This document provides guidance on clinically assessing child and adolescent psychiatric emergencies. It discusses goals of acute assessment including determining risk of harm, ruling out acute medical issues, and determining need for inpatient care. It also covers distinguishing between psychiatric diagnoses and mental health problems. Common acute mental health problems presented in the emergency department that are discussed include suicide, aggression, adjustment issues, borderline traits, abuse/homelessness, and acute psychiatric disorders like psychosis, mania, depression, and anxiety disorders. The document provides assessment approaches and case examples for managing these various psychiatric emergencies.
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Clinical assessment of child and adolescent psychiatric emergencies
1. Clinical Assessment of Child and
Adolescent Psychiatric Emergencies
Carlo Carandang, MD, FAPA
2.
3. Goals of Acute Assessment
• To determine if the patient is at imminent risk of
harm to self and/or others
• To determine if the young person presenting with
crisis is suffering from an acute psychiatric disorder
versus a mental health problem
• Acute medical complications emanating from the
acute mental health problem need to be ruled out
• Ultimately, urgent mental health assessment is
needed to determine if a higher level of care is
needed, such as referral to a psychiatric inpatient
unit, crisis unit/step-up unit, or urgent mental health
outpatient clinic.
4. Psychiatric Diagnosis versus a Mental
Health Problem
• Important to determine if the patient has a
psychiatric diagnosis versus a mental health
problem
• Presenting with an acute psychiatric disorder
has a different treatment plan than for a
youth presenting with adjustment problems
after a break-up with their
girlfriend/boyfriend
6. Suicide
• Suicide is a major public health concern around
the world
• Third leading cause of death in the US among 15
to 24 y/o accounting for 12.2% of all deaths in
this age group
• Youth Risk Behaviour Surveillance Survey ’09- In a
1-yr period, 13.8%of students grades 9-12 had
S.I. 10.9% made a plan, 6.6 made at least one
attempt, 1.9% made an attempt requiring
medical attention
7. Assessing For Risk of Suicide
When assessing a suicidal youth, ED clinicians gather info.
regarding risk factors. Risk factors are not necessarily
causes but rather associated characteristics.
• Gender
• Psychiatric Illness
• Previous Suicide Attempt (s)
• Family History of Suicide
• Access to Firearms
• Sexual Orientation
• Stressful Life Events
8. SADPERSONS Scale
• Sex (male)
• Age less than 19 or greater than 45 years
• Depression (patient admits to depression or decreased
concentration, sleep)
• Previous suicide attempt
• Excessive alcohol or drug use
• Rational thinking loss: psychosis, organic brain syndrome
• Social supports lacking
• Organized plan or serious attempt
• No spouse
• Sickness, chronic disease
9. The SADPERSONS Scale and Clinical
Decision Making
Note: Some patients can have many risk factors
for suicide; however are not at risk. Others can have few risk
factors but be at risk for suicide.
Total Points Proposed Clinical Action
0 to 2 Discharge with follow-up
3 to 4 Discharge if able to arrange close follow-up;
otherwise consider hospitalization
5 to 6 Likely to admit to hospital unless immediate
reliable follow-up is available
7 to 10 Admit to hospital, either voluntarily or
involuntarily
10. Case Example
14 y/o female seen for Crisis Ax on a Friday. Shy, quiet and not attention seeking. Disturbing (superficial)
pattern of cutting on arm x 1 year (50 cuts). Told parents about the cutting one month ago. Typically cuts
when mood is low. Denies a strong intent to die, however; insists on persisting with cutting, possibly
deeper. Reports intrusive thoughts of suicide with recent increase in frequency and intensity. Functioning
well in other areas (doing well in school in spite of being bullied last year). For her age, + insightful and
stating she cuts to relieve tension and to battle loneliness. Poor coping skills. Describes “dips” in her mood
that seem situationaly driven. Hx of insomnia. Hx of significant depression on maternal side. Not using
Any substance / alcohol. Good relationship with parents, by all accounts “good kid.”
**Prescribed meds for sleep, and d/c home with a priority referral (within 7 days) to IWK outpatient mental
health. **
Returned to the ED 6 days later following an outpatient mental health session. Sent to the ED by the
Clinician as she disclosed feeing suicidal, exhausted, wanting to “give up.” Vague about the S.I., no plan.
Arrives in the ED. Won’t talk to the Crisis Worker. Reports she does not talk to anyone, including her
boyfriend. We work our magic… she tells us her good friend completed suicide and died yesterday. Still vague
about the S.I. and no concrete plan; however, states, “my friend was always smiling and no one knew because
she never talked to anyone. That is how I am.”
ADMITTED.
11. Understanding the Patient’s Thinking
and Planning
To complete a risk assessment, it is crucial to
assess the patient’s current thinking with regard
to suicide.
• Establish positive therapeutic alliance (empathic, not appear
rushed, eye contact, non-judgemental)
• Introduce topic gradually (gently). Move to direct questioning
• Open-ended questions to direct questions
• Scale of 1 to 10
• Degree of Hopelessness
• Future Orientation (immediate and distant)
• Careful History
• Availability of help and potential to abort attempt
12. Management of the Suicidal Patient
• Imminent Risk (hopeless, lack of future
orientation, persistent suicidal ideation and
plan with intent to commit suicide, access to
means, little social support) = Admission
• Uncooperative Patients at imminent risk
refusing admission = Admitted involuntarily
• Low to Moderate Risk patients will require a
well-organized, comprehensive discharge plan
13. Management of the Suicidal Patient
Con’t
• Each d/c plan will vary and will need to be
developed in consultation with the patient
and the family
• D/C plans include: discussion with the
patient / family about creating a safe
environment by removing access to means
(firearms, medications), information about
follow-up plans (who, where, when), return to
the ED if necessary
14. Contracting for Safety
• Developed in collaboration with the patient and
the family
• Lists what a patient agrees to do should their S.I.
return or worsen
• Key Components: listing triggers, coping skills
(exercise, music, reading), friends and family the
patient can call, contact numbers (crisis lines,
peer support), creating a safe home environment
and listing reasons for returning to the ED
15. Aggression
Treating and containing the aggressive patient is
one of the most CHALLENGING situations in the
ED. Needed: skilled empathic staff, adequate
facilities, security, collaboration with law
enforcement / justice / and / or child welfare,
verbal de-escalating techniques, NVCI. Chemical
and / or physical restraint may be required.
16. Most Common Psychiatric Diagnoses
Associated with Aggressive Behaviours
• Disruptive Behaviour disorders (ADHD, ODD,
Conduct Disorder)
• Mood Disorders (irritability with depression
and mania)
• Substance Abuse (intoxication)
• Developmental Disabilities (cognitive, autism)
• Psychosis and general medical conditions
(head injuries)
17. Case Example
• 14 y/o female born in Lebanon, grew up in N.S. After an extended trip to Lebanon,
patient has trouble readjusting upon her return home (current school is not
diverse, patient feels “out of place”). Parents noticed a significant change in
behaviour at this time. Extreme parent-adolescent conflict ensues. Patient
engages in high risk behaviour (staying out all night, school refusal, defiant,
disrespectful, and visiting another community against parent’s wishes where
there is a large representation of Lebanese peers). Multiple ED visits with
overwhelmed parents insisting patient is “mentally ill.” Patient assaulted mother
(violent). Charges laid and patient asked to leave the home (placed with a
neighbour). Patient unable to follow rules in neighbour’s home. Patient continues
to feel isolated in her home and community.
• Repeated visits to the ED involving grueling family conflict resolution and attempts
to help improve patient’s situation. On wait list for outpatient mental health. Will
be waiting another 6 months to 1 year.
• Family doctor prescribes Risperidone. Patient has a fight with mom, gets on a bus,
ingests roughly 10 or more tablets. Heart races, she gets scared, calls mom from a
payphone. Admitted to the ED, EKG, and overnight observation. Tells Crisis
Worker the next morning that she never meant to kill / harm herself. Just wanted
attention.
• Priority Referral to outpatient mental health
18. Parent-Child Relational Conflict
• ED visits as a result of lack of timely, accessible
and available community resources
• High conflict situations that require a
comprehensive d/c plan involving temporary
solutions between parent and child
• Take up a lot of time in the ED
• Emerge at any age
• Goal in the ED is to Defuse the situation via brief
family mediation / conflict resolution / building
communication skills
19. Adjustment Issues
• DSM1V-TR definition: Reactions to a specific stressor
that are beyond the normal expected reaction or that
cause significant impairment in functioning.
• Symptoms onset within 3 months of the stressor and
usually resolve within 6 months. Chronic AD if
symptoms last beyond 6 months
• AD develops when the stressor overwhelms the coping
skills (death of a loved one, move to a new school /
city, bullying, relationship break-up, poor grades
• Can be at SIGNIFICANT RISK for suicide
• Diminished stressor can = improved symptoms
• Treatment – Ongoing outpatient therapy
20. Borderline Traits
• Maladaptive Coping
• Shifts in mood, uncontrollable and intense anger
• Self-damaging behaviour (substance abuse, gambling, compulsive
spending, eating disorder, shoplifting, reckless driving, compulsive
sexual behaviour, defying curfew, self-mutilation, etc.)
• Identity issues, chronic feelings of emptiness, boredom, heavy need
for affection, reassurance
• Unstable chaotic relationships (splitting), alternating between
“clingy” and distancing
• Effort to avoid real or imagined abandonment
• Lack of trust in others
• Can be at risk for suicide due to impulsive, risk taking behaviour
• Intervention – long-term therapy (DBT)
21. Case Example
• 16 y/o female. “Outrageous” personality, funny, bright and creative. Piercings,
brightly coloured hair (pink, purple). Multiple presentations to the ED for
behavioural outbursts, parent-adolescent conflict, cutting and ongoing threats of
self-harm and / or complete suicide. Several admissions to inpatient mental
health unit. Patient recently texted her boyfriend to say she was going to a cliff to
kill herself. Patient smoked marijuana, drank 2 Vodka coolers, drove to the beach,
stood on the cliff for 2 hours waiting for him to come get her. When he did not
show, she felt rejected, cold and angry. Patient called police to come get her.
Police took too long, so patient walked through the woods in search of them.
Previous admissions to mental health unit not helpful; in fact, patient’s mental
state worsens when admitted on the unit.
• The intervention? Long-term outpatient therapy (DBT – Dialectical Behaviour
Therapy).
• The risks? Impulsive and risk taking behaviour can lead to accidental death /
completed suicide.
22. Child Abuse / Homeless Youth
• Many forms: physical, verbal, sexual, emotional and chronic
neglect (most common)
• The impact of child maltreatment on mental health is significant
• Collaboration with Child Welfare authorities is essential in the ED
• Homeless youth are often brought to the ED by police for risky /
dangerous behaviours as well as mental health difficulties
• Tenuous support systems, poor compliance with follow-up services
• The longer a youth is homeless, the more likely it is for the youth to
have a mental health problem
• Assessment must include risk assessment for suicide / homicide
and basic info. on housing / shelter, financial aid, clothing,
educational and vocational support, food banks / soup kitchens,
etc…
23. Confidentiality – Case Example
• 16 year old woman who discloses she has a loaded gun at home
and plans to shoot her stepfather if he comes near her or her 10
year old brother again, as he has before, when he is drinking and
violent. She also states that sometimes she thinks about turning
the gun on herself because she is miserable at home.
• Safety of the young woman (self harm; abused by stepfather)
• Safety of the stepfather
• Brother’s safety (Child Welfare)
• Ethical dilemma / duty to protect and warn? Confidentiality vs.
safety
• Warning police, stepfather while preserving daughter’s safety
• Explore alternative living arrangement
• Outpatient follow up if not admitted
24. Confidentiality
• Key component of the physician-patient / clinician-patient relationship
• The limits of confidentiality should be clearly established at the beginning of the assessment
• Confidentiality must be maintained unless the patient is at risk for harming himself / herself
(risk of suicide) or others (risk of homicide), if someone is harming them (child maltreatment)
or if the Health Centre is served with a court order (Order for Production)
• If the patient understands the importance of maintaining confidentiality and the limits to
confidentiality, he / she may be more likely to open up
• Clinicians can receive unlimited information from parents / collaterals (school personnel,
police, caregivers) without requiring consent from the patient. Clinicians should not share
information with parents / collaterals and nonclinical staff without the patient’s consent.
• Information can be shared among the patient’s treatment team involved in the patient’s
direct care at the Health Centre. Assessment results can be sent to the family doctor (with
permission)
• Privacy legislation varies among countries and within countries. There are also variations in
the age at which patients can give consent for the release of medical information.
• It is crucial that clinicians be up to date in terms of their local privacy legislation governing
their practice
26. Psychosis
• Psychosis is a disorder of thinking (delusions) and perception
(hallucinations) in which there is a gross impairment in reality
testing
• Positive symptoms- excess or distortion of normal functions-
delusions, hallucinations, disorganized speech or disorganized
or catatonic behaviour
• Negative symptoms- diminution or loss of a normal function-
affective flattening, alogia or avolition
• Look for decline in their social and cognitive functioning:
social withdrawal, worsening of school performance, bizarre
or eccentric thoughts and behaviours, self-neglect,
suspiciousness, anxiety, irritability, hostility, or aggression
• Patients might not come for medical care, and they are often
brought by their relatives
• The youth in the emergency department might be fearful,
apprehensive, irritable, or agitated
27. Psychosis
• Mnemonic for psychosis is THREAD: Thinking
may become disordered, Hallucinations may
occur, Reduced contact with reality,
Emotional control affected (incongruent
affect, affective fattening), Arousal may lead
to worsening of symptoms, and Delusions
might occur
28. Mania
• Irritable, elevated or expansible mood state, which represents
a significant change from the youth’s usual mood state and
persists for at least a week
• Change in mood state accompanied by grandiosity
• Youth with mania often think highly of themselves and also
think that everyone shares or welcomes their bright ideas;
this leads to over confidence
• Also have decreased need for sleep, racing thoughts,
increased interest in multiple activities, hypersexuality,
impulsivity, poor judgment, pressured speech, provocative
change in clothing style, distractibility
• More than half of the adolescents with mania might develop
psychotic symptoms
• The mnemonic for mania is DIGFAST
29. Depression
• Youth with depression often present as
irritable rather than depressed or sad
• Up to 60% of youth with depression also have
suicidal ideation and 30% attempt suicide
• The mnemonic for depression is SIGECAPS
30. Anxiety Disorders
• For ED, focus on acute stress disorder, post
traumatic stress disorder, panic disorder, and
social phobia
31. Post Traumatic Stress Disorder
• This disorder occurs after a traumatic event, in which the
youth experiences extreme fear, hopelessness or horror
• In younger children the experience could be expressed
through agitated or disorganized behaviour
• Re-experiencing symptoms associated with the trauma
• avoidance of stimuli associated with the trauma and
symptoms of hyperarousal; which causes significant distress
and/or functional impairment
• When these symptoms last more than a month, then the
diagnosis of PTSD is given
• The parents might not always know about their child’s
exposure to trauma (or they may be the perpetrator)
• The mnemonic for PTSD is TRAUMA: Traumatic event, Re-
experience, Avoidance, Unable to function, Month or more of
symptoms, and Arousal increased
32. Acute Stress Disorder
• Acute stress disorder is similar to that of PTSD with
respect to symptom occurrence
• ASD is limited to one month following the traumatic
event
• Youth’s subjective report of symptoms are more
focused on the trauma than the re-experience of it
• When youth discuss the traumatic event, they will
often describe having experienced it in a dissociative
manner (eg youth may describe watching the event
happen to themselves, lacking an emotional
response to the event, or have incomplete
recollection of the event)
33. Panic Disorder
• Panic attack is the sudden emergence of intense fear
and associated symptoms peaking within ten
minutes: palpitations, shortness of breath,
paresthesias, dizziness, sweatiness, shaking and the
perception of choking
• Youth could be considered to have a panic disorder
when panic attacks are repetitive and happen with
or without stimuli
• They also worry about having future panic attacks
and make behaviour changes in attempts to avoid
them
• Onset of panic disorder usually occurs in late
adolescence
34. Social Phobia
• Marked distress and fear of social situations
• Pattern of avoidance and anticipatory anxiety of
these situations
• Younger children might not be able to recognize
anxiety-provoking situations; thus, their anxiety may
be expressed in tantrums or crying spells
• Older children and adolescents might have somatic
symptoms such as nausea, abdominal pain or
headaches related to social situations
• For youth presenting to ED, often the problem is
refusing to attend school or gatherings
35. Disruptive Behavioural Disorders and
Substance Abuse
• ADHD, ODD, Conduct D/O
• Substance Abuse
– WILD: Work, school and home failure, Interpersonal or
social consequences, Legal problems, and Dangerous use
• Substance Dependence
– ADDICTeD: Activities are given up or reduced,
Dependence - physical – Tolerance, Dependence - physical
– Withdrawal, Intrapersonal (internal) consequences:
physical or psychological, Can’t cut down use or control
use, Time-consuming, Duration of use is greater than
intended
36. Acute Medical Assessment for the
Mental Health Patient
• Overdose
• Self mutilation
• Intoxication
• Serotonin Syndrome
• Acute EPS
• Neuroleptic malignant syndrome (NMS)
• Serious adverse drug events
• Lithium toxicity
• Traumatic Brain Injury
• Delirium
37. Summary
• Clinical assessment of child and adolescent
psychiatric emergencies requires systematic, yet
concise and prompt evaluation of acute psychiatric
illness, acute mental health problems, and the acute
medical complications
• Assessment and treatment of acute psychiatric
emergencies in children and adolescents in the ED
require a team approach consisting ideally of a child
psychiatrist, crisis worker/ social worker, nursing
staff, and ED physician
38. Summary- continued
• Once the medical complications are addressed, then the next
step is to determine the safety risk, specifically the risk of
harm to self and/or others. This risk is determined by a
number of factors in a variety of presentations, spanning from
a youth with acute psychiatric illness (ie psychosis) to a youth
who presents with cutting behaviours who has emotional
dysregulation and parent-child relational conflict
• The primary goal of an urgent psychiatric assessment in the
ED is to determine the safety risk of the patient, and if there
is imminent risk of harm to self and/or others due to
psychiatric illness and/or acute mental health problems, then
admission to a psychiatric inpatient unit is warranted, and at
times this is done against the will of the patient and/or their
family, to ensure the safety of the mental health patient
39. To Learn More
Carandang CG, Gray C, Marval H, MacPhee S
(in press) “Clinical Assessment of Child and
Adolescent Psychiatric Emergencies.” IACAPAP
Textbook of Child and Adolescent Mental
Health, Editor Joseph Rey