• Military medicine · Feb 2024

    Increasing Mental Health Screening in Pediatric Subspecialty Clinics: An Improvement Project at Brooke Army Medical Center.

    • Victoria Cocozza, Lydia Sickbert, Timothy Kenny, Dimas Espinola, Sebastian Welsh, Zachary Turner, and Kevin Pieroni.
    • Pediatric Residency Program, Brooke Army Medical Center, Fort Sam Houston, TX 78234, USA.
    • Mil Med. 2024 Feb 27; 189 (3-4): e789e794e789-e794.

    IntroductionMental health screening allows for the early identification of patients at risk of mental health disorders such as anxiety and depression. The Defense Health Administration Procedures Manual 6025.01 established that patients older than 12 years of age should receive annual mental health screening assessing suicidality risk with a standardized screening tool.Materials And MethodsTo improve rates of mental health screening in this at-risk population, an A3 Lean approach to quality improvement was undertaken in the Pediatric Subspecialty Clinics at Brooke Army Medical Center.ResultsBaseline data of Patient Health Questionnaire-9 or General Anxiety Disorder-7 screening from pediatric pulmonology and cardiology clinics were 6.3%. Plan-Do-Study-Act quality improvement methods evaluated possible interventions to improve screening. A standard operating procedure (SOP) outlining scoring and interpretation recommendations was distributed in pediatric pulmonology and cardiology clinics. Using the Armed Forces Health Longitudinal Technology Application, a post-implementation chart review was conducted for 8 weeks. With the initiation of Military Health System Genesis, the SOP was adjusted and a root cause analysis was performed. The pediatric gastroenterology clinic cares for patients presenting with functional abdominal pain; therefore, the clinic was added to the second iteration to determine if anxiety or depression may play a role. Providers were educated on documentation and coding. A second post-implementation chart review was conducted for 8 weeks. Over two iterations, mental health screening of new adolescent patients in pediatric subspecialty clinics increased by 794% from baseline. Our providers screened 50% of the adolescent patients.ConclusionsWith increased surveillance of an at-risk population, more adolescents will receive the standard of care. With refinement of the SOP and expansion to other subspecialties, this project has the potential to expand within Brooke Army Medical Center and other clinics in the Defense Health Administration.© The Association of Military Surgeons of the United States 2023. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.

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