davis
  • penny.knapp_at_dmh.ca.gov, pkknapp_at_ucdavis.edu
  • Healthy Tomorrows 9/15/05

2
Workshop Goals
  • Indications for screening and for assessment
  • Current statutory and programmatic requirements
    for early screening.
  • Risk resilience factors that influence
    services.
  • Screening vs Assessment
  • Examples of tools
  • Activities of AAP MHTF and DPS workgroup

3
Workshop Goals, continued
  • Choice of screening and assessment measures.
  • Basic skills needed for screenings and
    assessment
  • What to do after you screen thresholds for
    treatment

4
Screening more than the tool
  • Use of developmental knowledge to formulate a
    more comprehensive view of the child
  • Interdisciplinary issues in screening and
    assessment
  • Choosing appropriate measures based on location
    of services, family literacy, language and
    culture, and primary issues.

5
Life Experience and Childrens development and
mental health
  • Young Children
  • Early relationships are crucial
  • Self-regulation underlies later reactions
  • Development is experience-contingent
  • School age Children Adolescents
  • Relationships perpetuate or correct trajectory
  • Emerging biological patterns operate
  • Opportunity for selective or indicated prevention

6
Indications for Mental Health Screening
  • Overview of the indications for screening and for
    assessment of young children at risk for
    emotional, behavioral or relationship
    disturbances.
  • Underlying this, is a concept of healthy mental
    development in young children.

7
The Child in Family
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10
How may screening inform decisions?
  • Promotion, prevention, and intervention a
    continuum
  • How much risk is too much?
  • What strengths assure resilience?
  • Cost-benefit ratios of waiting vs. intervention

11
Risk and resilience factors
  • Risk
  • Child Abuse/neglect Childrens Defense Fund
    estimate _at_ 1 million cases
  • Prevalence rates of psychosocial diagnoses in
    preschool children 13-25
  • Children with special needs/ special health
    care needs only 30 are screened.

12
Current statutory and programmatic requirements
for early screening.
  • ADA, IDEA part B and Part C
  • Eligibility guidelines often not linked to
    community diagnostic services.

13
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14
Presidents New Freedom Commission Goal Early MH
Screening, Assessment Referral to Services are
Common Practice
  • Promote the mental health of young children
  • Improve and expand school mental health programs
  • Screen for co-occurring mental and substance use
    disorders - link with integrated treatment
    strategies
  • Screen for MH disorders in primary health care.

15
Promoting the Mental Health of Young Children
  • Prevalence of mental disorders in children
  • 9-13 for Serious Emotional Disturbance
  • 5-9 for Severe Emotional Disturbance
  • Estimation prevalence in California households
    1.2, or 700,000 children
  • CMHS - via compilation of studies. Populations
    and diagnoses vary. Percentages are higher in
    areas of higher poverty.

16
What to screen
  • Domains Development, medical factors,
    emotional/behavioral, relationship/attachment
  • Condition/eligibility e.g. developmental
    delay, psychiatric disorders
  • Specific risk factors e.g. social stress,
    relationship disturbance
  • Possible child psychiatric disorder e.g. ADHD or
    other DBD, Mood or Anxiety disorder, Thought
    disorder

17
Where to screen
  • Parent screens
  • Screens for a particular setting e.g. primary
    care practice, child care,
  • Screens to evaluate program outcomes e.g. Head
    start, Special Needs demonstration site

18
Screen for MH disorders in Primary Health Care
  • The primary care provider is likely to see
    youngest children first. Older children with
    mental disorders are identified by MD or school.
  • Consultation with primary care providers would
    allow better screening, prevention, and early
    intervention.

19
Screening v.s. Assessment
  • Screening to identify children who may need
    further evaluation to determine the existence of
    a problem (developmental, emotional, presence of
    a disability etc).
  • Assessment to identify the childs strengths and
    weaknesses, present level of performance, and
    indicated intervention.

20
Examples of Screening
  • Newborn Screening- for inborn errors of
    metabolism, e.g. PKU, or genetic screening
  • Hearing screening, vision screening
  • Developmental screening - to identify
    developmental delay
  • Mental Health screening - to identify the
    presence of symptoms of emotional, behavioral, or
    relationship disorder.

21
Definitions from Screening to Intervention
SCREENING
  • WHAT IT IS -Brief assessment procedure to
    identify children needing fuller diagnostic
    assessment
  • WHO CAN DO IT- A person familiar with young
    children and with the screener.
  • EFFECTIVE IMPLEMENTATION -Brief, easy to complete
  • Questionnaire or interview
  • High sensitivity and specificity compared to full
    assessments

22
Examples of Screening tools the PEDS
  • PEDS Parents Evaluations of Developmental
    Status Glascoe 1997
  • Age range 0-8 years
  • Respondent Parent
  • Number of items 10
  • Domains Learning, Development, Behavior
  • Psychometrics High reliability validity
  • Cross-Cultural Validity diverse standardization
    sample

23
Example of Screening tool PSC
  • Pediatric Symptom Checklist Jellineck, Murphy
    Burns 1986
  • Age range 2-16 years
  • Respondent Parent or caregiver
  • Number of items 35
  • Domains Behavioral, emotional problems
  • Psychometrics Good. 3-pt rating scale,
    cutpoints based on age and SES risk
  • Cross-Cultural Validity Eng. Spanish

24
Example of Screening toolBITSEA
  • Brief Infant-Toddler Social Emotional Assessment.
    Briggs-Gowan Carter 2001
  • Age range 1-3 years
  • Respondent Parent or caregiver
  • Number of items 42
  • Domains Problem, competence indices
  • Psychometrics Good. 3-pt rating scale,
    cutpoints based on age and sex
  • Cross-Cultural Validity Multiple languages.
    Validity established in ethnically and
    SES-diverse population

25
Example of Screening tool ASQ -SE
  • Ages and Stages Questionnaire Social-Emotional
    Squires, Briucker Twombly 2002
  • Age range 6-60 months
  • Respondent Parent or caregiver
  • Number of items Age-specific, (ranging from 19
    to 33 items for 6,12,18,24,30,36,48 60 months)
  • Domains Social-emotional problems, behavioral
    problems, social competencies
  • Psychometrics Good. 3-pt rating scale,
    cutpoints based on age and SES risk
  • Cross-Cultural Validity Eng. Spanish

26
ASQ SE, continued
  • Time to administer 15 minutes, limited
    psychometrics.
  • Assesses 7 behavioral areas
  • Self-regulation
  • Compliance, Communication
  • Adaptive functioning
  • Autonomy, Affect
  • Interaction with people
  • Plus.. parental concerns

27
Definitions from Screening to InterventionASSESS
MENT
  • WHAT IT IS -Procedure using a standardized
    measure to answer a particular DX ? and develop
    information for RX
  • WHO CAN DO IT - A professional trained in the use
    of the instrument(s) e.g.Psychologist,
    Psychiatrist,Special Education, OT, Language
    specialist
  • EFFECTIVE IMPLEMENTATION - Testing should be
    directed to a specific referral question and
    results should be linked to an intervention plan.
  • Child should be tested at a time when he can give
    his best performance

28
DefinitionsDEVELOPMENTAL SURVEILLANCE
  • WHAT IT IS -Ongoing, skilled obs. of children
    during health visits.
  • WHO CAN DO IT -Trained Professional
  • EFFECTIVE IMPLEMENTATION - Elicit/attend to
    parental concerns
  • Collect relevant history.
  • Accurate, informative observations
  • Communication with other professionals.

29
Definitions EARLY DETECTION
  • WHAT IT IS - Identify children at risk of or with
    developing clinical problems
  • WHO CAN DO IT - A person or professional familiar
    with the child
  • EFFECTIVE IMPLEMENTATION - Tools include
  • Screening tests
  • Professional elicitation interpretation of
    parent concerns

30
Definitions ANTICIPATORY GUIDANCE
  • WHAT IT IS - Communicate to parent the expected
    developmental changes for the child
  • WHO CAN DO IT - Trained Professional (e.g.
    Pediatrician)
  • EFFECTIVE IMPLEMENTATION - Considers biomedical,
    development, behavior, family, safety and
    supported interpersonal interaction.

31
Definitions Preventive Intervention
  • WHAT IT IS - Early identification and
    intervention for maladaptive behaviors so as to
    prevent psychiatric disorder.
  • WHO CAN DO IT - Person or professional trained to
    recognize, diagnose, and provide intervention.
  • EFFECTIVE IMPLEMENTATION - Prevention may be at 3
    levels
  • Universal (Primary)
  • Selective (Secondary) for those at high risk
  • Indicated (Tertiary) for those with clinical
    symptoms.

32
Domains for Screening
  • Parent mental health
  • Parent stress/support
  • Childs development
  • Childs social emotional status
  • Childs physical/medical health - CSHCN
  • Parent-child relationship

33
Screening for Parent Mental Health
  • Parent Depression two questions
  • During the past month, have you often been
    bothered by feeling down, depressed, or
    hopeless?
  • During the past month, have you often been
    bothered by having little interest or pleasure in
    doing things?
  • Standard screeners Edinburgh Depression Screen,
  • SCID and other psychiatric measures

34
Parent stress, Parent-child relationship
  • Parent Stress Support
  • PSI (Parent Stress Index), PSI-SF (short form)
  • Parent-child relationship
  • BABES Behavioral assessment of Babys Emotional
    and Social Style (Finello Poulson 1996)
  • FEAS Functional Emotional Assessment Scale
  • ASQ-SE

35
Child Domains examples of screening tools
  • Child development
  • Child Social/Emotional
  • Child Physical,Medical, Special Health Care Needs
  • Denver, PEDS, BITSEA, CDR
  • ASQ-SE, TABS,
  • DC 0-3PIR-GAS
  • 3. AHRQ, NCQA measures

36
Technical aspects
  • Reliability is test score consistent,
    dependable, repeatable?
  • Validity Does test measure what it is intended
    to measure?
  • Sensitivity Does test actually identify all
    at-risk children
  • Specificity does test identify children who are
    not at risk?

37
How good is the Screening tool?
  • Highly Validated Sensitivity and specificity of
    70 or better. Ideally, sensitivity will be
    higher measure over specificity.
  • Uses Developmental milestones
  • Established tool has been in use for at least 2
    years and is widely distributed
  • Recognized by a national organization.

38
Choosing a Screener
  • Parent- completed or Professional-completed tool?
  • Length, Literacy level / Computer-based?
  • Time required to complete and score the tool
  • FOCUS
  • Measures that are focused (e.g. on development or
    on mental health) and that have established
    psychometrics
  • versus
  • Measures that are brief and span several domains
  • Cost of measure (purchase price and staff time)
    and sustainability of use
  • Utility of measure for follow-up, surveillance
    and intervention

39
AAP Mental Health Task Force
  • Four Groups to develop Tool Kit for PCPs
  • Patient engagement
  • Clinician decision support
  • Information Systems and Tracking Support
  • Organization/Financing of Care

40
Clinician Decision Support
  • Issue is not which screening tool(s) but to
    assist with decision about what to do after
    screening identifies a problem.
  • Clinical Dashboard concept to help pediatricians
    think about psychosocial assessment in much the
    same way they think about physical assessment.
  • Not a quickie DX, but a systematic overview of
    the child for ongoing management, similar to a
    growth chart to plot the childs developmental
    and socioemotional growth.

41
The Clinical Dashboard
  • The Dashboard lists 6 domainscognition/language,
    attention/executive function, control of
    impulses, mood/anxiety, developmental progress,
    and relationshipsfollowed by a listing of
    strengths, expectable functions, problems, and
    psychiatric diagnoses for each of the domains.

42
AAP Bright Futures Developmental Psychosocial
Screening Workgroup
  • The BF Toolkit Workgroups will assist the BF
    Education Center and the Pediatric Implementation
    Project (PIP), funded by the MCHB, HRSA to,
  • Review and develop implementation tools to
    complement revision of the Bright Futures
    Guidelines for Health Supervision of Infants,
    Children, and Adolescents.
  • Develop selection criteria for reviewing tools,
    identifying existing tools, selecting tools based
    on criteria, and if needed, developing new tools.
  • Maternal and Child Health Bureau
  • Health Resources and Services Administration

43
What to do after you screen thresholds for
treatment
  • www.brightfutures.org/mentalhealth/index.html
  • www.aacap.org/clinical/parameters/fulltext/
  • Conners CK 1997. Conners rating Scales.
    www.mhs.co

44
Resources
  • Jellineck M, Patel FB, Froehle MC Eds 2002.
    Bright Futures in Practice Mental Health Volume
    1. Practice Guide Volume II Tool Kit.
    Arlington VA National Center for Education in
    Maternal and Child Health.
  • The National Center of Medical Home Initiatives
    for Children with Special Needs
  • www.medicalhomeinfo.org
  • ABCD Toolkit. www.nashpd.org

45
More Resources
  • American Academy of Pediatrics
  • http//aappolicy.aappublications.org
  • National Center on Birth Defects and
    Developmental Disabilities
  • http//www.cdc.gov/ncbddd/child/devtool.htm
  • National Early Childhood Technical Assistance
    Center NECTAC http//www.nectac.org

46
More Resources
  • California Institute of Mental Health
    www.CIMH.org
  • Childress AC et al 1993. The Kids eating
    Disorder survey (KEDS) A study of middle school
    students. JAACAP 32 (4)843-850
  • Webster-Stratton C, Hammond M 1997. treating
    children with early-onset conduct problems A
    comparison of child and parent training
    interventions. J. Consulting and clinical
    Psychology 65 (1) 93-109.

47
Screening and Intervention for Mental Health
Issues in a Pediatric Clinic
  • Karen Hacker, MD, MPH

48
Healthy Tomorrows Project
  • Introduce screening to pediatric practice at all
    well visits for 5-19 year olds.
  • Co-locate a social worker in the practice
  • Track the information

49
Evaluation Guiding Questions
  • Did the number of children identified with mental
    health issues increase with the addition of a
    mental health screening tool compared to the
    baseline?
  • Did the number of children who were referred to
    mental health services increase compared to
    baseline?
  • Did children who were enrolled in the social work
    intervention show improvement in symptoms and
    school indicators as measured by PSC, absences,
    tardiness, and grades as compared to those who
    refuse?
  • What was the net cost of the intervention under
    current billing and funding mechanisms?

50
Pediatric Symptom Checklist
  • Developed by Drs. Jellineck and Murphy
  • Validated instrument
  • Easy to complete
  • Translated into 6 languages

51
Pre-ImplementationPediatric perspective
  • 43 of Pediatric providers did not feel the
    current referral system was effective
  • 86 did not feel their current mental health
    screening was effective
  • 72 did not feel they had adequate time to
    discuss these issues with patients
  • 100 did not feel they were adequately reimbursed
    for discussion of mental health issues.

N7
52
Incidence of positive screensannual and acute
visits
N100
53
Medical Record ReviewAnnual Visits
N100
54
Challenges to Implementation
  • Tension between child psychiatry and Pediatrics
  • Space
  • Productivity
  • Differences in work flow
  • Concerns regarding billing and registration

55
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56
Results of Screening
57
Pediatric Patients Screened With PSC by Race
(12/03-02/05)
N1770 (Annual visits only)
58
Pediatric Patients Screened Using PSC by Primary
Language (12/03-02/05)
N1755 (Annual visits only)
59
Positive Negative Scores by Race (12/03-02/05)
Percent
N1723, p0.19 (Annual visits only)
60
Those with emotional problems versus those without
Percent
N1723, plt0.001 (Annual visits only)
61
Positive Screenings by Insurance Type
(12/03-02/05)
Percent
N1723, plt0.0001 (Annual visits only)
62
Referrals
  • No significant change in referrals to Child
    Psychiatry pre and post implementation
  • 161 new referrals to mental health

63
Referred PatientsN161
  • 67 did not make an initial visit
  • For those that made the initial visit (50)
  • Females referred were more likely to make the
    initial visit than males (p.008)
  • Those who had insurance were more likely to make
    their appointment compared to those with Medicaid
    or Free care (p.01056)
  • Those with negative PSC scores were more likely
    to make their appointment compared to those with
    negative scores (p.0032)
  • Whites were more likely to make it to their
    appointment than others (plt.0001)

64
New Challenges
  • Electronic medical record
  • How to incorporate a screen into the annual visit
    without overburdening the provider
  • Related to ease with EMR
  • Tracking to see improvement
  • Provider transitions
  • Increasing demand

65
1 Year post implementation
  • Post pediatrician survey-1.25 positive increase
    in response mean. Significant increase in those
    who felt screening was effective and efficient
  • Better documentation of screening and diagnoses
  • Demand for co-located social worker
  • Spread to second site
  • Overall increased awareness of mental health
    issues in the practice.
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