A pediatric practice and a counseling center in Palm Beach County are teaming up to make sure their patients are physically and mentally healthy. That's especially important now, as the pandemic has worsened stress and anxiety for many children.
鈥淎s mental health professionals, we can鈥檛 do it all," said Ren茅e Layman, CEO and president of the Center for Child Counseling in Palm Beach Gardens. 鈥淲e also know that we don鈥檛 have to wait for a child to fall apart and have a mental health diagnosis before we do something."
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According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, there's been a in children showing up at emergency rooms because of a mental health crisis. Layman says integrating mental health services into pediatrics, schools and childcare centers is an 鈥渆arly intervention strategy that is more important than ever.鈥
Layman says due to a critical staffing shortage across health care and mental health services, she has partnered with Palm Beach County Youth Services to have co-located behavioral health professionals who can handle early prevention needs and provide necessary specializations.
She is also working with Palm Beach Pediatrics on a new strategy designed to get kids the help they need before a mental health issue becomes an emergency.
Dr. Shannon Fox-Levine is president of Palm Beach Pediatrics and said there were issues brewing before the pandemic shutdown.
鈥淭he epidemic was before the pandemic. We had already been seeing a lot of anxiety and depression, and being able to try to manage that has been overwhelming for a pediatric practice,鈥 Fox-Levine said.
Fox-Levine said the new care coordination strategy can help fill an information gap for patient care situations that are beyond her expertise.
鈥淩ecently, I [had] a teenager who had been struggling with diagnosable anxiety and depression through the pandemic. It presented mostly symptomatic through the pandemic, but even looking back, he had probably struggled,鈥 said Fox-Levine. 鈥淎nd as we developed a relationship, he [revealed] to me that he is struggling with his gender identity. And that's where we struggle as a primary care medical facility is, 'How do we get this person with this particular insurance to someone who we think is going to get high quality care to help him get through something that he's struggling with?鈥
During the pandemic, Fox-Levine said she has seen more of her patients experiencing stress, anxiety or depression.
鈥淲e actually have about a 10 percent rate right now of diagnoses of anxiety and depression amongst our 20,000 patients, so that's 2,000 kids that we're managing right now. Some of them were before the pandemic,鈥 said Fox-Levine. 鈥淭here are definitely those kids that have been diagnosed in this past year and a half.鈥
She said the 10% doesn鈥檛 even include ADHD patients.
鈥淲hile the pandemic may have increased numbers transiently last year, I do not believe it to be much higher, currently, than 2 years ago with everyone returning to school,鈥 Fox-Levine said.
Incorporating mental health care into her patients' regular treatment allows health professionals to add nuance to the numbers. She said many of the children during the pandemic who were initially diagnosed with anxiety or depression turned out to be mere stress-related issues in response to the pandemic environment.
鈥淎nd with just the support that we've been able to give them, whether it be with counseling and/or medication, a lot of them have improved,鈥 she said.鈥
Fox-Levine partnered with Ren茅e Layman because her primary care facility had difficulty credentialing their own licensed mental health counselors.
鈥淲e have a psychologist, we have a psychiatric nurse practitioner in our practice. But getting the insurance plans to allow us to credential the mental health professionals has been a major barrier," Fox-Levine said.
She called the situation 鈥渦rgent鈥 and that she was unwilling to wait for insurance plans to meet the demands and Layman had the resources at their fingertips.
Some of her patients will be able to access the newly available mental health services within the next few weeks.
鈥淪o even if they themselves don't have that therapist to address my patient with gender [identity] needs, they have somebody that they trust that they can send them to,鈥 said Fox-Levine. 鈥淎nd so we joined Ren茅e in trying to figure out how we can kind of help one another help the children.鈥