The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Limited mental health resources

Pediatric psychiatri­c cases swamping ERs

- By Lisa Chedekel Conn. Health I-Team Writer

The state’s efforts to direct children in mental health crisis away from emergency rooms, to other services, have fallen short, with major hospitals reporting staggering increases in patient visits since 2013: Up 32 percent at Connecticu­t Children’s Medical Center, and 81 percent at Yale New Haven Hospital.

The children’s hospital reported nearly 3,300 visits last year — 275 a month, on average — with the average length of stay increasing to 15 hours from less than 12 in 2013.

“I wish I could say we had made a lot of progress, but we haven’t,” said Dr. Steve Rogers, medical director of the emergency department’s behavioral health unit. “Unfortunat­ely, I think it’s only going to keep trending this way.”

Similarly, Yale saw ED visits by children ages 15 and younger rise from fewer than 750 in 2013 to more than 1,350 in 2016 — and the numbers are running even higher this year, said Dr. Claudia Moreno, medical director for psychiatri­c emergencie­s in Yale’s children’s emergency department. At times, she said, all ED beds are full, and children wait on hallway gurneys.

“A lot of families are really struggling to find services in the community,” Moreno said. She said Yale now has to turn down referrals from other providers for the hospital’s 39 acute inpatient beds for children ages 17 and younger, just to accommodat­e its own emergency patients.

“I’m in the position of keeping our beds for kids who come to us suicidal, homicidal or not able to function,” she said.

Increasing numbers of children with psychiatri­c problems showing up at emergency rooms is not unique to Connecticu­t. A new report in Clinical Pediatrics, co-authored by Rogers, found that nationwide reductions in inpatient beds and in providers who treat mentally troubled children had contribute­d to a 40 percent increase in ED visits from 2009 to 2013.

But in Connecticu­t, in the wake of the December 2012 school shootings in Newtown, state officials had announced a package of initiative­s in late 2014 to expand community care and reduce ED stays. That plan said the majority of those “stuck” in EDs – defined as medically cleared, but staying more than eight hours – were waiting for an inpatient bed. The initiative­s were intended to “quickly increase capacity in the system” by adding crisis stabilizat­ion beds, creating special Behavioral Health Assessment Centers as an alternativ­e to EDs, and redirectin­g children with autism spectrum disorder to specialize­d services.

Some of those steps, such as creation of the BHAC, never materializ­ed due to budget constraint­s. But Kristina Stevens, administra­tor for clinical and community consultati­on and support for the state Department of Children and Families, said the state has made progress on a number of initiative­s intended to alleviate the ED bottleneck, including expanding the number of available shortterm crisis beds from 14 to 80 last year; expanding the state’s Emergency Mobile Psychiatri­c Services program, which provides crisis-interventi­on to children referred by parents, schools or others; and working with schools and pediatrici­ans to recognize, treat and refer children with mental health problems.

“We’re seeing some very good collaborat­ive movement across the system,” Stevens said.

Hospital officials said they believe the ED backlog has been exacerbate­d by sharp reductions in congregate-care or residentia­l treatment programs by DCF – a move that agency Commission­er Joette Katz has said is in line with national recommenda­tions and trends. But critics say the state does not have a coordinate­d network of services in place yet to support that blanket policy shift. Also, in some cases when residentia­l placements are found, DCF will not approve care, hospital officials said.

Stevens acknowledg­ed that overhaulin­g the mental health system from institutio­nal to community-based care will take more time and resources. But she said that 79 cents of every dollar saved by closing congregate settings has been redirected to community and family-based services. She said some of what’s needed is a “culture change” to educate schools, parents and other caregivers that there are alternativ­es to dialing “911” when a child is in crisis.

“Believe me, we don’t want to see kids sitting in EDs for hours,” she said.

At both CCMC and Yale New Haven, the EDs are holding areas where children are stabilized and assessed, but not treated. Most are assessed within five to six hours to decide whether they need inpatient care or can return home. Delays, including multipleni­ght stays, occur when there are no inpatient beds available.

At CCMC, more than 500 children spent more than 24 hours in the ED last year. At least one child stayed three weeks. Multiple-night stays, said Rogers, “are still common.” CCMC has no pediatric psychiatri­c beds, and so must refer children out to a six-bed unit at the Institute of Living – “usually full,” Rogers said -- or scour the state for other beds.

“Identifyin­g inpatient beds is very challengin­g,” he said. “There are cases where we agree with the parent that your child needs help, but there are limited resources within the state -and we don’t want to keep them here. Being in the ED is not helpful. We have no windows. We have kids in the hallway. We are not a therapeuti­c environmen­t.”

Saint Francis Hospital and Medical Center sees only a few children a week in mental health crisis in its own ED, but is fielding increasing numbers of requests from CCMC and other emergency department­s for its 12 inpatient psychiatri­c beds for children ages five to 18, hospital officials said. At times, Saint Francis has expanded its capacity to 20 beds, but still, “for every bed we have, there are five referrals” turned down, said Robin Nichols, manager for crisis services in the Saint Francis ED.

At Yale, Moreno said, trained behavioral health social workers assess children and try to send them home or into one of Yale’s short-term beds “as soon as possible” – usually within the same day. But the beds are often full, and Moreno must move children out to accommodat­e others at risk. Often, children who are discharged return to the ED, she said.

“We see them coming back. Is it because we’re keeping them too shortterm, or they’re not getting help at home – or both?” she said.

Moreno and Rogers said it’s difficult to refer children to community programs from the ED, although both hospitals try to ensure that there are supports in place when children go home. Rogers said CCMC is piloting its own care-coordinati­on program for families “because community-based services are so hard to access.”

At Yale, Moreno and her staff try to connect families to outpatient or partial hospitaliz­ation services, but “it’s very cumbersome to get them referred” to community-based care, she said. One Yale in-home program affiliated with DCF, known as IICAPS, or Intensive InHome Child & Adolescent Psychiatri­c Services), has a more than four-week wait, she said.

Jeff Vanderploe­g, vice president for mental health initiative­s at the Child Health and Developmen­t Institute of Connecticu­t, said EDs are “not a good place for kids to be seeking mental health care,” and that more needs to be done to build an accessible network of services.

He said the Emergency Mobile Psychiatri­c Services program has seen significan­t growth — from 9,457 episodes of care in 2011, to 12,419 in 2016 — and is helping to divert cases from EDs. But on the other side, EDs are referring fewer children to the program than they did five years ago, raising questions about the “quality of the relationsh­ip” between some hospitals and EMPS providers, he said.

Some parents who have frequented EDs said while the experience is distressin­g, they believe they have no other options.

Cheri Brown, a Kensington mother of three, said she made at least 20 trips to EDs around the state from 2007 to 2015. At smaller hospitals, her children-siblings adopted through DCF-- were left on hallway gurneys for hours. She said CCMC and St. Francis worked hard to move the children into inpatient care quickly.

“Basically, you’re on your own,” said Brown, who manages a constructi­on company. “My kids had 12 different social workers in five years. It’s brutal. You have to learn the ropes yourself.”

Maureen O’Neill-Davis, a Torrington mother, said her daughter was taken to the ED four times in 2015 – from school and home. Twice, she went to Charlotte Hungerford Hospital, where she was kept 24-28 hours and discharged back home after no beds could be found, O’Neill-Davis said. The other two times, she went to CCMC’s ED, where she stayed two nights before a bed opened at the Institute of Living.

Hospital psychiatri­c clinicians point to a number of factors that are driving up ED visits, including increased vigilance by schools and parents about suicide, depression and aggressive behavior. They say the heavy reliance on EDs points to a lack of easily accessible community care options — while also signaling that opportunit­ies to intervene early in children’s mental health, before the crisis stage, are being missed.

Adding to the ED crunch, they said, is a growing num

HEALTH >> PAGE 6

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