Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
346730 Children and Youth Services Review 2012 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

We present data on predictors of treatment outcome for 3200 consecutive referrals to a child and adolescent psychiatry clinic. Using Reliable Change Index (RCI) methodology, we divided children into those who, between intake and discharge, improved, stayed the same, or got worse according to clinician-rated impairment. Most predictors of improvement were related to parent variables (marital status, maternal anxiety, and ethnicity), while those associated with deterioration were tied to child status (extent of psychiatric comorbidity, history of placement in a self-contained classroom, and a prior trial of psychotropic medications). The implications of these findings for data-driven program development, clinic management, treatment planning, and systems of care are discussed.

► We explored treatment outcome predictors for 3200 youth receiving psychiatric services. ► Parent-related variables (such as maternal anxiety) most predicted improvement. ► Variables associated with deterioration in functioning were more tied to child status. ► We discuss the benefits of data-driven clinic management and treatment planning.

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