Behavioral Health Emergency Room Dilemma: Children Waiting in Crisis

Most children and adolescents experiencing a behavioral health crisis wait hours or even days for placement in clinically appropriate therapeutic treatment.

While emergency department (ED) visits for other medical causes that affect children declined in the early stages of the pandemic, the number of children’s mental health-related ED visits rose 24% among 5- to 11-year-olds. It also surged 31% among 12- to 17-year-olds in April 2020 through October, compared to that period in 2019, according to a November Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report. During the pandemic we also saw a rise in ED visits for suspected suicide attempts among young people. Among teen girls, such visits were up 51% from February to March earlier this year compared to 2019, according to a June CDC report. These are staggering experiences facing youth and children today. Complicating these situations even more is the difficult experience of accessing care when crisis care is needed.

Most children and adolescents experiencing a behavioral health crisis wait hours or even days for placement in clinically appropriate therapeutic treatment. One study documents an average length of stay in the hospital emergency department for psychiatric admissions of 18 hours, compared to 5 hours for non-psychiatric admissions.1 Others have estimated average boarding times of between 6.8 hours and 34 hours for patients needing psychiatric treatment.2,3  Children’s hospitals reportedly saw a 45 percent increase in pediatric self-injury and suicide cases between January and July 2021. In 2020, pediatric mental health-related hospital emergency department visits increased 24% for children ages 5-11 and 31% for older children and adolescents.

“Extended ED boarding is detrimental for children and adolescents with behavioral health issues,” said Jennifer Wolff, PhD, an associate professor of psychiatry and human behavior at the Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, a staff psychologist at Rhode Island Hospital and Bradley hospitals, and the director of the Adolescent Mental Health Collaborative at Brown.

Dr. Wolff and her colleagues found a threefold increase in the number of pediatric patients who boarded in their children’s hospital ED over the past three years and a 60% increase in the average time spent boarding in the ED. (Adm Policy Ment Health. 2023 Jan;1; https://bit.ly/3KaUqJ0.)

Dr. Wolff said care delayed further can also exacerbate existing problems. “For some of these kids who have really chronic psychopathology and are going to need long-term care, we run the risk of them having a negative experience that is so detrimental that it is a deterrent to them seeking care later on,” she said. “People are becoming aware that the system is broken and that we need to do more to serve these kids, but I wish there was more help coming faster.”

In August of 2023, American Academy of Pediatrics published a The Management of Children and Youth with Pediatric Mental and Behavioral Health Emergencies with Recommendations for Optimizing and Improving Care of Pediatric Patients with Mental Health Emergencies which included referral networks and the use of technologies to improve care coordination which is where XFERALL helps.

XFERALL’s mission is to drastically save time for clinical staff and reduce the amount of time patients spend in EDs waiting for a transfer to the most appropriate care center by applying innovative technology solutions. XFERALL enables real-time communication so that clinicians needing to place a patient can request placement at as few or as many facilities as they choose; receive responses from facilities or programs that can accept and treat the patient; and share clinical information — all within minutes from a single source.

This coordinated approach allows caregivers and patients to be engaged in the decision-making process. In states that have adopted XFERALL, finding placement for youth and children went from multiple hours or days to sixty minutes or less on average.  In just a matter of minutes, providers can coordinate and provide options for families seeking care for their child.

XFERALL partners with health systems, mental health crisis teams and healthcare providers across the nation to expedite access to care for children and adolescents experiencing a mental health crisis. In July of 2023, the median time to secure placement on the XFERALL network was 36 minutes.  XFERALL is available nationwide and continues to expand with the mission of driving quality improvement through expediting access to care. 

To learn more about this program and how it can support improving access for youth in crisis Schedule Some Time with Us Below:

Sources:

1 Nicks BA, Manthey DM. The impact of psychiatric patient boarding in emergency departments. Emerg Med Int 2012; 2012: 360308.

2 Weiss AP, Chang G, Rauch SL, et al. Patient and practice-related determinants of emergency department length of stay for patients with psychiatric illness. Ann Emerg Med. 2012;60(2):162–71.

3 Tuttle GA. Access to psychiatric beds and impact on emergency medicine. Chicago, IL: Council on Medical Service, American Medical Association; 2008.

4 Pediatricians, Child and Adolescent Psychiatrists and Children’s Hospitals Declare National Emergency in Children’s Mental Health, October 19, 2021.

Reducing Violence Relating to Long Stays in the Emergency Department


 Long waits in the emergency department exacerbate agitation, especially for behavioral health patients. 

The healthcare workforce shortage that existed before the COVID-19 pandemic is now a full-blown crisis. In 2022 alone, 500,000 nurses were expected to leave the workforce, creating a shortage of more than 1.1 million nurses. 

The increasing threat and incidence of workplace violence is contributing to the ongoing exodus of healthcare workers. Violence against U.S. healthcare workers has been on the rise for at least a decade and has accelerated during the COVID-19 pandemic, particularly in hospital emergency departments, where the combination of a large patient volume and high-stakes, emotionally difficult situations, staff shortages, and at-risk patients creates tension and frustration that can escalate quickly to physical and verbal threats and violence. The rate of serious workplace violence incidents is four times greater in the healthcare field than is the case in private industry.

As we all know, for hospital security teams responsible for keeping patients, visitors, and employees safe, managing security in the emergency department is paramount. Staff are much more likely to be injured in EDs than any other area in the hospital [3]. Since January 1, 2022, hospitals have had an added incentive to focus on protecting healthcare workers: the new and revised Joint Commission standards for workplace violence prevention for all accredited hospitals and critical access hospitals.

One way to reduce the risk of workplace violence in the ED is to improve ED “throughput,” ensuring that patients are admitted or transferred to another facility without unnecessary delay. Improving throughput can help by lessening patient anxiety and potentially preventing decompensation by patients who are experiencing a serious psychiatric condition. Improving ED throughput is not a substitute for a holistic, multidisciplinary strategy to reduce and address workplace violence and create a clinical de-escalation management model, but it should be one of the elements in that strategy. 

Unfortunately, too many hospital emergency departments still rely on antiquated, manual processes to manage patient transfers. In their search for a bed for their ED patients, clinicians still are calling other hospitals one-by-one, leaving messages, faxing paperwork, and waiting for calls to be returned. The seemingly simple act of transferring a patient out of the ED to another facility is requiring clinicians to spend countless hours on repetitive tasks that take them away from direct patient care at the bedside and contribute to lengthy delays in getting to therapeutic care. In this article, I review data relating to violence in the ED, outline some good practices for reducing that violence, and describe a technology that can address the slow throughput problem.

To read the full article please visit the IAHSS Journal site an login


(Shana Palmieri, LCSW, is the Managing Partner of Clinical Education & Consulting at Healthcare Legal Education and Consulting Network in Honolulu, HI, and COO and Co- Founder of XFERALL, based in Austin, TX.) 

Press Release: Nation’s Leading Patient Transfer Platform Announces Arkansas Expansion

XFERALL is expanding its service area to include Arkansas.

“2022 continues to be a year of growth and expansion for XFERALL,” said Nathan Read, CEO, XFERALL. “More hospitals, behavioral health providers, and community organizations are using XFERALL to deliver a proven solution to the increasingly difficult problem of placing behavioral health patients in appropriate treatment quickly. Today, we are pleased to announce that Arkansas behavioral health providers and facilities will have access to the platform.”

988 Is Coming. Is Your State Ready?

Beginning July 16, a single national 988 number will be available for anyone facing a mental health crisis. Callers from anywhere in the country can call 988 and get connected to trained crisis counselors. The phone line will be staffed 24/7 and is free and confidential.

XFERALL is working with state mental health agencies and other stakeholders to encourage use of our platform by 988 responders so they have in-the-field ability to identify locally available treatment options.

XFERALL to Present at DCHA’s Opioid Response Symposium

XFERALL’s chief clinical officer, Shana Palmieri, LCSW, will give a special presentation at the District of Columbia Hospital Association’s Opioid Response Symposium in April. Two of XFERALL’s co-founders called DC home and spent time working in one of the busiest hospitals in the nation’s capital. Drawing on their work together, they combined their clinical and information technology expertise to create XFERALL with the sole purpose of solving one of the most intractable problems in health care delivery today – timely placement of patients needing behavioral health care in treatment appropriate for their condition, need, and demographics.

More Can Be Done Today to Eliminate Barriers to Behavioral Health Care for Children and Adolescents

Between 2016 and 2020, the number of children and adolescents diagnosed with mental health conditions skyrocketed, according to a new U.S. Department of Health and Human Services study published in JAMA Pediatrics. The number of children ages 3-17 years diagnosed with anxiety grew by 29 percent and those with depression by 27 percent.

The Washington Post also recently profiled families’ growing struggles to get essential behavioral health care for their children – a situation that was challenging before the pandemic and is now dire.

Press Release: XFERALL Receives Endorsement by Hospital Council - Northern & Central California

Endorsement as a preferred vendor to help hospitals reduce wait times for behavioral health patients

March 15, 2022 (AUSTIN, Texas) – XFERALL and Hospital Council – Northern & Central California, which represents nearly 200 hospitals throughout California, have partnered to bring XFERALL’s real-time technology as a preferred solution to help reduce delays for patients in accessing crisis and inpatient behavioral health treatment.

XFERALL Delivers Immediate Results for Hospitals, Crisis Teams in Tennessee

XFERALL began working with Tennessee mobile crisis teams, acute hospitals, and behavioral health facilities in late January 2022. Almost immediately, our hospital and clinician partners saw decreased placement times for their patients in psychiatric crisis.

Tennessee’s statewide average wait time for psychiatric placement for a patient in an acute hospital emergency department is estimated at 25 hours (more than a full day and night). Using XFERALL, our partners have been able to get patients accepted into psychiatric treatment in 52 minutes. The fastest accept time is 5 minutes and 4 seconds.

Press Release: XFERALL Announces Expansion

XFERALL has expanded its service area to include Tennessee.

“Building on our successes in Texas, Georgia, and Louisiana, we are expanding our service area to include Tennessee,” said Nathan Read, CEO, XFERALL. “We are partnering with acute and behavioral health hospitals and mental health providers across the state to deliver a proven solution to the increasingly difficult problem of placing behavioral health patients in appropriate treatment quickly.”

EMS and XFERALL Partner to Directly Place Patients in Crisis in Behavioral Health Treatment

People experiencing a psychiatric crisis -- considering suicide, for example -- need immediate psychiatric help. But, unless they have done something physically to attempt suicide, such as overdosing on pills, they very likely do not also need emergent medical attention. Yet, too often, a 911 call for help ends with EMS transport to the hospital emergency room, and only hours, and sometimes even days, later is the individual transferred to an appropriate behavioral health facility.

Partnering with XFERALL makes timely, direct transport by EMS to behavioral health facilities possible, allowing patients experiencing a behavioral health crisis to avoid unnecessary and, often, lengthy and untherapeutic hospital ED stays.

District of Columbia Hospital Association Partners with XFERALL to Provide DC Hospitals Access to a Solution to Accelerate Transfers of Medical and Behavioral Health Patients

(WASHINGTON, D.C.) – January 31, 2022

The District of Columbia Hospital Association (DCHA) and XFERALL, the nation’s leading mobile patient transfer platform, have entered a partnership that offers DC hospitals a new process for transferring acute and behavioral health patients to clinically appropriate health care facilities.

Reducing ED Boarding Times and Improving Placement, Even During the Pandemic

The District of Columbia Hospital Association published this article in its Jan. 24 member newsletter. Below is an excerpt.

The American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) in August last year identified boarding times for patients in hospital emergency departments as at an “all-time high.” This is for all patients waiting to be transferred to a different facility for needed treatment, whether a behavioral health facility or hospital providing a higher level of acute care.

Katy Independent School District Chooses XFERALL to Improve Access to Critical Behavioral Health Services for Students

With a national crisis in pediatric mental health, XFERALL is particularly proud of its partnerships that reduce barriers to behavioral health treatment for children and adolescents. Since 2019, XFERALL has facilitated the transfer of thousands of children and adolescents experiencing a behavioral health crisis to clinically appropriate inpatient treatment. Our placement time for children and adolescents is less than three hours, compared with the national average of more than eight hours.