Psychosocial Assessment and Interviewing


It is estimated that 20% of children living in the United States experience a mental illness in a given year, at a cost of almost $14 billion. In children, mental illness is more prevalent than leukemia, diabetes, and AIDS combined; more money is spent on mental disorders than on any other childhood illness, including asthma, trauma, and infectious diseases. Although nearly 1 in 5 youths suffers from a psychiatric disorder, 75–85% do not receive specialty mental health services. Those who do, primarily receive services in nonspecialty sectors (primary care, schools, child welfare, juvenile justice), where mental health expertise may be limited. Untreated or inadequately treated psychiatric disorders persist over decades, become increasingly intractable to treatment, impair adherence to medical treatment regimens, and incur progressively greater social, educational, and economic consequences over time.

Aims of Assessment

A psychosocial assessment in the pediatric setting should determine whether there are signs and symptoms of cognitive, developmental, emotional, behavioral, or social difficulties and characterize these signs and symptoms sufficiently to determine their appropriate management. The focus of the assessment varies with the nature of the presenting problem and the clinical setting. Under emergency circumstances, the focus may be limited to an assessment of “dangerousness to self or others” for the purpose of determining the safest level of care. In routine circumstances (well-child visits), the focus may be broader, involving a screen for symptoms and functional impairment in the major psychosocial domains. The challenge for the pediatric practitioner will be to determine as accurately as possible whether the presenting signs and symptoms are likely to meet criteria for a psychiatric disorder and whether the severity and complexity of the disorder suggest referral to a mental health specialist or management in the pediatric setting.

Presenting Problems

Infants may come to clinical attention because of problems with eating and/or sleep regulation, concerns about failure to gain weight and length, poor social responsiveness, limited vocalization, apathy or disinterest, and response to strangers that is excessively fearful or overly familiar. Psychiatric disorders most commonly diagnosed during this period are rumination and reactive attachment disorders.

Toddlers are assessed for concerns about sleep problems, language delay, motor hyperactivity, extreme misbehavior, extreme shyness, inflexible adherence to routines, difficulty separating from parents, struggles over toilet training, dietary issues, and testing limits. Developmental delays and more subtle physiologic, sensory, and motor processing problems can be presented as concerns. Problems with “goodness of fit” between the child's temperament and the parents' expectations can create relationship difficulties that also require assessment (see Chapter 19 ). Psychiatric disorders most commonly diagnosed during this period are autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and reactive attachment disorders.

Presenting problems in preschoolers include elimination difficulties, sibling jealousy, lack of friends, self-destructive impulsiveness, multiple fears, nightmares, refusal to follow directions, somatization, speech that is difficult to understand, and temper tantrums. Psychiatric disorders most commonly diagnosed in this period are ASD communication, oppositional, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), anxiety (separation, selective mutism), reactive attachment, gender dysphoria, and sleep disorders.

Older children are brought to clinical attention because of concerns about angry or sad mood, bedwetting, overactivity, impulsiveness, distractibility, learning problems, arguing, defiance, nightmares, school refusal, bullying or being bullied, worries and fears, somatization, communication problems, tics, and withdrawal or isolation. Psychiatric disorders most commonly diagnosed during this period are ADHD, oppositional, anxiety (generalized, phobias), elimination, somatic symptom, specific learning, and tic disorders.

Adolescents are assessed for concerns about the family situation, experimentation with sexuality and drugs, delinquency and gang involvement, friendship patterns, issues of independence, identity formation, self-esteem, and morality. Psychiatric disorders most often diagnosed during this period are anxiety (panic, social anxiety), depressive, bipolar, psychotic, obsessive-compulsive, impulse control, conduct, substance-related, and eating disorders.

General Principles of the Psychosocial Interview

Psychosocial interviewing in the context of a routine pediatric visit requires adequate time and privacy. The purpose of this line of inquiry should be explained to the child and parents (“to make sure things are going OK at home, at school, and with friends”), along with the limits of confidentiality . Thereafter, the first goal of the interview is to build rapport with both the child and the parents (see Chapters 17 and 34 for further discussion of strategies for engaging families).

With the parents, this rapport is grounded in respect for the parents' knowledge of their child, their role as the central influence in their child's life, and their desire to make a better life for their child. Parents often feel anxious or guilty because they believe that problems in a child imply that their parenting skills are inadequate. Parents' experiences of their own childhood influence the meaning a parent places on a child's feelings and behavior. A good working alliance allows mutual discovery of the past as it is active in the present and permits potential distortions to be modified more readily. Developmentally appropriate overtures can facilitate rapport with the child. Examples include playing peek-a-boo with an infant, racing toy cars with a preschooler, commenting on sports with a child who is wearing a baseball cap, and discussing music with a teenager who is wearing a rock band T-shirt.

After an overture with the child, it is helpful to begin with family-centered interviewing, in which the parent is invited to present any psychosocial concerns (learning, feelings, behavior, peer relationships) about the child. With adolescent patients, it is important to conduct a separate interview to give the adolescent an opportunity to confirm or refute the parent's presentation and to present the problem from his or her perspective. Following the family's undirected presentation of the primary problem, it is important to shift to direct questioning to clarify the duration, frequency, and severity of symptoms, associated distress or functional impairment, and the developmental and environmental context in which the symptoms occur.

Because of the high degree of comorbidity of psychosocial problems in children, after eliciting the presenting problem, the pediatric practitioner should then briefly screen for problems in all the major developmentally appropriate categories of cognitive, developmental, emotional, behavioral, and social disturbance, including problems with mood, anxiety, attention, behavior, thinking and perception, substance use, social relatedness, eating, elimination, development, language, and learning. This can be preceded by a transition statement such as, “Now I'd like to ask about some other issues that I ask all parents and kids about.”

A useful guide for this area of inquiry is provided by the 11 Action Signs ( Table 32.1 ), designed to give frontline clinicians the tools needed to recognize early symptoms of mental disorders. Functional impairment can be assessed by inquiring about symptoms and function in the major life domains, including home and family, school, peers, and community. These domains are included in the HEADSS (Home, Education, Activities, Drugs, Sexuality, Suicide/Depression) Interview Guide, often used in the screening of adolescents ( Table 32.2 ).

Table 32.1
From The Action Signs Project, Center for the Advancement of Children's Mental Health at Columbia University.
Mental Health Action Signs

  • Feeling very sad or withdrawn for more than 2 weeks

  • Seriously trying to harm or kill yourself, or making plans to do so

  • Sudden overwhelming fear for no reason, sometimes with a racing heart or fast breathing

  • Involvement in many fights, using a weapon, or wanting to badly hurt others

  • Severe out-of-control behavior that can hurt yourself or others

  • Not eating, throwing up, or using laxatives to make yourself lose weight

  • Intense worries or fears that get in the way of your daily activities

  • Extreme difficulty in concentrating or staying still that puts you in physical danger or causes school failure

  • Repeated use of drugs or alcohol

  • Severe mood swings that cause problems in relationships

  • Drastic changes in your behavior or personality

Table 32.2
From Cohen E, MacKenzie RG, Yates GL: HEADSS, a psychosocial risk assessment instrument: implications for designing effective intervention programs for runaway youth, J Adolesc Health 12:539–544, 1991.
HEADSS *

* HEADSS, Home, Education, Activities, Drugs, Sexuality, Suicide/Depression.

Screening Interview for Taking a Rapid Psychosocial History

Parent Interview

Home

  • How well does the family get along with each other?

Education

  • How well does your child do in school?

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