Study: More Children Need Urgent Mental Health Care, But Many Emergency Departments are Unprepared

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When a child is in crisis, the most likely place they go for urgent mental health care is the nearest emergency department, an increasingly critical resource as suicidal ideation and attempts continue to rise among children. Now, a new study by researchers at Nationwide Children’s Hospital finds there was a 60 percent increase in children visiting U.S. emergency departments for mental health concerns. The study also found that self-harm cases more than tripled and substance abuse disorders increased nearly 160 percent over the 10-year study period.

“These children didn’t just come to children’s hospital EDs. In fact, most of them came to general emergency departments that see less than 15 to 20 children each day,” said Rachel Stanley, MD, Division Chief for Emergency Medicine at Nationwide Children’s Hospital. “In rural areas, only 30 percent of emergency departments are prepared to manage children with urgent mental health disorders.”

Experts say it is imperative that every hospital is prepared for pediatric mental health emergencies because lives can be saved if the correct steps are taken when children in crisis walk through their doors. Those experts are urging every emergency department and primary care physician to implement regular mental health screenings for children and training for physicians who directly care for these patients.

“They don’t have to be psychiatrists. They can have a short training course to learn how to triage and manage these children,” Stanley said. “But they can’t do everything, so it’s also important that they receive help from their local or their regional specialized centers who have additional expertise to treat these patients.”

Nationwide Children’s is leading efforts to ensure every hospital has the resources to effectively treat pediatric behavioral health issues with plans to partner with rural providers and hospitals for telepsychiatry sessions. These will allow behavioral health experts to assess patients remotely and participate in shared decision-making with emergency physicians in different communities.

If you or your child need immediate help because of having suicidal thoughts, go to your local
emergency room, call the Nationwide Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-TALK (8255) or
reach the Crisis Text Line by texting “START” to 741-741.

2 Comments

  1. Its becoming an overwhelming crisis in emergency departments. I work in a pediatric emergency department that has 12 er beds and in the last few months everyday i come to work we have at the minimum 3 and maximum 8 children in crisis. Taking up beds so when we have traumas or covid19 patients come in we have no beds available. The system is broken. Until the social worker can find placement in a psychiatric facility it can take 3 days to as long as 4 weeks. Then the children go to a facility fir 2 weeks end up back home and not even a month or 2 later back in the emergency department taking up another bed. Its a joke. The staff are getting burned out. Every crisis patient ends up having to have a 1:1 baby sitter to make sure they are safe. Things are so bad in my hospital they have to use RNs to sit and baby sit because of all the pcas, cnas resigning. Today my hospital has 35 1:1s or crisis patients.

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