Background and objectivesPatients with a primary mental health condition account for nearly 10% of pediatric hospitalizations nationally, but little is known about the quality of care provided for them in hospital settings. Our objective was to develop and test medical record-based measures used to assess quality of pediatric mental health care in the emergency department (ED) and inpatient settings.MethodsWe drafted an evidence-based set of pediatric mental health care quality measures for the ED and inpatient settings. We used the modified Delphi method to prioritize measures; 2 ED and 6 inpatient measures were operationalized and field-tested in 2 community and 3 children's hospitals. Eligible patients were 5 to 19 years old and diagnose...
Demonstrations of high-quality services have surpassed cost control as the primary task of health ca...
Research suggests that visits to the Emergency Department (ED) for psychiatric purposes among youth ...
ObjectiveDifferences in the quality of emergency department (ED) care are often attributed to noncli...
ObjectiveTo develop and test a new quality measure assessing timeliness of follow-up mental health c...
Objective: We examine psychiatric and pediatric clinical management of pediatric mental health in th...
ObjectiveTo examine trends in mental health (MH) visits to pediatric emergency departments (EDs) and...
Pediatric patients (17 years and younger) in mental health crisis are arriving in the emergency depa...
Objectives:It is aimed to present pediatric psychiatry consultations requested from children and ado...
Objective: To describe a cohort of children presenting to a paediatric emergency department with men...
ObjectivesPediatric mental illness poses a significant burden with an overall prevalence of approxim...
Abstract Background Recognition of mental illness in the pediatric emergency department (PED) follow...
Objectives:The majority of US children do not have access to an emergency department (ED) with a ped...
Objective: To describe the patterns of referral and use of resources for patients with psychiatric-r...
Objective: From 2007 to 2010, inpatient admissions increased for pediatric patients suffering from m...
ObjectiveThis study aimed to examine changes in child emergency department (ED) discharges and hospi...
Demonstrations of high-quality services have surpassed cost control as the primary task of health ca...
Research suggests that visits to the Emergency Department (ED) for psychiatric purposes among youth ...
ObjectiveDifferences in the quality of emergency department (ED) care are often attributed to noncli...
ObjectiveTo develop and test a new quality measure assessing timeliness of follow-up mental health c...
Objective: We examine psychiatric and pediatric clinical management of pediatric mental health in th...
ObjectiveTo examine trends in mental health (MH) visits to pediatric emergency departments (EDs) and...
Pediatric patients (17 years and younger) in mental health crisis are arriving in the emergency depa...
Objectives:It is aimed to present pediatric psychiatry consultations requested from children and ado...
Objective: To describe a cohort of children presenting to a paediatric emergency department with men...
ObjectivesPediatric mental illness poses a significant burden with an overall prevalence of approxim...
Abstract Background Recognition of mental illness in the pediatric emergency department (PED) follow...
Objectives:The majority of US children do not have access to an emergency department (ED) with a ped...
Objective: To describe the patterns of referral and use of resources for patients with psychiatric-r...
Objective: From 2007 to 2010, inpatient admissions increased for pediatric patients suffering from m...
ObjectiveThis study aimed to examine changes in child emergency department (ED) discharges and hospi...
Demonstrations of high-quality services have surpassed cost control as the primary task of health ca...
Research suggests that visits to the Emergency Department (ED) for psychiatric purposes among youth ...
ObjectiveDifferences in the quality of emergency department (ED) care are often attributed to noncli...