Feasibility of single question mental health surveillance in chronic disease

Author:

White MaryORCID,Pelly Rachel,Le Jane,Dove Lucy,Connolly Sarah,Morgan Alice,Reid Dave,Haslam Ric,Hiscock Harriet

Abstract

ObjectiveTo determine the (1) feasibility and acceptability of administering single question mental health surveillance to carers of children with chronic disease in the inpatient setting and (2) sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value (PPV) and negative predictive value (NPV) of this question to detect ‘at risk’ children compared with the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ).DesignCross-sectional pilotSettingDay Medical Unit of a tertiary paediatric hospital, 1 April 2021–31 July 2021.PatientsCarers of children aged 2–17 years with chronic medical conditions.InterventionsCaregivers were asked to respond to ‘Thinking about your child’s mental health over the past 4 weeks, are they thriving/coping/struggling/always overwhelmed?’ during the admission process. All carers and children 11–17 years were invited to complete the SDQ.Main outcome measuresFeasibility and acceptability were determined by nursing feedback. Sensitivity, specificity, PPV and NPV were determined by comparing question responses with clinical cut-points on the SDQ.Results213 carers responded to the question. Nurses reported that the question was easy (12/14) or moderately easy (2/14) to use and was ‘easily understood’ (6/14) or ‘understood after some explanation’ (8/14) for most carers. The question demonstrated a high specificity (0.98)/PPV (0.87) but low sensitivity (0.2) when thriving/coping were considered together whereas when thriving was compared with all other responses the sensitivity increased to 0.7.ConclusionsSingle question mental health surveillance appears acceptable to carers and nursing staff and has a high level of specificity for children who are ‘struggling’ or ‘always overwhelmed’ versus the SDQ screening measure.

Funder

Royal Children's Hospital Foundation

National Health and Medical Research Council

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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