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Journal Article

Citation

Newton AS, Soleimani A, Kirkland SW, Gokiert RJ. Acad. Emerg. Med. 2017; 24(5): 552-568.

Affiliation

Community-University Partnership, Faculty of Extension, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Society for Academic Emergency Medicine, Publisher John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/acem.13162

PMID

28145070

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Specialized instruments to screen and diagnose mental health problems in children and adolescents are not yet standard components of clinical assessments in emergency departments (EDs). We conducted a systematic review to investigate the psychometric properties, accuracy, and performance metrics of instruments used in the ED to identify pediatric mental health and substance use problems.

METHODS: We searched seven electronic databases and the grey literature for psychometric validation studies, diagnostic studies, and cohort studies that assessed any instrument to screen for or diagnose mental illness, emotional or behavioral problems, or substance use disorders. Studies had to include children and adolescents with mental health presentations or positive screens for substance use. Two reviewers independently screened studies for relevance and quality. Diagnostic study quality was assessed with the four QUADAS-2 domains. Psychometric study quality was assessed with published criteria for instrument reliability, validity, and usability. We present a descriptive analysis of the reported psychometric properties and diagnostic performance of instruments for each study.

RESULTS: Of the 4832 references screened, 14 met inclusion criteria. Included studies evaluate 18 instruments for identifying suicide risk (6 studies), alcohol use disorders (6 studies), mood disorders (1 study), and ED decision-making (need for assessment, admission; 1 study). Nine studies include a psychometric focus but quality varies, with no studies fully meeting criteria for reliability, validity, and usability. Seven studies examined diagnostic performance of an instrument, but no study has a low risk of bias for all QUADAS-2 domains. The HEADS-ED instrument has good inter-rater reliability (r=0.785) for identifying general mental health problems and modest evidence for ruling in patients requiring hospital admission (positive likelihood ratio, LR(+) =6.30). Internal consistency (reliability) varies for instruments to screen for suicide risk (α=0.46-0.97), and no instruments have both high sensitivity and high specificity. The Ask Suicide-Screening Questionnaire (ASQ) is highly sensitive (98%) and has strong evidence for ruling out risk (negative likelihood ratio, LR(-) =0.04). Among screening instruments for alcohol use disorders, internal consistency is high for the consumption subscale of the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (α=0.83-0.88) and the Adolescent Drinking Index (α=0.92). Both instruments also had sound internal validity. Diagnostically, however, a two-item instrument based on DSM-IV criteria is the most accurate in identifying patients with a disorder (area under the curve: 0.89) and has modest evidence for ruling in and out risk (LR(+) =8.80, LR(-) =0.13).

CONCLUSIONS: From available evidence, we recommend that ED clinicians use (a) the HEADS-ED to rule in ED admission among pediatric patients with visits for mental health care, (b) the ASQ to rule out suicide risk among pediatric patients with any visit type, and (c) the DSM-IV two-item instrument to rule in/rule out alcohol use disorders among pediatric patients currently using alcohol. These instruments require minimal to no training or time commitment. We also recommend that clinicians become familiar with each instrument's psychometric properties to understand the quality of the evidence base. In this review, however, we identify methodological limitations in the evidence base. To develop a robust evidence base, additional research is necessary. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.


Language: en

Keywords

children; emergency department; instrument; mental health care; systematic review; tool

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