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    Children's Mental Health Issues are a Growing Cause of ER Visits

    The number of emergency room visits due to mental health problems of children and young adults is on the rise, according to a new study.

    Researchers analyzed data from 279 million visits kids made to emergency rooms around the country spanning 1999 through 2007. Over the eight-year period, the percentage of those visits attributable to psychiatric complaints rose from 2.4 percent to 3 percent.

    While seemingly small, such an increase translates to hundreds of thousands of additional psychiatry-related ER visits per year, the study's authors wrote. The largest rise was seen among children who have no health insurance or public health insurance.

    The reasons for the psychiatric visits in those under age 19 fit into six broad categories, said study researcher Dr. Zachary Pittsenbarger, of Chidren's Hospital Boston. Depression, anxiety and behavioral issues were the most common, with suicide attempts, drug use and alcohol problems less often cited.

    "These patients are often in the emergency room for longer than many other patients, and need the most consultations," Pittsenbarger said. "We need to find out why they are there, and whether they could be better served in an outpatient clinic."

    The new findings are being presented today (Oct. 14) at the American Academy of Pediatrics National Conference and Exhibition in Boston.

    Shortage of doctors to blame

    Despite increasing numbers of pediatric psychiatric visits to emergency departments, patients did not become any more likely over time to be admitted to the hospital. This indicates that the children and young adults are not any sicker, Pittsenbarger said. Many of them likely have problems that could be dealt with by outpatient psychiatrists.

    Therefore, he said, a shortage of such outpatient mental health specialists may be to blame for the rise in ER visits. If a patient or parent can't easily find an outpatient specialist to help them, they will turn toward the emergency department.

    "There are just not enough pediatric mental health care providers for the amount of need that there is," Pittsenbarger said.

    A second factor in the increase, he said, is the effect of having public health insurance on a person's access to outpatient mental health care. Many psychiatrists either don't accept Medicaid and other public insurances, or are more reluctant to fit these patients into their schedule, other studies have shown.

    Among the pediatric psychiatric ER visits that Pittsenbarger studied, the percentage of visits by patients with either no health insurance or Medicaid grew from 46 percent in 1999 to 54 percent in 2007.

    Effects of insurance

    Dr. Karin Rhodes of the University of Pennsylvania led a study in Cook County, Ill., which includes the city of Chicago, that examined whether it was more difficult for children with public insurance or private insurance to get appointments with medical specialists. The data were published in June in the New England Journal of Medicine.

    The study relied on scripted phone calls with doctors' offices; callers were told what symptoms to describe and what type of insurance to mention.

    The psychiatry offices in the study scheduled appointments for 51 percent of calls in which a child was said to have private insurance, and only 17 percent of calls for children said to have public insurance.

    "Psychiatry had the worst access, not just among publicly insured children, but for all children," Rhodes said.

    "It's a disturbing trend," Rhodes said. Based on the study's results, it's not surprising that ER visits are rising, she said. "It does indicate that the disparities we found in Cook County probably exist nationwide."

    More work is needed, Pittsenbarger said, to determine who the patients are that are using the ER for mental health issues, and how doctors can help them get more appropriate care.

    "For example, we want to know if these are the same patients coming in over and over or are these many patients who are coming once each time," he said.

    Pass it on: Limited access to outpatient mental health services may explain a growing number of visits to the ER by children with public health insurance or no health insurance.

    This story was provided by MyHealthNewsDaily, a sister site to LiveScience. Follow MyHealthNewsDaily on Twitter @MyHealth_MHND.

     

    20 comments

    • nICK Fletcher  •  7 mths ago
      I have never seen a study that shows the long term effects of medication on a youths brain. Imagine if you will a child at age 9 starting abusing methamphetamine, what would you think that his brain would look like at age 18? As someone who has worked in the mental health profession this is always the first question I ask to doctors and parents when medication is brought into the question. To me its like an amputation, some times its necessary but not in every case, every time.
      • Psychentist 7 mths ago
        You haven't seen those studies because they don't exist. Classic example is ADD (now also ADHD).
        Fact of life : Children have a lot of energy and don't concentrate as well as an adult who is responsible for them would like.
        Viola! A pharmaceutical megacorporation, in the attempt to make more money sees said fact of life and declares to the world (via television and propaganda aimed at educators) that this must be a DISEASE! We'll call it... Hmm... What does one call the lack of ability to concentrate? Attention Deficit Disorder! Yes, that's it! Now, give the kids something to slow down their brain activity and tout it as a miracle drug. Call it Ritalin! Who cares if there are no studies on the long term effects? That would take decades! Just think of all the money we could make if we just throw a few million at a politician to ensure that the FDA approves our product, even without clinical trials! While we're at it, why not make some depressing commercials about being depressed in which we ask the viewer if he or she is depressed. If the answer is yes, then it must be a DISEASE! We'll call it... Depression! Oh, Prozac causes suicide? Who said that? Arrange his death. Make it look like a suicide...

        It goes on and on and on...
    • cerberus  •  7 mths ago
      i can see big pharma marketing children's chewable xanax
      • Lone Ranger 7 mths ago
        Methinks simply admitting the problem of mental illness to a health care professional is the proper prophylaxis. Something my parents could NEVER do.Meaning, admit THEY had a problem.
      • Psychentist 7 mths ago
        @ Cerberus :
        They make children's chewable Valium. Basically the same thing.
      • cerberus 7 mths ago
        frightening, eh?
    • Douglas  •  7 mths ago
      It's not their mental "health" issues bringing them to the ER.
      It's mental illness issues.
      Let's dispense with PC-correct shying away from words that we may not like but accurately describe what's going on.
      • Lone Ranger 7 mths ago
        Methinks it's both. They seem to believe they can get help for their mental illness issues at a public health facility.
    • garry  •  7 mths ago
      once again the proof that all the so called proffesionals are idiots. Pussifing our children never helped them only made them worse
    • Huh  •  7 mths ago
      would that have anything to do with the ADD drugs we started our kids on?
    • Psychentist  •  7 mths ago
      Mental illness is caused by environment in 99% of cases. Brains glitch when they are taught to value things like life, love and liberty and then are thrust into a world that destroys all of the above for the sake of the almighty dollar.

      "It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society."
      -Jiddu Krishnamurti
    • Joel  •  7 mths ago
      Perhaps making them "choose" a gender in elementary school, or tell them more about the holidays that their parents celebrate are really all about abusing someone else, or teaching them everyone wins when they really don't...
    • Sharon  •  7 mths ago
      Look at the adults...and our society...is it any wonder the kids are going off the deep end?
    • Bobby H  •  7 mths ago
      This will get worse. Drugging kids to make them behave is the problem. They have had no reason to learn how to control themselves in society. The followers of Freud and the other apologists have caused this and will of course develop more drugs to fix this. Remember the only difference between Freud and fraud is a vowel.
      • Brenda 7 mths ago
        Some parents have forgotten how to displine their children. But yes, too many times a child is given drugs I do not think they need. ADHD has become one of the most prominent of mental disorders. And I do know that some people will get a SSI check who have children who have ADHD. I know of children as young as 2 years old being treated for ADHD. My opinion, some of the parents of these children who are very active at 2 don't want to deal with the child and some doctors are more than willing to put them on medications to calm them down.
      • AG 7 mths ago
        I agree that there are to many kids being diagnosed with ADHD that don't have it because parents AND teachers don't want to deal with kids having extra energy but there are seiously kids who can't function because of the ADHD. Real ADHD isn't just about being hyper it is so much more than that. Real ADHD can affect a child well into adulthood and make it hard to maintain a job or relationship. They are more likely to develop addictions to alcohol and drugs because that helps them feel more calm or connected to something. Pot is the top used thing among ADHD teens and adults because it calms the minds of many of them making them actually focus. So for those real suffers the meds are necessary but giving a child meds just because they are energetic or are hard to discipline is never a good idea. For those parents that question just how their kids act I welcome them to spend a day with my 9 year old who was diagnosed PDD-NOS, ADHD both and they will see where real problems can be and my son is considered one of the higher functioning and with less behavioral issues than most. I think parents need to sit down and realize when the problems start. Eliminate certain dietary factors from their lives because we all know artificial dyes and sweetners are the top two causes of ADHD symptoms in children and adults. If the diet changes and routine don't help then they should feel ok about seeking out possible medications to be used only during school hours to help them focus at school and never on the weekends, summertime or breaks from school. To many parents rely on the meds to be the "discipline" for their child(ren) which makes it look worse when parents actually need to give their kids meds. None of this should be taken lightly.
      • Kevin 7 mths ago
        AG you said it right =)
    • Brenda  •  7 mths ago
      My opinion, many of these cases could be the result of drug use. Children are not going to tell their parents they are experimenting with drugs. Another thing I will express an opinion on is some people who have a child who gets diagnoised with a mental disorder or ADHD, they can get a SSI check on the child. Could explain why they take the child around to so many doctors. Hoping to find one who will give them the results they want. That is just my opinion.
    • dave  •  7 mths ago
      I'm in favor of bringing back the full frontal lobotomy.
    • Rowell  •  7 mths ago
      During the times of the roman empire, people drank from goblets made out of lead. As we know today, lead can cause problems in the human brain. Back then, there were a lot of insane people, due to the lead that leeched into their wine and water. I wonder if something we're using today is having the same effect.
    • yargh2002  •  7 mths ago
      hmm, i'm not allowed to beat the crap out of my kid anymore i'll get in trouble, lets drug them to make them behave, hey it is easier then actual parenting
    • ILuvCats  •  7 mths ago
      Seems to me that cutting has become an epidemic, and parents freak out and take their kid to the ER when it is not a psychiatric emergency. I'd freak out too. But I bet a lot of cutters do not have serious mental illness and could have been dealt with outpatient, except for the freakout factor.
    • Wombat  •  7 mths ago
      How many of these 279,000,000 ER visits were for undocumented (illegal) aliens? Any stats on that? This is the main reason for the failure of the American medical system.
    • starr bright  •  7 mths ago
      they are doping up the kids, kids hyper as puppies run around a lot so mom and dad are busy give them a pill so they can watch the soap opera or sports, how did all of this happen ,this is one of the major reasons , and only one fault your drs and there leaders, read this slow but your kind care less for facts , History and science have shown us that the existence of the disease of alcoholism is pure speculation. Just saying alcoholism is a disease, doesn't make it true. Nevertheless, medical professionals and American culture lovingly embraced the disease concept and quickly applied it to every possible deviant behavior from alcohol abuse to compulsive lecturing. The disease concept was a panacea for many failing medical institutions adding billions of dollars to the industry and leading to a prompt evolution of pop-psychology. Research has shown that alcoholism is a choice, not a disease, and stripping alcohol abusers of their choice, by applying the disease concept, is a threat to the health of the individual.

      The disease concept oozes into every crevice of our society perpetuating harmful misinformation that hurts the very people it was intended to help. It is a backwards situation where the assumptions of a few were adopted as fact by the medical profession, devoid of supporting evidence. And soon after, the disease concept was accepted by the general public. With this said, visiting the history of the disease concept gives us all a better understanding of how and why all of this happened.

      The disease concept originated in the 1800s with a fellow by the name of Dr. Benjamin Rush. He believed alcoholics were diseased and used the idea to promote his prohibitionist political platform. He also believed that dishonesty, political dissention and being of African-American decent were diseases. The "disease concept" was used throughout the late 1800s and early 1900s by prohibitionists and those involved in the Temperance Movement to further a political agenda. Prior to this time, the term alcoholic did not exist.
    • starr bright  •  7 mths ago
      let us not forget these are the kids of the baby boomers , there greed and hate left the world as it is for there kids now it will there grand kids that also pay the price, as many of the baby boomers are now raising there grand kids, they where raised by fools also , no 1 it comes down to one thing religion ,Ask why religion causes so many problems

      If God were to exist, wouldn't you expect there to be a huge benefit to those who follow and obey him? Why, instead, do we see the opposite?

      For example, there is growing evidence that the delusion of religion causes significant social dysfunction. Statistical research is revealing the problems that go with religion. For example, a recent article in the Journal of Religion and Society points out that religion is correlated to the significant social difficulties that we can see in America
      The prevailing view is that religion is harmless even if it is delusional. That turns out not to be the case. America is the most religious country of those studied in the developed world. America also has the biggest problems in terms of things like homicide, juvenile and early adult mortality, STD infection rates, teen pregnancy, and abortion.
    • Tejas  •  7 mths ago
      Kids never Crazy or Mental. First day Kids see the World, the Brain is empty so cute and so
      naived. When They growing up start with School and They Parents couldn't vision on them so closed.Other than that in the School. Races to races messing up and bunch of Teachers
      can't say nothing and some They use the Kids race to race mess up each other also. Then
      they start going to work each other they trying to be who the best and Strongest Community
      or Muscle. The First thing we need to blame Parents always leave them alone, second thing
      School Staffs need to be fairly with any Colors and watch them like a World Family. USA
      or other Country different Culture. Kids are the Top but the Kids may be the bottom if We can't control them. They don't known lot of Idiots Society alway want other Kids bad than them Kids,that all.
    • Scott  •  7 mths ago
      It's not just us. Dealing with mental health issues around the world are more problematic due to severe cuts in health care. In a health care system, the mentally ill are the first to be cut and the last to be funded. The problem here is that our county health facilities are so grossly inadequate that we can hire one psychiatrist and one psychologist only. Teenagers are hard to treat.
    • WelcometoSpartan  •  7 mths ago
      of course from all the vaccines full of mercury and the gmo's from monsnanto and all the quemicals they are introdising to create all this chaos....DOWN WITH THE NEW WORLD ORDER AND THE EUGENIC AGENDA FOR CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY ,THIS ILLNES ARE NOT HAPPENING BECAUSE OF MOTHER NATURE,IS MAN MADE BY THIS EVIL CABAQL WICH IS TRYING TO DOMINATE THE WORLD BY KEEPING YOU DUMB DOWN AND EXPERIMENTING WITH EVERYONE . wake up wake up wake up
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