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Where does Child Psychiatry fit into paediatric practice? UCT Paediatric Refresher Course February 2010 Dr Rene Nassen Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Dept of Psychiatry Stellenbosch University/Tygerberg Hospital This presentation A brief history and overview of relationship between Paediatrics and C-L Psychiatry Red Cross Children’s Hospital ConsultationLiaison service Case examples Conclusion What is consultation liaison psychiatry? Consultation: Services performed for physically ill patients and families, often at the bedside in a general hospital, upon referral of the attending physician or other health care professional Liaison: Services provided for the physician and staff, tying together the treatment of the patient and family, using educational conferences, psychosocial teaching rounds and holistic treatment plans Involves collaboration between two teams who differ in their main focus of interest and methods of working. Paediatrician- established a physician-patient relationship - primary case manager Psychiatrist -brief consultations -acute setting -distressed child -communication problems -absence of parent History Paediatrics and Child psychiatry: 6 decades of the relationship 1937-Kanner L ‘The development and present status of psychiatry and pediatrics’ Pediatrics 11:418-435 1946-Senn M ‘The relationship of pediatrics and psychiatry’ Am j Dis Child 71;537-549 1959-Creak M ‘Child health and child psychiatry, neighbours or colleagues? Lancet 7;481-485 1967-Eisenberg L’The relationship between psychiatry and pediatrics, a disptable view’ Pediatrics 39;645-647 1977-Anders T ‘ Child psychiatry and pediatrics: the state of the relationship’ Pediatrics 60;616-620 1982-Jellinek M ‘The present status of child psychiatry in pediatrics’ N Engl J Med 306;1227-1230 1990-Fritz Gk ‘consultation Liaison in child psychiatry and the evolution of pediatric psychiatry’ Psychosomatics 31;85-90 Donald Winnicott (1896 - 1971) ‘Common Ground’ Collaboration around common goals Clinical population at psychological risk Holistic treatment Prevention Multidisciplinary models of care Red Cross Children’s Hospital Consultation-Liaison Service Team Services Teaching Research Future- training? Role of liaison team Diagnostic Psychosocial meetings/ward rounds Multidisciplinary team meetings Psychological management- group therapy - individual Psychotropic medication Staff support Family support Transition to adult services Common reasons for referral Critically ill child ?Depression,?Psychosis (delirium), ?PTSD Behaviourly disturbed, unmanageable child Clinical presentations for which no medical explanation (? Conversion) The non compliant teenager Transplant assessment Case 1: The critically ill child Reason for referral: Referred by S/W on the ICU team 2/52 after admission Extensive burns following fire at home ?PTSD ?Depression Identifying data: Pearl 10yr 10 month old girl Xhosa and English-speaking Grade 5 Medical Details Admitted 13/8/05 with >70% burns following fire at home Most of body affected, face & head spared Multiple operations, including colostomy and many skin grafts Multiple visits to theatre for change of dressings Septicaemia Significant to severe pain No previous medical/surgical history; no previous admissions Medications & Management Panado Methadone Clonidine Modazolam Amitryptiline Antibiotics Multiple vitamins Nutritional supplementation Tube-fed Colostomy IV lines Extensive dressings Multiple and regular visits to theatre for grafting or dressing changes Staff involved Nursing staff Social worker Medical: Burns team, ICU team, Pain team Physiotherapist Occupational therapist Dietitian Aromatherapist Volunteers Psychiatry Mental State Examination Appearance, behaviour, speech Lying on back in bed in ICU almost covered in bandages and with multiple tubes Engaged well, good eye contact Soft speech, not spontaneous Mood and affect Objectively sad, but came across as optimistic Subjectively: “happy because my face is not burnt” restricted Anxiety/PTSD symptoms: Nightmares at night that woke her Thought about the fire and could sometimes ‘see’ fire Vegetative symptoms: Difficult to assess in view of medical condition, but difficulty sleeping noted Thoughts and perceptions: No abnormalities Cognitions: Alert Orientated to month and year Insight: Fair Summary 10yr old girl admitted after severe burns injury In a critical medical condition No past medical/psychiatric history Good family support Symptoms of acute stress disorder (later PTSD) and possibly depression Multiaxial Diagnoses Axis I: PTSD Depressive disorder Axis II: nil Axis III: Severe burns septicaemia GIT complications/ colostomy Axis IV: Medical condition Hospitalisation Axis V: 60 Management Biological: Optimal pain management ?Rationalisation of meds Fluoxetine 5mg/day Psychological: Provide source of support to patient & family Encourage ongoing regular visits Suggest routine in terms of staff visits Dealing with death and dying Social: Contacting school and parents work Outcome Patient died 17/10/05 due to overwhelming sepsis, 1 week prior to her 11th birthday CASE 2: Symptoms for which no medical cause found Reason for referral: Recurrent, unexplained vomiting Referred by neurology registrar during admission for further investigations Identifying data 10yr old girl Saldanha Bay Grade 4 English-speaking Muslim Medical Details 2yr history of recurrent vomiting severe enough to cause oesophageal tears, oesophagitis and dehydration with electrolyte abnormalities Associated headaches and abdominal pain Admitted now with severe dehydration, acute renal failure and for further investigations 1 previous documented UTI No other medical/surgical history No psychiatric history Multiple admissions to RXH and local hospital Investigations Blood: FBC & Diff, LFT’s normal U&E abnormal 2° vomiting and dehydration, otherwise normal Endocrine Metabolic screens Amino acid analysis VMA’s Urine: 1 episode E.coli UTI, otherwise normal VMA’s and NMA’s Imaging: CT x 2 MRI Ultrasound UKB EEG: normal Muscle Biopsy: normal GIT Endoscopy: normal Treatment Admissions for IV fluids Medication: Omeprazole, anti-emetics,Carbamazepine Mental state examination Appearance, behaviour, speech Sitting up in bed, drip IV, relaxed, playing with puzzle Appeared young for age, shy Engaged poorly, unconcerned Spoke softly, answered “I don’t know” or shrugged shoulders frequently Gave poor account of illness Mood and affect Euthymic , not anxious Affect: Inappropriate Thoughts: No abnormalities Couldn’t think of 3 wishes No perceptual disturbances Cognitive function: Orientated, alert, poor cooperation Insight poor Summary 10 year old girl from a large nuclear family, presents with long history of unexplained vomiting. History of 1° nocturnal enuresis and shy and nervous temperament. Maternal history of depression Marital discord Possible abuse Differential Diagnosis Axis I: Conversion disorder? Undifferentiated somatoform disorder? Factitious disorder? V code: ??sexual abuse Axis II: defer Axis III: Recurrent vomiting Axis IV: ? Axis V: ?60-70 Outcome Admission to child psychiatry Selectively mute Emotional distress expressed via somatization Uncooperative parents Several transfers to medical ward Further multidisciplinary meetings Long term admission vs ‘removal’ from parents care Settled after admission to St Josephs Children’s Home Ethical dilemmas/end of life decisions 11yo male MVA pedestrian C2 resection, paralysed, ventilator Cognitively intact and alert Prognosis very poor Withdrawal of treatment Child psychiatry consult What to tell the child? Right to be informed? Consent/assent Counselling: death/dying Parent’s wishes Outcome Met with parents Multidisciplinary team meeting Ethical principle of ‘best interest of the child’, non maleficence, benificance Sedation maintained and ventilator turned off Follow up sessions with family Conclusion End of life Hospital environment Multiple drug regimens Tolerating diagnostic uncertainty C-L/ Paediatrics Limited human resources Effective Collaboration Multidisciplinary approach Collaborative clinical services Teaching and training Collaborative research “Child psychiatry and Paediatrics have enjoyed a long flirtation. It is high time they were married if only for the sake of the children” (Apley, 1984) THANK YOU