Global Pediatrics (Sep 2024)

Improving rates of adolescent suicide risk screening in a primary pediatric clinic, a quality improvement project

  • Janet Lee,
  • Gabriela Araujo,
  • Emma Price

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9
p. 100184

Abstract

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In recent years, adolescents have experienced rising rates of suicidal ideation. Though pediatricians in our clinic were screening for depression, suicide risk screens were not completed. We designed a quality improvement (QI) project with the goal to increase the rate of suicide risk screening by 20 %, and improve clinicians’ attitudes toward the electronic health record (EHR) for mental health screening by 20 %. Baseline analyses included chart review and a provider survey. Suicide risk screen tools were built with decision-support into the EHR. After provider education was completed, the EHR-based interventions were implemented. Post-intervention, suicide risk screening completion increased from 8.8 % to 95 %. Provider attitudes towards the EHR also improved. This QI project demonstrates that implementing EHR tools that are provider-informed can help to improve suicide risk screening rates, streamline workflows, and help improve clinicians’ attitudes towards the EHR.

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