Quality Improvement Initiative to Implement Anxiety Screening for Children and Teens With Headache and Epilepsy.
Publication/Presentation Date
6-1-2025
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: We conducted a quality improvement initiative to implement standardized screening for anxiety among adolescents with headache and/or epilepsy receiving outpatient neurology care at a quaternary health care system, consistent with recommendations from the American Academy of Neurology. Our SMART (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, and Time-Based) aim was to screen ≥90% of established patients aged 12 years or older seen by a participating health care professional using a standardized anxiety screener by February 2024.
METHODS: This initiative was conducted in patients seen for follow-up by 17 participating neurology health care professionals. Health care professional opinions were assessed before and after implementation of the Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7 (GAD-7), administered as a previsit questionnaire distributed using the electronic health record. The integrated workflow included a best practice advisory (BPA) alert that permitted easy access to interventions and automatic population of education materials into the after-visit summary. After 12 months of use (March 2023 to February 2024), we assessed demographic and diagnostic information, GAD-7 completion rates, anxiety symptom severity, BPA utilization, and health care professional acceptance of the intervention.
RESULTS: The GAD-7 was completed for 64% of 3,671 encounters and by 71% of 2031 unique patients. The GAD-7 was more often completed for encounters if the patient was female, younger, or White or had a headache diagnosis. Among unique patients, anxiety symptoms were minimal in 50%, mild in 24%, moderate in 17%, and severe in 10%. Severe anxiety symptoms were more often present in female patients or those with a headache diagnosis. Among patients with severe anxiety symptoms, 66% had established behavioral health care plans and, for remaining patients, referrals were made to community behavioral health care professionals (11%), or pediatric psychologists (4%) or social workers (3%) within neurology. Clinicians indicated that the approach was easy to use and improved the quality of patient care.
DISCUSSION: We implemented standardized EHR-based screening for anxiety symptoms for pediatric neurology patients, most of whom had headache or epilepsy. Screening was feasible, and approximately one-quarter of patients had moderate or severe anxiety symptoms. Future work will focus on improving completion rates of previsit questionnaires including the GAD-7 and optimizing clinician actions based on the screening data.
Volume
15
Issue
3
First Page
200458
Last Page
200458
ISSN
2163-0402
Published In/Presented At
Murphy, C., Molisani, S. E., Riisen, A. C., Scotti-Degnan, C. M., Karvounides, D., Witzman, S., Kaufman, M. C., Gonzalez, A. K., Ramos, M., Szperka, C. L., Abend, N. S., & Division of Neurology Quality Improvement Program (2025). Quality Improvement Initiative to Implement Anxiety Screening for Children and Teens With Headache and Epilepsy. Neurology. Clinical practice, 15(3), e200458. https://doi.org/10.1212/CPJ.0000000000200458
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences | Pediatrics
PubMedID
40182316
Department(s)
Department of Pediatrics
Document Type
Article