11 - CAHMS Flashcards
What are the different categories of mental disorders within CAHMS?
- Behavioural
- Neurodevelopmental
- Emotional
Can be overlap between them
What is the aetiology of Child Mental Health Disorders?
- Biological: genetic, neurodevelopment, biochemical
- Psychological/Development: attachment, learning, cognitive
- Social: acute and chronic stressors, protective factors, schooling, culture
What are some difficulties with doing a mental state examination on a child?
- Age
- Cognitive ability
- Emotional understanding
- Communication problems
- Willingness to engage
- What they can say with parents present
- Need to see them engaging with parents but may be difficult to engage parents
What are some emotional disorders of childhood and adolescence?
How may GAD present in children and how prevalent is it?
Prevalence increases with age and can continue into adulthood and become OCD
Somatic symptoms common in children
More common if parent has anxiety
How may separation anxiety present in children?
- Anxiety manifest upon separation (or threat of separation) from attachment figures (usually parent, particularly mother)
- Somatic manifestations
- Nightmares with separation themes
- School refusal
What is school refusal and how is it dealt with?
Severe difficulty in attending school, often amounting to prolonged absence with parental knowledge, due to emotional upset and excessive fearfulness, and somatic complaints.
Features: Emotional overprotection, high social class, neurotic parents
Treatment: Liaise with head teacher, parents, and an educational psychologist. Escort by an education welfare officer aids prompt return. Other methods: educational-support therapy, CBT, and parent-teacher interventions
How is GAD treated in children?
- Assess and address environmental triggers: family relationships, friendships, bullies, school pressures, alcohol and drug use
- Mild anxiety: watchful waiting and advice about self-help strategies (e.g. meditation), diet, exercise
- Moderate to severe anxiety can be referred to CAMHS services for: -Counselling, CBT, Fluoxetine
How is OCD managed in children?
- Referral to CAMHS
- Patient and carer education
- CBT
- SSRIs medications (under the guidance of a CAMHS specialist)
What are the 3 key signs of PTSD?
- Hyperarousal e.g poor sleep, irritability, poor concentration
- Reliving e.g acting out with toys
- Avoidance
What is the prevalence of depression in CAHMS and how does it present differently to in adults?
3% of children, 5.6% of adolescents
Features less constant and more subtle:
- •** Mood changes: grumpy or irritable rather than sad. *NOT PERVASIVE
- *•** Thought changes: loss of self-esteem, confidence, and concentration
- *•** Physical changes: reduced energy, sleep, appetite; self-harming behaviour
Impairment of functioning: missing school and social life.
What are some important psychosocial contributions to childhood depression?
- Potential triggers (e.g. loss of a family member)
- Home environment
- Family relationships
- Relationship with friends
- Sexual relationships
- School situations and pressures
- Bullying
- Drugs and alcohol
- History of self harm
- Thoughts of self harm or suicide
- Family history
- Parental depression
- Parental drug and alcohol use
- History of abuse or neglect
What is the biggest concern with childhood depression?
Self Harm
Always ask the patient directly about alcohol and drug use, bullying, abuse, and suicidal thoughts
How is depression in childhood managed?
Mild depression** **or low mood associated with a single negative event (e.g. loss of a family member):
Watchful waiting and advice about healthy habits, such as healthy diet, exercise and avoiding alcohol and cannabis. Follow up within 2 weeks
Moderate to severe depression: Refer to CAMHS
- Full assessment to establish a diagnosis
- First Line: CBT, non-directive supportive therapy, IPT and family therapy
- Second Line: medication
- If do not respond to above then intense psychlogical therapy
- Admission if high risk of self harm, suicide, self-neglect or immediate safeguarding issue
How may depression present in young boys?
Anger
Not pervasive in all areas of life like in adults
What is first and second line antidepressants in CAHMS?
First Line: Fluoxetine
Second Line: Sertraline and Citalopram
Need to be kept on it for 6 months after remission
What tool can you use to monitor depression in CAHMS?
Mood and Feelings Questionnaire (MFQ)
What is the prognosis with depression in CAHMS?
Recovery: 10% at 3 months, 50% at 1 year, and 80% at 2 years
Even after recovery 3% risk of completed suicide over next 10 years
Follow-up monitoring is essential
Psychotic symptoms are common in children as they are part of neurodevelopment. When are they classed as having psychosis and how do you assess this?
Psychotic symptoms for over 4 weeks
Always take collateral history
Important as 20% of schizophrenia starts before the age of 20
What are some causes of psychosis in children?
- Substance abuse
- Psychosis (schizophrenia)
- Anxiety
- Depression
- Hypomania
- Head injury
- Epileptic aura
- SLE
- Anti-NMDA receptor antibody encephalitis
- Alice-in-Wonderland syndrome