The American Academy of Pediatrics, Rhode Island Chapter (RIAAP) the Rhode Island Council of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry (RICCAP), Hasbro Children’s Hospital, and Bradley Hospital have issued a declaration of emergency regarding the state of child and adolescent mental health in Rhode Island (full declaration below).

“This has been an exceptionally troubling time for our children and adolescents – one that continues to be exacerbated by the pandemic and one that shines a light on the inequities that continue to exist in health care,” said Phyllis A. Dennery, MD, FAAP, pediatrician-in-chief and medical director, Hasbro Children’s Hospital. “Drawing attention to these discrepancies and this youth mental health crisis of epic proportions is a start, but we all must come together to provide the critical support these kids and families so sorely need.”

“Amidst the stress and disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, we are experiencing an unprecedented emergency in child and adolescent mental health here in Rhode Island,” said Henry Sachs, President of Bradley Hospital. “Prior to the pandemic, we were already experiencing troubling trends including increased youth suicides. The pandemic has pushed this situation into a full-blown emergency, with dramatic increases in emergency room visits for all child mental health crises. We are issuing this emergency declaration as a call to action to invest in our state’s child and adolescent mental health care system, and to implement innovative new strategies to address this crisis.”

“In my 21 years as a pediatrician, I have never seen so many children experiencing mental health challenges or lack access to community resources to meet their mental health treatment needs,” said RIAAP President Allison Brindle, MD. “The disruptions to usual routines and general stress that COVID has caused - on top of the usual stressors that kids and teens face -   has taken a toll on children and families.  They are having difficulty accessing resources needed to meet their child's social and emotional needs, support their optimal development, and we are seeing the results in developmental delays and in a sharp increase in child and adolescent emergency room visits due to mental health issues. As a state, we need to come together to find ways to invest in our mental health system to better support our children through this emergency and to implement strategies that will promote positive mental health and prevent an emergency like this from occurring again in the future.”

“As child and adolescent psychiatrist working with teens, it is clear that the stress and disruptions caused by COVID have pushed many of the patients I see to the point of experiencing mental health crises,” said RICCAP President Michael Wolfe, MD. “Unfortunately, at the very time this is occurring many of our state’s outpatient community providers are underfunded and are losing staff to higher paying jobs in other sectors. This means our youth are not receiving the community-based care they need, leading to more mental health emergencies. This emergency declaration is a call to action to better invest in Rhode Island’s network of community and school-based mental health providers. We look forward to working with state government and health care leaders to implement recommendations that will address this child and adolescent mental health emergency and leave our system in a stronger position post pandemic.”

Declaration of a Rhode Island State of Emergency

in Child and Adolescent Mental Health

Rhode Island Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics;

Rhode Island Council for Child and Adolescent Psychiatry;

Hasbro Children’s Hospital,

and Bradley Hospital

As health professionals dedicated to the care of children and adolescents in Rhode Island, we have witnessed soaring rates of mental health challenges among children, adolescents, and their families over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, exacerbating the situation that existed prior to the pandemic. Children and families across our state have experienced enormous adversity and disruption. The inequities that result from structural racism have contributed to disproportionate impacts on children from communities of color at the same time as racial and ethnic diversity has increased in Rhode Island and is projected to rise in the future.

This worsening crisis in child and adolescent mental health is inextricably tied to the stress brought on by COVID-19 and the ongoing struggle for racial justice and represents an acceleration of trends observed prior to 2020. Rates of childhood mental health concerns and suicide rose steadily between 2010 and 2020 and by 2018 suicide was the second leading cause of death for youth ages 10-24. According to the 2019 Rhode Island Youth Risk Behavior Survey, 15% of Rhode Island high school students reported attempting suicide one or more times in the 12 months before the survey was administered. The pandemic has intensified this crisis: we have witnessed dramatic increases in Emergency Department visits for all mental health emergencies including suspected suicide attempts.

The pandemic has struck at the safety and stability of families. More than 140,000 children in the United States lost a primary and/or secondary caregiver, with youth of color disproportionately impacted. We are caring for young people with skyrocketing rates of depression, anxiety, trauma, and suicidality that will have lasting impacts on them, their families, and their communities. We must identify strategies to meet these challenges through innovation and action, focusing on state and local interventions designed to improve equitable access to care including mental health promotion, prevention, and treatment. Taking into account Rhode Island’s specific existing resources and our state’s unique strengths, we urge a particular focus and investment in community-based and community-responsive outpatient care designed to identify and treat youth earlier in their course of illness. This would reduce the burden on individual children and their families as well as the impact on our higher levels of care and schools by decreasing escalation to full-blown mental health crises.

The Rhode Island Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics (RIAAP), the Rhode Island Council of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry (RICCAP), Hasbro Children’s Hospital, and Bradley Hospital are joining together to declare a Rhode Island State of Emergency in Child and Adolescent Mental Health. The challenges facing children and adolescents are so widespread that we call on policymakers at all levels of state government, advocates for children and adolescents, and community stakeholders to join us in this declaration and advocate for the following:

  • Increase state funding, including Medicaid rates, dedicated to ensuring that all families and children, from infancy through adolescence, can access evidence-based mental health screening, diagnosis, and treatment to appropriately address their mental health needs, with particular emphasis on meeting the needs of under-resourced populations.
  • Fully fund and prioritize comprehensive, community-based systems of care that connect families in need of outpatient behavioral health services and supports for their children with evidence-based interventions in their home, community or school as well as follow-up with families to overcome any barriers to engagement in care.
  • Accelerate strategies to address longstanding workforce challenges in child mental health, including innovative training programs developed collaboratively by Rhode Island’s existing healthcare professional programs, loan repayment and reduced/free tuition consistent with RI Promise grants, and intensified efforts to recruit and retain underrepresented populations into mental health professions as well as attention to the impact that the public health crisis has had on the well-being of health professionals.
  • Increase implementation and sustainable funding of effective models of school-based mental health care with clinical strategies, including a mental health “warmline” for school staff to access care comparable with the existing PediPRN model for pediatricians, and models for payment.
  • Accelerate and incentivize adoption of effective and financially sustainable models of integrated mental health care in primary care pediatrics, including clinical strategies and models for payment.
  • Address the ongoing challenges of the acute care needs of children and adolescents, including shortage of beds and emergency room boarding, by expanding access to short-stay stabilization units and community-based response teams.

Elena Falcone-Relvas

Senior Public Relations Officer
Bradley Hospital & Hasbro Children's Hospital
401-444-6863
[email protected]