Chapter 40 Psychiatric Emergencies
1 What constitutes a psychiatric emergency?
Most practically defined, this is a potentially preventable or treatable condition that threatens:
The patient’s own bodily integrity by suicide, self-mutilation, or drug ingestion
Someone else’s bodily integrity by assault or homicide
The patient’s own psychological and functional integrity (i.e., ability to perceive reality, feel appropriately, make judgments, remember)
The psychological and functional integrity of the family unit.
2 What is the epidemiology of psychiatric illness in children?
Between 6 and 9 million children and adolescents have serious emotional disturbances, and this accounts for 9–13% of all children in the United States.
In addition, only an estimated 20% of children in the United States with some form of mental health problem severe enough to require treatment are actually identified as such, and are receiving mental health services.
Emergency department (ED) visits for psychiatric conditions accounts for 1.6% of all ED visits and 3.2% of visits requiring an inpatient admission.
3 Which is the most common psychiatric emergency in children?
KEY POINTS: EPIDEMIOLOGY OF PSYCHIATRIC EMERGENCIES
1 Up to 6–9 million children suffer from serious emotional disturbances, accounting for 9–13% of all children in the United States.
2 Psychiatric conditions account for under 2% of all emergency department visits but for over 3% of emergency department visits requiring inpatient hospitalization.
3 Suicide is the leading cause of death from a psychiatric cause and the third leading cause of death overall in older adolescents.
EVALUATION
5 What are the ABCs of the mental status examination in the ED?
A = Appearance/affect: dress/grooming; abnormal movements; eye contact; facial expression; affect (depressed, blunted, flat, anxious, constricted, hostile, euphoric)
B = Behavior: attitude (cooperative, manipulative, guarded, suspicious, angry, violent, withdrawn)
Thought content—delusions, suicidal or homicidal; paranoia; somatic preoccupation; depression, obsessions, fears, phobias; belief of special powers; thought control; depersonalization; feelings of helplessness or hopelessness; guilt
Thought process—rate, organization, goal directedness, tangential, flight of ideas
Level of consciousness—orientation, attention, concentration, abstraction
6 How should the initial approach be conducted in evaluating a child with a possible psychiatric emergency?
7 List some of the medical considerations of acute psychosis
Trauma: Intracranial hemorrhage
Drug intoxication: Ethanol, barbiturates, cocaine, opiates, amphetamines, hallucinogens, marijuana, phencyclidine, anticholinergic medications (antihistamines, tricyclics), heavy metals, corticosteroids, neuroleptic medications
CNS lesions/infections: Tumor, hemorrhage, temporal lobe epilepsy, abscess/meningitis/encephalitis, HIV
Cerebral hypoxia: Carbon monoxide poisoning, cardiopulmonary failure
Metabolic/endocrinologic: Hypoglycemia, hypocalcemia, hyperthyroidism or hypothyroidism, adrenal insufficiency, uremia, liver failure, diabetes mellitus, porphyria, Wilson’s disease
Collagen vascular diseases: Lupus
Miscellaneous causes: Malaria, typhoid fever, Wilson’s disease, Epstein-Barr virus infection
RESTRAINTS
9 What are the indications for the use of physical restraint or seclusion in the ED setting?
To prevent imminent harm to the patient or other persons when other means of control are not effective or appropriate
To prevent serious disruption of the treatment plan or significant damage to the physical environment
To decrease the stimulation a patient receives (i.e., for those with PCP [phencyclidine] or ethanol intoxications)
Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations. 2005 Restraint and Seclusion. Available at www.jointcommission.org/AccreditationPrograms/BehavioralHealthCare/Standards/FAQs/Provision+of+Care+Treatment+and+Services/Restraint+and+Seclusion/Restraint_Seclusion.htm
10 Describe the proper procedure in the use of physical restraint
Explain to the patient why physical restraint is necessary.
Enlist at least five caretakers, one for each limb and one for the head. Avoid pressure on the patient’s throat or chest and keep hands away from the patient’s mouth.
Closely supervise (1:1) the patient in physical restraints; assess restraints at least every 30 minutes and document findings.
Avoid placement of the restrained child in the prone position (this could interfere with ventilation).
Remove restraints only with adequate staff present, and when the patient has regained control (either on his or her own volition, or with the use of chemical restraint).