Godoy Leandra, Carter Alice S, Silver Rebecca B, Dickstein Susan, Seifer Ronald
*Child Health Advocacy Institute, Children's National Health System, Washington, DC; †University of Massachusetts, Department of Psychology, Boston, MA; ‡Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, RI.
J Dev Behav Pediatr. 2014 Jun;35(5):334-43. doi: 10.1097/DBP.0000000000000060.
To determine (1) how child age relates to parent concerns about child behavior and (2) how child age and parent concerns correlate with provider referrals and family attendance at mental health consultant (MHC) appointments.
Data were obtained from Rhode Island's Project, Linking Actions for Unmet Needs in Children's Health, in which universal developmental and behavioral screening and MHCs were embedded within primary care sites serving low-income diverse families. Children 9 months to 8 years of age were eligible for the study if they had a scheduled screening well-child visit in 2010 (N = 1451). Families completing screening and/or those referred for a MHC appointment were included in analyses (n = 700). Outcome measures included parent-reported concerns about child behavior, referral status following screening, and family attendance at the MHC appointment.
For every 1-month increase in child age, there was a 1.02 times increase in the likelihood of parent behavioral concern and a 1.04 times increase in the likelihood of mental health referral, even when controlling for child behavior. MHC-referred children older than 5 years were 2.61 times more likely to attend than children less than 5 years. When examining parent behavioral concerns and child age jointly, only concerns remained significant.
Infants and toddlers, who have the highest rates of unmet mental health needs, may be least likely to benefit from universal screening and on-site MHC support. Efforts to incorporate behaviorally based screening tools and increase parent concerns where appropriate appear warranted, particularly for families with very young children.
确定(1)儿童年龄与父母对儿童行为的担忧之间的关系,以及(2)儿童年龄和父母担忧与医疗服务提供者的转诊以及家庭参加心理健康顾问(MHC)预约之间的相关性。
数据来自罗德岛州的“儿童健康未满足需求的联动行动项目”,该项目将普遍的发育和行为筛查以及MHC嵌入到为低收入多样化家庭服务的初级保健场所。2010年有定期筛查性健康儿童访视的9个月至8岁儿童符合研究条件(N = 1451)。完成筛查和/或被转诊进行MHC预约的家庭纳入分析(n = 700)。结果指标包括父母报告的对儿童行为的担忧、筛查后的转诊状态以及家庭参加MHC预约的情况。
即使在控制儿童行为的情况下,儿童年龄每增加1个月,父母对行为的担忧可能性增加1.02倍,心理健康转诊的可能性增加1.04倍。5岁以上被MHC转诊的儿童参加的可能性是5岁以下儿童的2.61倍。当联合考察父母对行为的担忧和儿童年龄时,只有担忧仍然显著。
心理健康需求未得到满足率最高的婴幼儿可能最不可能从普遍筛查和现场MHC支持中受益。采用基于行为的筛查工具并在适当情况下增加父母的担忧的努力似乎是有必要的,特别是对于有幼儿的家庭。