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Hospitalists’ Perceptions of Pediatric Mental Health Boarding: Quality of Care and Moral Distress

Nicole Penwill, Christopher Wong, Delaney B. Taylor, Seneca D. Freyleue, Amy Bordogna, Ryan S. Bode, JoAnna K. Leyenaar

2023Hospital Pediatrics18 citationsDOI

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Acute care hospitals increasingly provide care for youth experiencing mental health crises while they await transfer for psychiatric hospitalization. To inform quality improvement efforts, we aimed to characterize hospitalists' perceptions of health care quality during pediatric mental health boarding and their experiences of moral distress in caring for this population. METHODS: In March 2021, we conducted a web-based survey of hospitalists who participate in the Pediatric Research in Inpatient Settings (PRIS) network. Closed- and open-ended questions queried the quality of care provided to youth during boarding and clinician experience of moral distress in caring for these youth. We iteratively coded qualitative data for emergent themes. Moral distress was measured using 11 items from the Measure of Moral Distress for Health Care Professionals (MMD-HP), which categorizes sources of moral distress into system-, team-, and patient-level factors. RESULTS: Eighty-eight of 111 PRIS site leaders (79%) and 76 of 383 other PRIS members (20%) responded, representing 12 community hospitals, 38 freestanding children's hospitals, and 35 children's hospitals in adult centers. Emergent themes related to health care quality included the following: access to psychiatric services; safety; standardized workflows; clinician training; compassion/patient engagement; and collaboration and disposition planning. Hospitals often lacked desired resources, resulting in poor perceived therapeutic value of care, limited patient engagement, and provider moral distress. Four of the 5 highest MMD-HP item scores were related to system-level factors. CONCLUSION: Hospitalists identified several foci for quality improvement and described significant moral distress in caring for youth experiencing boarding, particularly related to health system factors.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineMental healthDistressHealth careNursingFamily medicinePsychiatryClinical psychologyEconomic growthEconomicsInnovations in Medical EducationPediatric Pain Management TechniquesHealthcare professionals’ stress and burnout