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All things to all people: what referrers want from their child and adolescent mental health service

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Rob Potter
Affiliation:
Brynffynnon Child and Family Clinic, Merthyr Road, Pontypridd CF37 4DD (Tel: 01443 480540, Fax: 01443 480535)
Kate Langley
Affiliation:
Department of Psychological Medicine, University of Wales College of Medicine, Cardiff
Divya Sakhuja
Affiliation:
Brynffynnon Child and Family Clinic, Pontypridd
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Abstract

Aims and Method

This study aimed to assess how referrers to specialist child and adolescent mental health services (CAMHS) wanted priorities to be determined. Postal questionnaires were sent to practitioners referring to the service in the Bridgend district.

Results

Nearly three-quarters of the questionnaires were returned (n=184). There was wide variation between professional groups in the priority attributed to different presenting problems, their modification by ‘contextual factors' and acceptable waiting times for the service. Mental disorder, self-harm, child abuse and complex cases require greatest priority.

Clinical Implications

Needs of referrers must be considered when deciding priorities for specialist CAMHS, however diverse these appear. If youth mental health needs are to be addressed, better communication between services, and clearer definition of the role of specialist CAMHS is imperative.

Type
Original papers
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © 2005. The Royal College of Psychiatrists

In recent years several influential documents have stated that meeting the mental health needs of children and young people is a task only possible by all children’s services working together (NHS Health Advisory Service, 1995; National Assembly for Wales, 1999). The epidemiological data make it clear that the task cannot be left to specialist services alone (Reference Ford, Goodman and MeltzerFord et al, 2003). The specialist National Health Service (NHS) child and adolescent mental health service (CAMHS) in Bridgend has been struggling – and failing – to keep pace with the volume of referrals to the service. Despite no additional resources being allocated to the team, the volume of clinical work has increased. A primary mental health team has not been developed, as has occurred elsewhere. Therefore, the waiting list has progressively grown. In routine cases children now have to wait for sometimes over a year before an assessment is offered. The survey reported here grew out of the increasing dialogue between the specialist CAMHS and the commissioners regarding core business and prioritisation. Accepting that the specialist CAMHS is a limited resource, this study investigates how different referring agencies would have us prioritise our work.

Method

The study was a questionnaire survey. Referrers were identified using the clinic database. The questionnaire was sent to all practitioners from child-care professional groups that contributed referrals over the past 3 years. For example, if a referral had been received from a health visitor, all health visitors in the district were contacted to complete the questionnaire. The only exception to this was that the police, who refer children for post-abuse work, were not contacted. If no reply was received within 1 month, a personally addressed letter was written stating the importance of receiving the reply. The following professional groups were included in the study:

  1. (a) general practitioners;

  2. (b) community paediatricians and hospital consultant paediatricians;

  3. (c) nurses, including health visitors, Surestart nurses, and young offender team and looked-after children health workers;

  4. (d) educational welfare officers;

  5. (e) educational psychologists;

  6. (f) special educational needs coordinators and head teachers from all the schools in the district;

  7. (g) child care social workers, including the managers of family unit homes.

The questionnaire presented a list of potential problems for which the referrer was asked to give a priority rating between 0 and 5 (0, not appropriate for specialist CAMHS; 1, lowest priority; 5, highest priority). Second, the referrer was asked to rate the extent to which a number of contextual factors would affect how priority should be attributed to the case (similarly rated 0 to 5). ‘Contextual factors’ included factors, other than the primary presenting problem, that might increase case complexity or otherwise influence the level of perceived priority. Third, the questionnaire asked what waiting time (time between referral and being seen) was considered acceptable for routine cases. Fourth, an open question asked for ‘any other comment’.

All data collected were analysed using the Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (SPSS, 1999). Initially the data were ranked with respect to priority score, to enable comparisons between respondents regardless of possible ‘halo’ effects for specific individuals. The data were first analysed as a whole, then split into ‘professional groups’. Comparisons between these groups were performed using Kruskal-Wallis analysis. Analyses of raw scores were also compared between professional groups using one-way analyses of variance (ANOVAs).

Results

Of the 252 child-care professionals invited to participate, 73% completed the questionnaire (n=184). The reply rate for each professional group was: general practitioners 63% (n=44); paediatricians/community child health doctors 80% (n=8); health visitors 73% (n=24); Sure-start nurses 100% (n=7); youth offending team health worker 100% (n=1); educational psychologists 100% (n=9); educational welfare officers 82% (n=9); head teachers and special educational needs coordinators 75% (n=52) and child-care social workers 69% (n=29). One questionnaire was returned with the front sheet removed so that the professional group was unidentifiable.

Table 1 shows the rank and the mean priority score attributed to each individual presenting problem. There was a wide variation in how much priority should be given to each presenting problem. However, when the highest priorities only were ranked there was considerable agreement between the different professional groups (Table 2).

Table 1. Rank and mean priority scores for each presenting problem

Presenting problem Rank 1 Score 2 Mean (s.d.)
Children who have been sexually abused 1 ** 4.79 (0.60)*
Self-harm 2 4.77 (0.57)
Suspected psychosis 3 ** 4.54 (0.97) **
Children who have been emotionally abused 4 *** 4.27 (0.80) ***
Anorexia nervosa 5* 4.26 (1.00)*
Depression 6 4.22 (0.86)
Bulimia nervosa 7* 4.20 (1.01)*
Families in which child abuse is suspected 8 4.17 (1.31)
Obsessive-compulsive disorder 9* 3.90 (0.90)*
Violence towards others 10 ** 3.63 (1.06) **
Possible ADHD/hyperkinetic disorder 11 3.57 (1.04)
Autistic spectrum disorder 12 3.53 (1.25)
Children whose family are unable to cope with their behaviour 13 *** 3.45 (1.08) ***
Children from families with multiple difficulties 14 *** 3.27 (1.02) ***
Poor parenting in the context of mental illness/drug misuse 14 *** 3.27 (1.30) ***
Children with behaviour problems 16 ** 3.04 (1.08) **
Children in local authority care 17* 2.92 (1.39)
Teenagers who misuse drugs 18* 2.88 (1.59)
Child upset following bereavement 18 2.88 (1.22)
Pre-school children with behaviour problems 20 *** 2.67 (1.39) ***
Relationship difficulties within the family 21* 2.66 (0.93)
Teenagers who use drugs 22 2.55 (1.56)
Child with chronic physical ill health 23 2.52 (1.41)
Child upset following parental separation 24 2.46 (1.15)
Soiling 25 2.21 (1.30)
Children with learning difficulties 26 *** 2.13 (1.36) ***
Teenagers who have committed a criminal offence 27 2.11 (1.37)*
Peer relationship problems 28 2.00 (1.10)
Dyspraxia (developmental coordination disorder) 29 *** 1.89 (1.33) ***
Bedwetting 30 1.82 (1.22)
Temper tantrums 31* 1.81 (1.18)*
Dyslexia 32 *** 1.77 (1.36) ***
School suspension 33* 1.47 (1.39)*
Truanting 34 1.36 (1.31)
Poor school attendance 35 1.28 (1.23)
Academic problems 36 1.10 (1.12)

ADHD, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder.

1. Measure of the difference between professional groups (Kruskal—Wallis test).

2. Analysis of variance.

* P<0.05, ** P<0.01, *** P<0.001.

Table 2. Top three priority problems by professional group

Rank All referrers GPs Paediatricians Health visitors Educational psychologists Educational welfare officers Schools Social workers
1 CSA Ps SH 1 CSA SH 1 SH CSA SH
2 SH CSA Ps 1 SH Ps 1 CSA SH CSA
3 Ps SH AN AN CSA AN and BN 1 EA Ps

AN, anorexia nervosa; BN, bulimia nervosa; CSA, child sexual abuse; EA, emotional abuse; GPs, general practitioners; Ps, suspected psychosis; SH, self-harm.

1. Equal ranking.

When problems were sorted into broad groups (mental disorders, mental health problems and risk factors), there was general agreement that mental disorders should be attributed the highest priority. Risk factors were then considered in more detail and placed into subgroups based on a common theme, such as family factors, school and education, the child’s own behaviour (such as offending or drug use) and child abuse. Some risk factors, most significantly those relating to family functioning, particularly child abuse, were rated more highly than the others. Indeed, child abuse, as a risk factor for mental disorder and mental health problems, was given greater priority than mental disorders in general. There was no problem that the majority of referrers considered inappropriate for specialist CAMHS.

Other contextual factors

When referrers were asked how other considerations would affect how CAMHS should attribute priority, again there were diverse responses (Table 3). However, some factors do greatly alter the priority that problems were given. For example, greater priority should be given when there are multiple problems in the same child or family. Conversely, the availability of other services to deal with a problem, or knowing that the treatment available is not particularly effective, led to a decrease in priority rating.

Table 3. How different contextual factors should affect attribution of priority

Factor considered Rank Factor score Mean (s.d.) Increase or decrease
Multiple problems in the same child 1 4.06 (0.86) +
Multiple difficulties in same family 2 3.79 (1.00) +
Degree of impairment/disability 3 3.60 (1.16) +
Child is ‘in care’ 4 3.11 (1.31) +
Parental distress 5 3.09 (1.09) +
Young age of child 6 2.81 (1.36) +
Other professionals already involved 7 2.59 1 (1.41) See note 1
Parental demands 8 1.79 (1.30) +
Other professionals already involved 9 2.59 1 (1.52) See note 1
Previous poor attendance 10 3.03 (1.52) -
Knowing that treatment is not particularly effective 11 3.76 (1.37) -
Other services available for problem 12 3.97 (1.26) -

1. Referrers were asked specifically whether other professionals being involved already would increase or decrease how they thought priority should be ascribed — a mean of 2.59 was given to both increasing and decreasing the priority, and it was the same professional group and sometimes the same referrer who said this should both increase and decrease the priority.

Waiting times

There was a wide range of waiting times that individual referrers considered acceptable for routine cases (Table 4). This varied from 2 weeks to 12 months, with a wide variation between the different professional groups (ANOVA, F=5.359, d.f.=6, P<0.001). The mean of the acceptable waiting time was 3.58 months.

Table 4. Referrers’ views of acceptable waiting times in routine cases

Professional group Number Time (months) Mean (s.d.)
Schools (head teachers, SENCos) 41 2.88 (2.18)
General practitioners 36 3.35 (1.54)
Social services 25 3.45 (1.90)
Educational psychologists 8 3.66 (1.63)
Nurses 32 3.73 (1.80)
Paediatricians 8 5.06 (1.32)
Educational welfare officers 9 6.22 (0.44)
Overall 159 3.58 (1.92)

SENCo, special educational needs coordinator.

Other comments made by referrers

Open comments made by referrers concentrated on a small number of issues. Most frequently stated was that there needed to be better communication between the CAMHS, referrers and families; clinics should keep families and referrers updated about position on the waiting list and expected duration before an appointment is offered. Many referrers from schools commented on the lack of routine information-sharing by the service. Several comments from different professional groups requested early assessment or a triage service. Some social workers wanted regular consultation sessions, and other practitioners stated the need for increased priority from CAMHS for their own field of work. Several commented that the waiting list was too long and that better resources for the service were necessary.

Discussion

This study shows some agreement between referrers that priority should be given to children who self-harm, children who have mental illness or a mental disorder and children who have been abused. School-related problems such as truancy and poor academic performance should be afforded the lowest priority. Priorities, however, are moderated by other factors relating to the case complexity and severity, and the availability and effectiveness of treatment. Other authors have also investigated how cases should be prioritised (Reference Hodges and WotringHodges & Wotring, 2000; Lyons, 2001; Reference Smith and HadornSmith et al, 2002). However, the extent of the differences demonstrated by this study, both within and between professional groups, had not been anticipated.

Our study shows the high demand for specialist CAMHS. Referrers felt no problem was outside the remit of specialist CAMHS, and average acceptable waiting times for routine cases should be just 3.5 months. Other studies similarly show that demand for CAMHS outstrips resources, leaving a large unmet need (Reference Jones and BhadrinathJones & Bhadrinath, 1998). Referrers want quick, easy access (Reference Weeramanthri and KeaneyWeeramanthri & Keaney, 2000) and better communication, but their understanding of what specialist CAMHS can offer is limited (Reference Markantonakis and MathaiMarkantonakis & Mathai, 1990; Reference DoverDover, 1996). There is a dilemma here for CAMHS providers as our study suggests that many referrers to CAMHS are unable to identify accurately children who are most in need of specialist CAMHS, have psychiatric disorders or for whom treatment or therapy is most effective. Ensuring that assessments are sufficiently comprehensive and rigorous, that post-assessment decisions are evidence based, the triaging of referrals and the introduction of primary mental health workers have elsewhere been initiatives to try to manage this interface more efficiently.

Jones & Bhadrinath (Reference Jones and Bhadrinath1998) noted that in many situations rated as highest priority for specialist CAMHS the main need is to share anxieties rather than anything else, and often other statutory agencies should more appropriately take the lead. This point requires consideration when deciding how to prioritise our workload. The act of referring probably depends on a range of factors (Reference Thompson and PlaceThompson & Place, 1995). Better communication about waiting lists and times, and easier access by referrers (perhaps enabling the sharing of anxieties) could probably be partially addressed from existing resources.

This study addresses an important issue in a practical manner, although not without limitations. Despite a good overall response rate (73%), possibly non-responders have views different from those assessed here. This study has several practical lessons for our own service, and may also have wider application. However, issues relating to the geographical, political and cultural context might limit the generalisability of our findings.

Together We Stand (NHS Health Advisory Service, 1995) highlighted that the mental health needs of children and adolescents are too great, and too important, to be left to one agency alone. However, increasing pressures in our partner children’s agencies have led to increased pressure on specialist CAMHS. Moreover, the reallocation of priorities does not deal with the widening gulf between need and resources available. In Wales, there is growing disquiet about the Welsh Assembly government’s lack of new investment in specialist CAMHS (Children’s Commissioner for Wales, 2004).

This study highlights continuing confusion among some of our partner professionals regarding our role. This may in part stem from our relatively recent evolution out of the child guidance clinics. However, it also stems from our own reticence to go out and clearly define our own core business and priorities – or perhaps from our own confused thinking about what these are.

Footnotes

Declaration of interest

None.

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Figure 0

Table 1. Rank and mean priority scores for each presenting problem

Figure 1

Table 2. Top three priority problems by professional group

Figure 2

Table 3. How different contextual factors should affect attribution of priority

Figure 3

Table 4. Referrers’ views of acceptable waiting times in routine cases

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