Pediatric Mental Health Care Access (PMHCA) programs, sometimes referred to as Child Psychiatry Access Programs (CPAPs), are collaborative programs that provide timely training and support to primary care pediatricians (PCPs) and other clinicians related to detection, assessment, treatment, and referral of mental/behavioral health conditions within their practice. This support is provided as part of a peer-to-peer, telehealth-based consultation model. Pediatricians and other clinicians can connect with off-site child/adolescent mental/behavioral health professionals by phone, video call or email/web-based consultation.  

The following strategies were implemented by PMHCA programs across the United States to support PCP and other pediatric clinicians in providing mental/behavioral health services in their practices. Many PMHCA programs noted similar outcomes, including the following: 

  • Improvements in patient care. 
  • High pediatric clinician and family/caregiver satisfaction with PMHCA program consultations.
  • Improvements in access to care, care coordination, communication between clinicians and families/caregivers, and similar health outcomes to in-person care.   

If a PMHCA program exists in your community or state, consider working with your PMHCA program to implement these strategies to strengthen or enhance mental/behavioral health services in your community. Visit the National Network of Child Psychiatry Access Programs for a list of states that currently have PMHCA programs/CPAPs, regardless of funding source.

 

Promising Practice Spotlight:

One PMHCA, which had clinics throughout a rural and frontier geographic region, made appointments more available to patients without consistent internet access by utilizing site coordinators located at the clinics. The program employs telemedicine coordinators who travel across the clinics to assist before, during and after the telehealth appointment. The program also uses a hub and spoke model with providers with expertise in behavioral health centrally and co-located in clinics to increase availability of care to rural communities. Rural health care workers also had access to monthly resilience huddles to promote resiliency among staff.

The strategies outlined in this promising practice spotlight were provided by KSKidsMAP. For additional details, please see below.

Last Updated

03/02/2022

Source

American Academy of Pediatrics