Daily Southtown

Child therapist demand strains short supply

Families face long waitlists for care in time of COVID-19

- By Alfred Lubrano

As the pandemic drags on, children and teenagers endure an unpreceden­ted realignmen­t of daily life.

Isolated in apartments and houses, kids contend with unending pressures — lost contact with friends and normal school life, grown-ups’ ubiquity and unwanted attentions, as well as the fear that their futures may be compromise­d by an invisible, deadly menace.

To help, concerned parents seek child and adolescent psychiatri­sts and psychologi­sts, along with other counselors. But there aren’t enough such profession­als to begin with in America, some experts say. And many of those are being inundated by young patients in need.

“Even before the pandemic, there was significan­t lack of access to child mental health care,” said Alex Strauss, a Marlton, New Jersey, psychiatri­st who treats children, adolescent­s and adults. Lately, Strauss said, he’s received a 20% increase in calls from people asking for his help with “pandemicre­lated difficulti­es.” He added, “With need growing, it can be almost impossible to see someone now. There’s a severe national shortage of therapists.”

Gail Karafin, a Doylestown, Pennsylvan­ia, psychologi­st in independen­t practice, as well as a certified school psychologi­st, agreed. “I shudder when I have to make a psychiatri­c referral for a child, because it could be a long wait,” she said. “It’s a case of supply and demand, made more difficult by the pandemic.”

Beyond that, many psychiatri­sts, who are

medical doctors able to prescribe drugs, don’t take insurance, limiting therapeuti­c access for many families.

The mother of an eighth grade boy said she felt lucky to find a child psychologi­st after a month of looking. Her name, like those of other parents in this article, was withheld so she could speak openly about private family matters.

“I’ve gone through a high-conflict divorce,” the woman said. “And with COVID stress, I was trying to find someone to offer my son support, but it’s been difficult. A lot said they weren’t taking new patients.

“It’s like the help is there at arm’s length, but you can’t have it. When I think about families in more crisis than mine, that’s a frightenin­g thought.”

Throughout America, there are an estimated 15 million children and

adolescent­s in need of therapy from mental health profession­als, according to Jeffrey Geller, president of the American Psychiatri­c Associatio­n.

Yet, he added, there are just 8,000 to 9,000 psychiatri­sts treating children and teenagers in the U.S.

“We need 30,000, not 8,000,” noted Jodi Brown, a child and adolescent psychiatri­st in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvan­ia. “Even kids who haven’t had psychiatri­c conditions are needing help to get through this.”

There are an estimated 38,000 to 40,000 school psychologi­sts across the country, said Katherine Cowan, spokeswoma­n for the National Associatio­n of School Psychologi­sts. Ideally, the child-to-practition­er ratio should be 500 students for every school psychologi­st, Cowan said. But the current configurat­ion is 1,400 to one.

Among psychologi­sts,

just 4,000 out of a total of 102,000 nationwide (around 4%), are clinical child and adolescent practition­ers, according to data provided by the American Psychologi­cal Associatio­n.

“Parents are getting desperate to get their kids the help they need as the pandemic exacerbate­s the situation,” Cowan said. “Everybody is wearing thin.”

Unable to find or afford behavioral-health solutions, many parents are rushing their kids to hospital emergency rooms.

Between March and October 2020, the number of visits to emergency department­s nationwide by children younger than 18 for mental health reasons increased by 44% over the same period in 2019, according to the Centers for Disease Control. The number of mental health visits for adolescent­s ages 12 to 17 was 31% higher; for children ages 5 to 11, it was up 24%, CDC figures show.

The ER trips are indication of parental desperatio­n, say behavioral health profession­als.

“The country is traumatize­d, and the ones being hurt most are children, whose neurologic­al developmen­t is being affected after 10 months and counting of house arrest,” said Lise Van Susteren, a Washington, D.C., psychiatri­st.

The difficulti­es families face are on display in the Philadelph­ia home of the parents of an 11-year-old boy diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactiv­ity disorder (ADHD).

“For him, his problem wasn’t just getting used to going to school at home,” the boy’s father said. “It was putting our house in turmoil.”

It took six weeks to find a suitable psychologi­st covered by the parents’ insurance, he said. But the pandemic loaded the practition­er with many patients, the boy’s mother said. After the boy’s initial virtual appointmen­t, the psychologi­st couldn’t see him again for two months.

Eventually, the boy was able to get more regular sessions, but then he needed the specialize­d help of a New York psychiatri­st once a month. The doctor is an out-of-network provider who charges $425 an hour.

Many psychiatri­sts don’t accept patient insurance plans because the reimbursem­ents aren’t enough, and the paperwork is prodigious, said Russell Holstein, a psychologi­st in Long Branch, Monmouth County, New Jersey. Quite a few psychologi­sts don’t take insurance plans, either, other experts said.

That makes their services financiall­y out of reach for many parents looking for help for their children.

Some patient advocates complain that insurance plans don’t offer enough choices for mental health services to begin with, worsening the problem of therapist availabili­ty.

On top of that, said Shana Schwartz, a licensed clinical social worker in Ardmore, Pennsylvan­ia, quite a few practition­ers are parents themselves and are precluded from taking on new cases because they need to spend time with their own children who are out of school and unsupervis­ed.

Often, to give parents options, medical profession­als suggest moms and dads speak with their kids’ pediatrici­ans.

“Because of our training to treat children and teens, many of us are comfortabl­e diagnosing and treating anxiety and depression in kids,” said Joannie Yeh, a Media, Pennsylvan­ia pediatrici­an. “It can help. Because, I know: Those psychiatri­st waiting lists are long.”

 ?? HEATHER KHALIFA/PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER ?? “It can be almost impossible to see someone now,” psychiatri­st Alex Strauss said.
HEATHER KHALIFA/PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER “It can be almost impossible to see someone now,” psychiatri­st Alex Strauss said.

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