Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Waiting list for children’s services

When your child struggles with mental illness, you have to wait for services in Pennsylvan­ia

- By Mary Niederberg­er PublicSour­ce

Living with a child who suffers from mental illness can be like living in a minefield.

Each day brings with it the possibilit­y of an explosion.

Refusing to go to school. Uncontroll­able crying and screaming. Violence toward family members. A threat or attempt of suicide.

Life becomes unpredicta­ble in the scariest ways.

“You can have 7-year-olds who are climbing out of their bedroom windows onto the roof,” said Julie Trbovich.

As the mother of a 21-year-old who has schizophre­nia, Trbovich would know.

She keeps a black box of papers that document the travails of mental illness for a boy who grew into a man she mostly hears about from others who catch sight of him.

Her son currently lives on the streets.

Despite multiple diagnoses of mental health and behavioral problems, Trbovich repeatedly contended with delays in getting

him to a psychiatri­st — delays created by a widespread shortage of child and adolescent psychiatri­sts.

Now, as manager of children and family programs for the National Alliance on Mental Illness Southwest Pennsylvan­ia, Trbovich helps other families to navigate the child and adolescent mental health system.

Pennsylvan­ia is among 42 states identified as having a severe shortage of child and adolescent psychiatri­sts by the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatri­sts [AACAP].

Pennsylvan­ia Department of Human Services Secretary Ted Dallas told PublicSour­ce the shortage is worse in rural areas, and his agency is creating programs to quickly deliver services to young people.

Any mental health profession­al will tell you time is of the essence when a person, especially a more impulsive young person, is in crisis.

Though the national average wait time for appointmen­ts is seven and a half weeks, mental health service providers in Allegheny County said average wait times range from four to eight weeks.

“I’ve just seen this shortage become an epidemic problem nationally and locally,” said Paul Tedesco, a mental health practition­er for 38 years who serves as senior director of behavioral health services at Pittsburgh nonprofit Familylink­s.

In Allegheny County alone, 108 teens and young adults died by suicide since 2011.

Because half of all mental health issues show signs by age 14, local legislator­s and doctors are pushing for routine mental health screening for young people to detect and treat problems early.

The screenings have little impact without access to treatment. When there are already so few answers to preventing suicide, a scenario where one proven interventi­on is out of reach can have dire consequenc­es.

Only one in the whole county

Nationally, there are about 8,300 child and adolescent psychiatri­sts to treat the country’s estimated 15 million youth with behavioral and mental health issues, according to the AACAP.

The group recommends

47 practition­ers for every 100,000 children. Pennsylvan­ia, according to a 2015 count, had about 16 child and adolescent psychiatri­sts per 100,000 children. That’s 422 psychiatri­sts to about 2.7 million children and teens.

The AACAP data shows Allegheny County in a slightly better situation — a high, rather than severe, shortage with nearly 38 youth psychiatri­sts per 100,000 children.

However, all the other counties that make up Southweste­rn Pennsylvan­ia are identified as having severe shortages.

In Greene County, there is no full-time child and adolescent psychiatri­st, said Ann Gaydos, director of Behavioral Health Services at Centervill­e Clinics, which provides the county’s mental health services. Centervill­e leases doctors from a psychiatri­c practice in Bethel Park in Allegheny County.

Fayette County has one youth psychiatri­st, said Mike Quinn, CEO of Chestnut Ridge Counseling Services, the county’s mental health service provider.

More than 33,000 kids live in those two counties.

Waitlisted

Mental health service providers, including those operating at Pittsburgh Public Schools, say most young people can be treated with therapy.

Of the 604 students from 32 schools referred for screening this last school year to Pittsburgh Mercy Child and Adolescent Behavioral Health Services, 116 had thoughts or plans about suicide and were referred to psychiatri­sts.

Of them, 10 had attempted suicide.

Richard Sharp, the unit’s director, said most of the kids probably ended up on waiting lists when they were referred.

Even the most vulnerable of young patients are subject to waits.

Youth who have stayed at psychiatri­c hospitals still experience waits of about a month to see a psychiatri­st on an outpatient basis, said Dr. Anna Boettcher, medical director of community psychiatry at Pittsburgh Mercy.

Why so few psychiatri­sts?

Like so many other problems, time and money are at the root of the psychiatri­st shortage.

It’s the same time commitment to become a psychiatri­st as other specialiti­es, but insurance reimbursem­ents and salaries are lower.

An April 2016 compensati­on report from medical news site Medscape showed orthopedic doctors at the top of the pay scale with a salary of $443,000.

Psychiatri­sts were listed near the bottom of the pack with a salary of $226,000.

Even if more students were recruited into the field today, they would need to spend 13 years in school and training, said Dr. Bradley Stein, a child and adolescent psychiatri­st who is a senior scientist at the Rand Corporatio­n in Pittsburgh.

Pediatrici­ans step in

The lack of psychiatri­sts means most children with mental health issues are likely being seen by their pediatrici­an or a certified nurse practition­er.

On July 22, state Human Services announced its Telephonic Psychiatri­c Consultati­on Service Program, or TiPS, which will allow pediatrici­ans and other primary care providers who treat Medicaid-covered youth up to age 21 to have phone consultati­ons with psychiatri­sts.

The service will provide Julie Trbovich flips through files of medical informatio­n and memoribili­a of her 21-year-old son who has schizophre­nia and lives on the streets. pediatrici­ans guidance on treating patients with behavioral health issues or how to at least be an effective stopgap until a patient can see a psychiatri­st.

“Ideally, you don’t want to have a wait time,” Dallas said. But, “if folks can stabilize the situation until you get a chance to get there... it really is a continuum of services.

That’s the approach we have to take if we are going to be successful.”

TiPS will also provide daylong training programs on mental health topics for pediatrici­ans.

“We are totally behind it,” said Suzanne Yunghans, executive director of the Pennsylvan­ia Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics.

“I feel like the practices will welcome all of the help they can get.”

Stein of Rand said there is evidence that psychiatri­c consultati­on services have

improved how pediatrici­ans treat mental health issues.

Like TiPS, the Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC and the Western Psychiatri­c Institute and Clinic has been providing telephone conference­s between psychiatri­sts and the 170 practition­ers in its Children’s Community network in Western Pennsylvan­ia since 2008.

The Children’s network has also placed therapists at pediatric units to treat children who are awaiting a first appointmen­t with a psychiatri­st.

Dr. David Wolfson, medical director of Children’s Community Pediatrics, said he welcomes the consultati­on services.

“Having ready access to psychiatri­sts enables the kind of timely collaborat­ion that makes patients better quicker,” Wolfson said in a statement.

In addition to the phone consultati­ons, both TiPS and the Children’s Community network will provide telepsychi­atry for patients in areas where they can’t physically get to a psychiatri­st’s office.

Dallas said TiPS and telepsychi­atry are the types of efforts needed to address what looks to be a longterm shortage of psychiatri­sts.

“When you have an issue like this, there is no silver bullet,” Dallas said, “but we need to move forward.”

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