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Clinical Considerations around the Development of Black Boys and Mental Health Outcomes

Reliford, Aaron; Yang, Shuting; D'Anna, Cristina
The development of racial identity in Black boys is a critical aspect of their overall mental health and well-being. This article explores the unique societal and cultural challenges faced by Black boys in the context of identity formation and mental health outcomes. It critiques the one size fits all approach in clinical settings and advocates for an equitably tailored approach that emphasizes cultural competence, cultural responsiveness, and the importance of understanding the lived experiences of Black youth. By integrating these elements into clinical practice, mental health professionals can provide more effective and compassionate care promoting their mental health and resilience.
PMID: 41101847
ISSN: 1558-0490
CID: 5955152

Improved Access to Behavioral Health Care for Patients in a Large New York City Behavioral Health Clinic by the Transition to Telemedicine

Reliford, Aaron; Zhang, Emily; Liu, Anni; Lanina, Olga; Williams, Sharifa Z; Sanichar, Navin; Khan, Shabana; Dapkins, Isaac; Frankle, William Gordon
OBJECTIVE/UNASSIGNED:To examine the transition to telemental health within the behavioral health program of a large federally qualified health center, The Family Health Centers at NYU Langone, in the 3 months following the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic-specifically impacts on show rates and access to care. METHODS/UNASSIGNED:Demographic and clinical information for all scheduled visits was collected for two time periods: the telemental health period, March 16, 2020-July 16, 2020 (46,878 visits, 5,183 patients), and a comparison period, March 15, 2019-July 16, 2019 (47,335 visits, 5,190 patients). Data collected included modality, appointments scheduled/completed/cancelled/no-showed, age, gender, race, language, and diagnosis. Generalized estimating equations with a compound symmetry correlation structure and logit link were used for analysis. RESULTS/UNASSIGNED:= 0.01), which was eliminated by implementation of telemental health. CONCLUSIONS/UNASSIGNED:This study supports the use telemental health to increase access for all patients, including those from under-represented, lower socioeconomic status backgrounds.
PMCID:12040568
PMID: 40308563
ISSN: 2692-4366
CID: 5834012

Correction: Engaging Black youth in depression and suicide prevention treatment within urban schools: study protocol for a randomized controlled pilot

Lindsey, Michael A; Mufson, Laura; Vélez-Grau, Carolina; Grogan, Tracy; Wilson, Damali M; Reliford, Aaron O; Gunlicks-Stoessel, Meredith; Jaccard, James
PMID: 38605372
ISSN: 1745-6215
CID: 5725912

Race, Ethnicity, and the Medical "One-Liner": How Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Can Chart Its Own Antiracist Path Forward [Editorial]

Reliford, Aaron; Liu, Anni; Dhir, Sakshi; Schlechter, Alan
PMID: 37993762
ISSN: 1545-7230
CID: 5608602

Engaging Black youth in depression and suicide prevention treatment within urban schools: study protocol for a randomized controlled pilot

Lindsey, Michael A; Mufson, Laura; Vélez-Grau, Carolina; Grogan, Tracy; Wilson, Damali M; Reliford, Aaron O; Gunlicks-Stoessel, Meredith; Jaccard, James
BACKGROUND:Depression continues to be an ongoing threat to adolescent well-being with Black adolescents being particularly vulnerable to greater burdens of depression as well as lower mental health service utilization. Black adolescents are likely to have untreated depression due to social network influences, varied perceptions of services and providers, or self-stigma associated with experiencing depressive symptoms. Furthermore, if or when treatment is initiated, low engagement and early termination are common. To address this gap, a trial is being conducted to preliminarily test the effectiveness of an engagement intervention targeting Black adolescents with depression in school mental health services in New York City. METHODS:A total of 60 Black middle and high school adolescents displaying depressive symptoms are equally randomized (based on school site) to the treatment arms. Both trial arms deliver Interpersonal Psychotherapy for Depressed Adolescents (IPT-A), a time-limited, evidence-based treatment for depression. Additionally, one arm pairs IPT-A with a brief, multi-level engagement intervention, the Making Connections Intervention (MCI), involving adolescents, caregivers, and clinicians. Outcomes of interest are group differences in depression and suicide ideation, adolescent and caregiver engagement, and mental health service use. DISCUSSION/CONCLUSIONS:This trial will serve as an efficacy assessment of the MCI among a sample of Black adolescent students with depressive symptoms. Clinical and implementation results will be used to inform future research to further test the MCI intervention in a larger sample. TRIAL REGISTRATION/BACKGROUND:Registered by ClinicalTrials.gov on May 3, 2019, identifier: NCT03940508.
PMCID:10854091
PMID: 38336803
ISSN: 1745-6215
CID: 5632122

The Positive Approach to the Psychiatric Assessment: A Randomized Trial of a Novel Interviewing Technique

Schlechter, Alan; Moerdler-Green, Michael; Zabar, Sondra; Reliford, Aaron; New, Antonia; Feingold, Jordyn H; Guo, Fei; Horwitz, Sarah
OBJECTIVE:This pilot study compared a novel communication strategy, the positive approach to the psychiatric interview, with the traditional approach to see if the positive approach can be taught to psychiatric residents; reproduced with standardized patients; measured with a structured scale, the "Positive Approach Outcome Measure," by blinded raters; and used to improve rapport (assessed with the Bond score), a key driver of engagement. METHODS:Thirty psychiatric residents were randomly assigned to conduct two psychiatric interviews with standardized patients. The standardized patients completed the Working Alliance Inventory-Short Revised, an assessment of the therapeutic alliance. T tests and linear regression examined the effect of the training on the outcome of interest, the Bond score. RESULTS:The Bond scores for the positive approach group (M = 19.27, SD = 2.87) and the traditional approach group (M = 16.90, SD = 3.44) were statistically significantly different (p = 0.05). All residents trained in the positive approach received a positive score on the Positive Approach Outcome Measure while none of the traditional approach-trained residents attained the threshold. The inter-rater reliability for the blinded raters was high (0.857), as was the intra-rater reliability (1.0). CONCLUSIONS:The positive approach can be taught to residents and reproduced consistently and was associated with improvement in a key driver of treatment engagement: rapport. The positive approach may be an important, inexpensive intervention to improve treatment engagement and ultimately treatment outcomes.
PMID: 37651038
ISSN: 1545-7230
CID: 5618362

Patient and Clinician Satisfaction with the Early Implementation of Telemental Health Services in an Urban Behavioral Health Clinic During the COVID-19 Pandemic

Reliford, Aaron; Zhang, Emily; Lanina, Olga; Williams, Sharifa Z; Sanichar, Navin; Khan, Shabana; Dapkins, Isaac; Frankle, W Gordon
PMID: 36912813
ISSN: 1556-3669
CID: 5449312

The Behavioral Health Needs of Youth With Preexisting Psychiatric Disorders in the Aftermath of COVID-19

Rice, Timothy; Reliford, Aaron; Calov, Chiara; Rodriguez, James
Children and adolescents with psychiatric disorders are a sizable population of children and youth with special health care needs. While the capabilities of behavioral health resources to meet these youth's needs were already strained, the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic extended resource limitations just as this subgroup of children and youth with special health care needs faced new stressors and potential exacerbations of their underlying psychiatric illnesses. In this article, we provide a brief narrative review of the factors' manifestations with an emphasis upon their disproportionate impact upon children of color and their families and particularly those from disadvantaged communities. We proceed to provide policy proposals for addressing these disparities. These include raising reimbursement for behavioral health services, increasing telehealth care delivery, reducing inter-state licensing requirements, increasing community-based services, and addressing social determinants of health. Conclusions and directions for strengthening behavioral health service delivery capabilities and addressing systemic injustices are made.
PMCID:9579186
PMID: 36347759
ISSN: 1532-656x
CID: 5357252

Holding Space for Facilitated Dialogues on Antiracism in Academic Medicine [Letter]

Reliford, Aaron; Berry, Obianuju O; Burgos, Junior Javier; Liaw, K Ron-Li
The year 2020 brought unprecedented challenges and renewed focus on racial disparities and inequities in the United States. For racial and ethnic minority groups, and in particular African Americans, racial disparities have been a constant presence and threat from the time of slavery through the present day. These racial disparities, sanctioned and maintained by institutional racism, manifest in all aspects of life for African Americans-segregated and unequal education and housing systems, health and mental health care disparities, disproportionally elevated incarceration rates, and, as painfully highlighted this past year, continued vulnerability to acts of violence at the hands of law enforcement. In addition, most recently, there has been a renewed focus on the increased suicide rate for Black youth and its relationship to these racial disparities.1 In a large urban environment, our academic Child Psychiatry Department recognized that progress toward addressing racial disparities would be impeded without raising awareness and taking individual and collective action to identify implicit bias, power, and privilege differentials, and systemic racism inherent within academic medicine and our own lived experiences. This letter describes the development of such examination through facilitated dialogues on race and antiracism in our department.
PMID: 35364252
ISSN: 1527-5418
CID: 5206102

44.1 THE EXPERIENCE OF BLACK YOUTH IN THE UNITED STATES [Meeting Abstract]

Reliford, A O
Objectives: The history of racial discrimination against African American (AfAm) and Black people in the United States is deeply rooted in the history of this country. This presentation will help participants understand the intersection between racism, structural racism, and subsequent hardships as it relates to the AfAm youth's experience of discrimination. This presentation will also help participants learn practical approaches for exploring issues of discrimination with AfAm patients.
Method(s): The presenter will review the history of racial discrimination toward AfAm groups in the United States and give an overview of common experiences of discrimination for AfAm youth. Additionally, using the models of adolescent development of Erik Erikson, William Cross, James Marcia, and Beverly Tatum, the presenter will describe how racial prejudice impacts adolescent socialization and (racial) identity development, and the risk that this may confer for mental illness. Finally, the presenter will offer clinical pearls for clinicians to explore topics of racial and religious prejudice with AfAm patients.
Result(s): For AfAms, racism, segregation, and the resultant impacts on self-esteem and identity have been a constant reality and threat from the time of slavery through the present day. These brutal institutions, sanctioned and maintained by institutional racism, clearly manifest in all aspects of life for African Americans-segregated and unequal education system and housing, healthcare disparities, mental healthcare disparities, disproportionally elevated incarceration rates, and as painfully highlighted this past year, continued vulnerability to acts of violence at the hands of law enforcement. These disastrous long-term consequences have been documented and are clear. However, the experience of Black youth, introduced to these harsh realities over time, has strong implications during crucial periods of development, including physical, emotional, and identity development.
Conclusion(s): There is benefit for clinicians to incorporate exploration of the impact of racial discrimination, although it is challenging, in the evaluation and treatment of AfAm and Black youth. DEI, DEV, ADOL
Copyright
EMBASE:2014994845
ISSN: 1527-5418
CID: 5024302