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Pediatricians and
child psychiatrists share a heartfelt commitment to the well-being
of children. Both are concerned about emotional illness, divorce,
substance use, domestic violence and other social issues impacting
children, as well as the needs of special populations of children,
such as those in foster care. Although such issues once fell
primarily within the purview of child psychiatrists, the prevalence
of psychiatric disorders in children—ranging from 10% to 20%,
depending on study methods and population—has made them major
concerns for pediatricians as well. Pediatricians in primary
care are often the first to see children with emotional disorders,
and pediatric subspecialists frequently face emotional issues
in children with cancer, seizures, or other chronic diseases.
Yet despite the commonalities of professional concerns and mission,
there is a sense that pediatrics and child psychiatry are farther
apart than they should be.
Our current system of health care financing has contributed
to this distance. Third party
payers’ reimbursement to pediatricians for practice
time spent addressing patients’
emotional disorders is low or non-existent. Reimbursement
for psychiatrists is also low
and structured to provide incentives for time spent on psychopharmacology.
Moreover,
for-profit managed care companies have cleaved mental health
services from general
insurance, disrupting medical referral patterns and making
it difficult to access
comprehensive care. Although such plans often limit the availability
of child psychiatrists
to pediatricians, even the current rate of referrals often
overwhelms the limited number
of child psychiatrists. Despite the higher prevalence of emotional
disorders in poor
children, many Medicaid programs provide inadequate coverage.
Both the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) and the American
Academy of Child
and Adolescent Psychiatry have made efforts to bridge the
gaps between the fields.
Recent publications, such as Bright Futures: Mental Health
and the Classification of
Child and Adolescent Mental Diagnoses in Primary Care—Child
and Adolescent version (DSM-PC), are the result of genuine
collaboration between the two specialties. There
are liaison and communication efforts between the academies.
The AAP has increased —
at least modestly—the emphasis on training in behavior
and development. However,
such requirements are difficult to fulfill due to insufficient
faculty, funding, and curricular materials, and thus do not
fully prepare pediatricians to deal with the high prevalence
of mental health and psychosocial problems they will encounter
in practice.
This manual is a valuable, practical contribution to filling
the breach. The three cases
presented are indisputably germane to both pediatrics and
child psychiatry; the authors
are clinical experts; and the editors are distinguished, experienced
leaders in the field.
These case studies have been thoughtfully presented to address
educational needs, build
collaboration, and improve understanding between pediatricians
and child psychiatrists. Clearly, meeting the mental health
needs of children will require a societal commitment
to invest in our children as well as continued work at the
Board and Academy levels. But
we also should remember that, ultimately, care is given by
a doctor in an office, consulting and referring to colleagues,
based on what each has learned through the case method.
This manual should be widely adopted by training programs.
Its use will enrich the educational process, and improve the
care of children.
The Pediatrician
Mark L.Wolraich, M.D.
We have made great strides in better defining mental
illness in children in recent years.
There have been improvements in defining diagnostic criteria
and in understanding the pathophysiology of many conditions.
We have more and safer medications with
demonstrated efficacy in children, and better-defined psychosocial
interventions with
proven efficacy. Unfortunately, the benefits of those advancements
have yet to be
realized by many of the children and families who need them.
The translation of science into practice has lagged, and the
capacity of the mental health services system to meet
the needs of children has not only failed to keep pace with
scientific advances,
but in some areas has even declined.
It is clear that the emotional well-being of children is not
important just to the mental
health community, but it is also a vital concern of primary
care clinicians. Most mental disorders do not present as an
all-or-none phenomenon: They fall within a developmental spectrum
that runs from normal and problematic behaviors to disorders
described in DSMPC. In their milder and earlier stages, most
disorders present first to primary care clinicians, as do
many of the environmental situations increasing the risk of
mental disorders. Therefore, primary care clinicians play
an important role in screening for conditions and providing
early or less intensive interventions. Given their large numbers,
pediatricians have the capacity to manage emotional conditions
early, when they may be prevented or ameliorated.
Communication and coordination between pediatricians and child
psychiatrists is essential
if we are to succeed at this task. Primary care clinicians
can help children and families
with complex needs only if there is appropriate communication
between specialties. Child psychiatrists can provide the needed
expertise in direct service where it is available. They can
also provide critically important consultation to primary
care physicians when psychiatric services are limited, especially
as access to therapeutic interventions becomes more challenging
in a system that restricts services and places mental health
service in a separate health care system.
This manual is designed to help pediatricians and child psychiatrists
to collaborate more
effectively for the benefit of the child. It employs a successful
model of case-based
sessions in collaborative office rounds as the basis for the
curriculum. By providing
instructions for including these educational activities in
residency training programs, the
manual illustrates how pediatric and psychiatric trainees
can work and learn together.
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