Culture Bound
Efforts to Meet the Mental Health Needs of Children
and Adolescents
As child and adolescent psychiatric-mental health nurses, we
are quite aware of the shortage of treatment beds, treatment
facilities, and appropriately trained mental health profession-
als to provide mental health services to children and adoles-
cents. As a consequence, many of our most vulnerable
individuals are not receiving early screening, a correct diag-
nosis, referral, or treatment. By the time most children and
adolescents come to the attention of mental healthcare
providers, their behavioral or psychiatric needs have been
woefully neglected. In essence, our current system of treat-
ment responds well to the “squeaky wheel” phenomenon. If
a youngster repeatedly gets into trouble at school or in
the community, or escalates to the point that he/she is
dangerous to self or others, the system reflexively goes into
crisis mode and responds by attempting to address the imme-
diate presenting needs. Unfortunately, at this point the level of
psychiatric or behavioral need may be so complex and exten-
sive that a successful treatment outcome is jeopardized.
Prevention and early intervention must become the gold
standard rather than the selective, inconsistent, and haphaz-
ard approach to child mental health that currently exists.
Advocates for the health and mental health of children are
looking at new models that will reach more children earlier
and in multiple nontraditional settings. Pediatricians, child
and adolescent psychiatrists, and advanced practice nurses in
child and adolescent mental health and pediatrics are all
responding to the significant mental health needs of our spe-
cialty population. For example, the American Academy of
Pediatrics (AAP) developed a policy statement on compe-
tency guidelines that strongly recommended that healthcare
providers in primary care screen all children and adolescents
for behavioral and psychiatric difficulties (AAP, 2009). In
describing the need to intervene in primary care, they cited
the discrepancy between the large number of children with
mental health needs and the relatively low number who access
and receive services; the disproportionate impact of unmet
mental health needs on minority populations; the shortage of
treatment specialty providers; the fact that most psychiatric
disorders have their origin in childhood or adolescence; and
that anxiety and depression are frequent comorbid presenta-
tions with medical illnesses in youth. In their position paper,
AAP stipulated that in order for pediatricians to be compe-
tent in providing mental health and substance abuse services
in their practice, changes must be made to their residency
training. They also identified that their continuing education
offerings should include content on knowledge and skills in
caring for children who present with anxiety, depression, and
substance use; skills in recognizing and managing psychiatric
emergencies; skills in recognizing behavioral and mental
health risk factors; and skills in promoting healthy lifestyles.
Lastly, they identified that pediatric healthcare providers
should commit to lifelong learning about mental health con-
cepts and engage in collaborative relationships with mental
health specialists in order to better meet the needs of children
and adolescents in their own practice.
Child and adolescent psychiatrists have endorsed the view
of pediatricians that primary care is a natural place to screen
all children and adolescents for risk of mental health or
behavioral concerns (early case finding). More recently, their
specialty organization, the American Academy of Child and
Adolescent Psychiatry (AACAP), endorsed a position paper
on Building Collaborative Mental Health Care Partnerships
in Pediatric Primary Care. That document was written in
response to the shortage of trained mental healthcare provid-
ers and the acknowledgment that other pediatric medical
professionals are already assessing and treating youth with
mental and behavioral health disorders. The AACAP “sup-
ports policies that promote mental health recovery as integral
to overall health” (AACAP, 2010, p. 3). The AACAP Council
further stated that “safe and effective mental and physical
health care requires collaboration and communication
between child and adolescent psychiatrists and other medical
professionals” (p. 3).
Early in 2012, a new textbook will be available titled Child
and Adolescent Behavioral Health: A Resource for Advanced
Practice Psychiatric and Primary Care Practitioners in
Nursing. Editors and contributing authors for the text are I,
Edilma Yearwood, Geraldine Pearson, and Jamesetta
Newland (Yearwood, Pearson, & Newland, 2012). The book,
which is published by Wiley-Blackwell, is written collabora-
tively by advanced practice pediatric or family nurses and
child and adolescent psychiatric-mental health practitio-
ners. The editors wanted to produce a document that would
strongly advocate for mental health screening of all children
and adolescents in primary care. Secondly, we hope the text
supports collaboration in nursing between two specialties,
both of whom provide treatment to children. Thirdly, we
wanted to begin the conversation as to which child and ado-
lescent clinical presentations could be managed in doi: 10.1111/j.1744-6171.2011.00314.x
Journal of Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Nursing ISSN 1073-6077
51 Journal of Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Nursing 25 (2012) 51–52 © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.