Chapter 1. Pediatric Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry
Building a Collaborative Care Bridge to Pediatrics
Professional disciplinea | Roles | Comments |
---|---|---|
Primary team members | ||
Attending physician | Leader of pediatric team Develops diagnostic formulation and treatment interventions Has final medical responsibility for patient | May have long-established relationships with patient and family Oriented toward immediate concerns of patient Potential for ambivalent feelings toward the consultant |
Resident | Frontline clinician involved in assessment and management Has trainee status as participant in residency training program | Short-term clinical rotations with lack of continuity Frequently dealing with time constraints and excessive burden of clinical work Lack of familiarity with role of the consultant |
Nurse | Implements bedside treatment interventions Provides education of patient and family Provides psychosocial support for patient and family Serves as liaison between family and pediatric team | Most frequent, direct contact Closest exposure to physical and emotional distress of the patient Lack of continuity due to shift changes and staffing issues |
Ancillary team members | ||
Physician (including psychiatrist) consultants | Consult to primary team to provide specialty input into patient’s care | May be part of primary team in integrated/colocated care models |
Social worker | Assists with basic social services for family Serves as liaison with outside agencies, including child protective agencies in cases of abuse and neglect Provides psychosocial support for patient and family Provides individual and family therapy Oversees referral to and coordination of outpatient services | May be part of primary team in integrated/colocated care models May have long-established relationship with patient and family Has established relationship with pediatric team Potential for “turf” issues with consultant due to overlap in clinical role |
Case manager | Coordinates resources and services inside facilities, outside facilities, and between care environments Works with patients, families, and other professionals to ensure proper resources and service utilization Serves as liaison with insurance companies for authorization of medical/behavioral health services | Generally, case manager is a nurse, although behavioral health support may fall to a social worker and/or a resource specialist |
Occupational and physical therapists | ||
Provides support with activities of daily living Oversees rehabilitation of patients after surgery and medical illness Provides treatment of feeding difficulties | ||
Nutritionist | Provides nutritional counseling and assists with calculation of caloric needs | Has an important role in treatment of patients with eating disorders and pediatric feeding disorders |
Child life specialist | Helps with coping with challenges of hospitalization, surgery, and disability | |
Coordinates hospital-based play and recreation services | ||
Chaplain | Provides spiritual assessment of patients and families | |
Provides psychosocial and religious support for patient and family |
Source. Adapted from Fritz 1993.
Roles of the Consultant
Assessment and Management
Referral Questions
Classification Framework
Consultant Interventions
Patient and Family Advocacy
Liaison Activities With Pediatric Team
Clinical Innovation and Research
Practice Patterns in Pediatric Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry
Service Composition
Clinical Consultation Services
Service Demand
Service Funding and Challenges
Conclusion
References
Information & Authors
Information
Published In
History
Authors
Metrics & Citations
Metrics
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