By: Emily Scott<\/p>\n
Pennsylvania faces a shortage of psychiatrists that children’s advocates call “alarming,” and they’re concerned about the impact it might have on young people whose needs become more intense and could require medication.<\/p>\n
A June 2020 report found there aren’t enough psychiatrists to meet the demand for mental-health assistance in the Commonwealth. Pittsburgh-based psychologist Dan Warner said this means the responsibility of prescribing medication for children with severe mental-health challenges often falls on pediatricians. He said the first step should be talking to a mental-health professional.<\/p>\n
“Under significant stress, there might be a need to elevate and really looking at a biomedical intervention,” he said. “Very often, the first line of that is starting with your pediatrician. Those people are not specially trained in the needs of children with mental health issues, and they don’t necessarily have the time to do all the kind of work.”<\/p>\n
The most recent\u00a0Pennsylvania Youth Survey<\/a>\u00a0found 38% of students reported feeling sad or depressed most days.<\/p>\n
One possible solution getting the support of some health professionals is\u00a0Senate Bill 25<\/a>. It would allow certain nurse practitioners to have full authority to prescribe medication without requiring them to have a collaborative agreement with a physician.<\/p>\n