The News-Times

Connecticu­t is combating youth mental health crisis

- By Steve Hamm CONN. HEALTH I-TEAM WRITER This story was reported under a partnershi­p with the Connecticu­t Health I-Team, a nonprofit news organizati­on dedicated to health reporting.

Carolina Serna's job as a care coordinato­r for the Clifford Beers, a behavioral health care provider based in New Haven, puts her in the middle of today's mental health crisis for kids, teenagers and their families. When Clifford Beers gets referrals for cases, Serna and other care coordinato­rs become the face of the organizati­on, helping children and families get the clinical care they need. But Serna and her colleagues do much more than that. In a sense, they're the bridge between troubled families and the rest of society.

Take one of the many tough situations Serna handled during the COVID-19 crisis: A young Hispanic mother in New Haven had just lost her job. Her husband left. She was pregnant. Her son faced behavioral health and disability issues. And she was being evicted from her apartment. The first thing Serna did was get the mom a lawyer. Then she reached out to the school and social service agencies for help. “The mom didn't know how to connect, so I connected the family to the help they needed,” says Serna, who is bilingual.

The story has a happy ending — at least so far. During the six months that Serna worked with the family, the eviction was stopped, the mom enrolled in a program for people reentering the workforce, and the son was placed in a school for kids with special needs and received the necessary counseling.

Across the nation, the number of adolescent­s reporting poor mental health is increasing. A U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2021 survey released in March showed that 37 percent of high school students experience­d poor mental health during the pandemic and 44 percent

said they persistent­ly felt sad or hopeless during the previous year.

Separation from school and friends, the threat of becoming seriously ill, and family stresses — including lost jobs and income — sent kids to hospital emergency department­s in record numbers. Other social stresses fuel crises, including domestic violence, gun violence and racism. The pain is most acute in disadvanta­ged communitie­s. “Many of my patients were at home doing virtual school, but they were also tasked with taking care of the younger kids because their parents are essential workers. The kids were overwhelme­d,” says Dr. Deepa Camenga, an associate professor of emergency medicine at Yale School of Medicine.

The nation's patchwork health care system isn't built to handle this kind of crisis. There aren't nearly enough behavior health caregivers and facilities to address demands for service, especially for poor people, says Dr. Andrew Ulrich, who is in charge of

the EDs at Yale New Haven Health's hospitals in New Haven. In addition, says Alice M. Forrester, CEO at Clifford Beers, Medicaid reimbursem­ent levels don't even cover the basic costs of the care organizati­ons like hers provide, forcing them to depend on philanthro­py to make ends meet.

The Connecticu­t General Assembly made a down payment on addressing some of these issues this session when it passed bills, which the governor signed into law recently, that expanded mobile crisis programs throughout the state and created grant programs to hire more school-based counselors.

Despite the depth of the crisis and dearth of funding, there is a glimmer of hope. In communitie­s across the state, groups are collaborat­ing and experiment­ing with innovative approaches to improving health and wellbeing. One example is how Serna of Clifford Beers helped the New Haven woman and her children. The idea is that when the social determinan­ts of

health are considered and community resources are coordinate­d, the well-being of individual­s and entire communitie­s can improve. The approach also involves families and neighborho­od organizati­ons in decisions affecting them.

Ultimately, these experiment­s could change how our society thinks about and delivers health care. Following this model, health care and social service organizati­ons aren't competing with one another or operating in isolation but are working together to achieve common aims. “We're shifting from shortterm self-interest to longterm shared interest,” says Rick Brush, the CEO of Wellville, a national nonprofit health advisory group that assists local collaborat­ives in five U.S. communitie­s, including north Hartford neighborho­ods.

Community health innovators in Connecticu­t aren't shy about adopting and adapting approaches that have been piloted elsewhere. For instance, the community outreach program at Clifford Beers is based on the Wrap-Around Milwaukee model for coordinati­ng social and health care services.

Clifford Beers plans to take its community engagement to another level with a resilience center it hopes to locate in New Haven's Newhallvil­le neighborho­od, offering early childhood services, mental health programs, after-school programs, and community health and disease prevention activities.

Health experts say the closer these coordinate­d service programs get to neighborho­ods and families — really listening to what people want rather than dictating to them — the more likely they will have positive effects.

When Cynthia Cruz, a bilingual coordinato­r serving the communitie­s of northwest Connecticu­t for Wellmore Behavioral Health, gets assigned to a new youth behavioral health case, the first thing she does is visit the family in their home.

They discuss what's going on and what they would like changed. Her program only lasts six months, so she also reaches out to others in the community to see if they can help on a longer-term basis, including pastors, sports coaches, and extended family members. Wellmore refers to these human networks as “natural resources.”

Cruz recalls one situation involving a boy and his family in the far northwest corner of the state. Earlier in the COVID crisis, the boy had retreated to his room and spent much of his time playing video games. He withdrew from his family,

barely talking to his mother. During sit-downs with the family, Cruz learned that the boy loved to watch football on TV, but he didn't play the game. So, in addition to finding a counselor for him, she recruited his uncle to toss a football around with him once a week. That broke the ice. She got the family a membership at the local YMCA. The boy began socializin­g with other people. He and his mom reconciled. “You know what they say,” says Cruz. “It takes a village to raise a child.”

A program launched by a team at Yale's Child Study Center, Supportive Parenting for Anxious Childhood Emotions (SPACE), puts parents at the center of their offspring's care. Clinicians train parents to deal directly with children who have anxiety disorders, rather than depending on profession­al therapy sessions.

“There are young people who can't or won't engage with cognitive therapy, so we were driven to find another tool,” says Eli R. Lebowitz, an associate professor at the Child Study Center whose team developed the technique. Their approach has been adopted by therapists worldwide and really took off after Lebowitz published a bestsellin­g book in 2021 about it, “Breaking Free of Child Anxiety and OCD.”

In one of Lebowitz's cases, a 12-year-old Milford girl had developed such severe anxiety that she would not speak to anyone outside her home. Lebowitz helped the parents understand they were hampering her recovery by speaking for her in such situations. They changed their behavior, which gradually led to their daughter regaining confidence and speaking for herself once again.

COVID triggered the youth behavioral health crisis, but it has also encouraged innovative approaches that could help address the problems young people face going forward.

“It has been a deep, deep couple of years, and, for the clinic, it has been in some ways revolution­ary,” says Forrester of Clifford Beers. “We have emphasized the outreach work in the communitie­s. Now we're seeing the aftereffec­ts, and we know what needs to be done.”

To connect with the Anxiety and Mood Disorders Program at the Yale Child Study Center, where free care is available in certain circumstan­ces, call 203-7374644.

 ?? Contribute­d photo ?? Carolina Serna, a care coordinato­r for Clifford Beers, helps children and families get the clinical care that they need. In her work, she often links families to services to improve their overall well-being.
Contribute­d photo Carolina Serna, a care coordinato­r for Clifford Beers, helps children and families get the clinical care that they need. In her work, she often links families to services to improve their overall well-being.

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