| Literature DB >> 34599735 |
Marisa E Marraccini1, Cari Pittleman2, Emily N Toole2, Megan R Griffard2.
Abstract
The immediate period following psychiatric hospitalization is marked by increased risk for suicide behavior and rehospitalization. Because adolescents commonly return to school settings following hospital discharge, school-related stressors and supports are important considerations for psychiatric treatment and discharge planning. The current study aimed to inform recommendations provided by hospitals to schools to improve school reintegration practices by employing a concurrent, mixed-methods design. Specifically, we: (1) surveyed school professionals (n = 133) in schools varying in resource availability and populations in one southeastern state of the United States about supports and services provided to returning students; and (2) conducted in-depth interviews with a subset of these professionals (n = 19) regarding their perceptions of the hospital to school transition for youth recovering from suicide-related crises. Findings from survey responses indicated that, compared to schools located in urban and suburban areas, schools in rural areas were less likely to have school reintegration protocols for returning students. More generally, however, available interventions and modifications were relatively consistent across rural and urban/suburban schools, schools serving high and low poverty communities, and schools with predominantly white and predominantly ethnic and racial minoritized student bodies. Key themes across interviews signify the importance of communication between stakeholders, the type of information used to develop re-entry plans, available school-based services for returning youth, and the need to mitigate stigma associated with mental health crises. Findings inform recommendations that can be provided by hospitals to schools to support adolescent recovery as they return to school following psychiatric hospitalization.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescents; Mental health policy; Psychoeducation; School reintegration; Suicide
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34599735 PMCID: PMC8486966 DOI: 10.1007/s11126-021-09942-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychiatr Q ISSN: 0033-2720
Procedures within school reintegration protocols
| Procedures for Re-Entry | N | Mandatory | Optional | Not Available |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phone communication with hospital staff | 66 | 9 (13.6) | 42 (63.6) | 15 (22.7) |
| In person visits by school staff to the hospital | 64 | 1 (1.6) | 35 (54.7) | 28 (43.8) |
| In person visits by hospital staff to the school | 64 | 0 (0.0) | 34 (53.1) | 30 (46.9) |
| Development of individualized re-entry plan | 66 | 39 (59.1) | 23 (34.8) | 4 (6.1) |
| Referral for Special Education/504 Evaluation | 64 | 6 (9.4) | 54 (84.4) | 4 (6.3) |
| Meeting with family about re-entry needs | 69 | 44 (63.8) | 23 (33.3) | 2 (2.9) |
| Meeting with student about re-entry needs | 69 | 45 (65.2) | 22 (31.9) | 2 (2.9) |
Numbers in this table represent frequencies (n), with percents (%) in parentheses
Components considered within school re-entry planning
| School Re-Entry Plan Components | N | Mandatory | Optional | Not Available |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Consideration of hospital evaluations/recommendations | 66 | 35 (53.0) | 26 (39.4) | 5 (7.6) |
| Consideration of previous school based evaluations | 65 | 33 (50.8) | 27 (41.5) | 5 (7.7) |
| Recommendations provided by Teachers | 65 | 20 (30.8) | 41 (63.1) | 4 (6.2) |
| Recommendations provided by School Counselors | 65 | 32 (49.2) | 31 (47.7) | 2 (3.1) |
| Recommendations provided by School Social Workers | 66 | 25 (37.9) | 35 (53.0) | 6 (9.1) |
| Recommendations provided by School Psychologists | 65 | 15 (23.1) | 42 (64.6) | 8 (12.3) |
| Recommendations provided by outside mental health professionals | 66 | 24 (36.4) | 39 (59.1) | 3 (4.5) |
| Recommendations provided by parents or other family members | 66 | 34 (51.5) | 29 (43.9) | 3 (4.5) |
| Recommendations provided by student | 66 | 30 (45.5) | 33 (50.0) | 3 (4.5) |
| Recommendations provided by others | 65 | 8 (12.3) | 53 (81.5) | 4 (6.2) |
| Separate school for transition prior to return to classes | 65 | 3 (4.6) | 22 (33.8) | 40 (61.5) |
| Gradual return to school using transition space outside of school (e.g., separate facility for academic and social-emotional support) | 64 | 3 (4.7) | 33 (51.6) | 28 (43.8) |
| Gradual return to academic classes using transition space within school (e.g., separate area for academic and social-emotional support) | 65 | 2 (3.1) | 46 (70.8) | 17 (26.2) |
Numbers in this table represent frequencies (n), with percents (%) in parentheses
Key individuals involved in school reintegration
| Individuals Involved in Re-Entry | N | Never | Sometimes | Always | N/A |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| School Psychologist | 107 | 38 (35.5) | 43 (40.2) | 7 (6.5) | 19 (17.8) |
| School Counselor | 109 | 0 (0.0) | 33 (30.3) | 71 (65.1) | 5 (4.6) |
| Principal | 108 | 8 (7.4) | 52 (48.1) | 43 (39.8) | 5 (4.6) |
| Vice Principal or Assistant Principal | 106 | 9 (8.5) | 63 (59.4) | 24 (22.6) | 10 (9.4) |
| School Nurse | 108 | 14 (13.0) | 72 (66.7) | 16 (14.8) | 6 (5.6) |
| School Social Worker | 109 | 6 (5.5) | 63 (57.8) | 24 (22.0) | 16 (14.7) |
| Special Education Teacher(s) | 108 | 14 (13.0) | 79 (73.1) | 4 (3.7) | 11 (10.2) |
| Regular Education Teacher | 108 | 19 (17.6) | 68 (63.0) | 13 (12.0) | 8 (7.4) |
| Parents or Family | 108 | 1 (0.9) | 35 (32.4) | 68 (63.0) | 4 (3.7) |
| Student | 107 | 2 (1.9) | 36 (33.6) | 65 (60.7) | 4 (3.7) |
Numbers in this table represent frequencies (n), with percents (%) in parentheses
Available services to returning students
| Requirements | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Services | N | Available | None | IEP | 504 |
| Off-site tutoring | 102 | 17 (16.7) | 14 (82.4) | 3 (17.6) | 2 (11.8) |
| On-site tutoring | 106 | 79 (74.5) | 76 (96.2) | 2 (2.5) | 2 (2.5) |
| Peer mentoring programs | 103 | 31 (30.1) | 30 (96.8) | 1 (3.2) | (0) |
| Adult mentoring programs | 101 | 24 (23.9) | 24 (100) | (0) | (0) |
| Check in/Check out (e.g., regular check ins with students by adult) | 105 | 95 (90.5) | 91 (95.8) | 2 (2.1) | 1 (1.1) |
| Self-monitoring instruction | 101 | 62 (61.4) | 57 (91.9) | 3 (4.8) | 1 (1.6) |
| Transition space within school (e.g., separate area for academic and social-emotional support) | 104 | 74 (71.2) | 61 (82.4) | 9 (12.2) | 10 (13.5) |
| Transition space outside of school (e.g., separate facility for academic and social-emotional support) | 104 | 25 (24.0) | 18 (72.0) | 6 (24.0) | 6 (24.0) |
| Group counseling | 99 | 31 (31.3) | 31 (100) | (0) | (0) |
| Individual counseling | 102 | 95 (93.1) | 92 (95.8) | 1 (1.1) | 1 (1.1) |
| Social skills groups | 97 | 35 (36.1) | 35 (100) | (0) | (0) |
| Support with time management/ assignment make-up | 101 | 90 (89.1) | 80 (88.9) | 7 (7.8) | 6 (6.7) |
| Personalized Early Outreach | 101 | 59 (58.4) | 57 (96.6) | 1 (1.7) | 1 (1.7) |
Numbers in this table represent frequencies (n), with percents (%) in parentheses. Participants could select multiple responses for requirements, so total percent may exceed 100%. IEP = Individualized Education Plan
Available accommodations to returning students
| Requirements | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Accommodations | N | Available | None | IEP | 504 |
| Universal pass (to visit school counselor, social worker, etc. at any time) | 104 | 92 (88.5) | 84 (91.3) | 2 (2.2) | 6 (6.5) |
| Excused absences following return to school | 103 | 83 (80.6) | 68 (100) | 5 (7.4) | 12 (17.6) |
| Pass to attend school late or leave school early | 101 | 68 (67.3) | 48 (70.6) | 8 (11.8) | 16 (23.5) |
| Reduced assignments/workload | 104 | 94 (90.4) | 51 (54.3) | 31 (33) | 38 (40.4) |
| Extended deadlines for assignments | 105 | 103 (98.1) | 61 (59.2) | 33 (32) | 40 (38.8) |
| Missing work forgiveness | 105 | 96 (91.4) | 79 (82.3) | 12 (12.5) | 16 (16.7) |
| Extended time limits for tests | 98 | 72 (73.5) | 27 (37.5) | 34 (47.2) | 42 (58.3) |
| Open-book tests | 95 | 49 (51.6) | * | * | * |
| Opportunity to take tests in quiet location | 97 | 79 (81.4) | * | * | * |
| Opportunity to retake tests | 98 | 82 (83.7) | * | * | * |
| Breaking long tests into shorter time blocks | 97 | 68 (70.1) | * | * | * |
| Alternatives to traditional testing (e.g., oral presentations, projects, etc.) | 95 | 59 (62.1) | 28 (47.5) | 25 (42.4) | 33 (55.9) |
Numbers in this table represent frequencies (n), with percents (%) in parentheses. Participants could select multiple responses for requirements, so total percent may exceed 100%. IEP = Individualized Education Plan; * due to an error in survey branching logic, these estimates are not available
Themes and illustrative quotes related to school processes for reintegration
| Topic and Theme | Participant | Quote(s) |
|---|---|---|
| 1.1 Re-Entry Protocols, Meeting, and Planning | School Psychologist | We try to provide those services to help them be successful, and then we do some follow-up on them. If I'm not there, a lot of times that doesn't happen which has been an issue. What ends up happening is instead of a student services meeting, it becomes a counseling meeting where they talk about their paperwork and courses and stuff like that. The socioemotional piece goes to the back burner. I think that happens in a lot of schools in talking to colleagues and friends. That seems to be an overriding concern is that we really have got to work together as a team. |
| School Counselor | Part of discharge is doing a teleconference where we talk about how things look, and the kids involved. The parent’s involved. A teacher is involved so we can determine how we do best help this kid, where it’s a team approach instead of just the doctor determining or just me determining. We’re working together. | |
| School Counselor | The main goals for the meeting are: What do we need to know to make sure that this student is happy and healthy and safe at school? Except from that, the reason the nurse is there is if there's anything medication-related that she needs to know about. The rest of us are there to put a safety plan in place. Do we have to have extra eyes on the student? Are they safe to be unaccompanied at school? What is the follow-up care? Is there anything the student is gonna be do—Do they see the school-based therapist? Will they be seeing somebody here at school, or are they following up with the therapists outside of school? What do we need to know? | |
| Social Worker | She was out for so long and then it became the issue that it’s like, “Y’all, we told her not come back until we had it [documentation from hospital] and now she’s got all these days and you’re sending me out,” because I was involved in the process with the mental health, I’m followin’ up on the back end about days. Then the parent tells me that the counselor said that she couldn’t go back until she had seen a therapist and they were waitin’ on an appointment. They’re not always readily available. That’s been an issue. That’s happened and it’s caused issues. | |
| School Psychologist | We will try and go about—usually myself or attendants or somebody will try and contact the parents to get some sort of a note, and just let them know that we’re not trying to be nosy, but we need to code the absences correctly so the student’s—and typically that’s how we handle that and then the work can be adjusted accordingly. | |
| 2.1 Accommodations | Principal | We work with the parents, making sure the child gets here, or we modify the schedules to try to still accommodate the student, make sure they're still able to get the credit and the work that they've done. Sometimes, we have to pull the student out of a class and put them in the online program. Just depends on what the child needs. You know, you're dealing with mental health. It's not like fixing a car. |
| School Psychologist | We've had some cases where we have modified the school day. We've had cases where we've done some online—doing like a hybrid schedule, so maybe an online class and coming for a period or two. I'm hesitant not to have the kid in school because I'm worried about what's gonna be happening at home. I want them to have as much normalcy as possible. It worries me when we push too much for homebound and stuff because I feel like we're making the problem worse in a lot of situations. | |
| School Counselor | One girl last year, major anxiety. She needed to be touching something. We said, she's holding onto one of my squeeze balls, or she's scratching her pants, moving, doing something, a pen. That's her coping mechanism so let her do that. Another girl that I have right now this year, she will doodle in her notebook. Middle school identified that. She won't necessarily be writing your notes down, but she's drawing. Let her draw. That's her way of coping when she's feeling that anxiety in the classroom. She has asthma, but I think she uses her inhaler as a crutch more so than for asthma. Let her use her inhaler at any time for any reason whatsoever. She's gonna have that with her. | |
| Teacher | One of the things I think that’s extremely important that I try to do is get the kids who are in these situations on a plan of self-advocacy when they come back, when they transfer back in. When I get that list together of things like that, when they’re getting their initials from their teacher on what’s exempt and what’s not, I ask them specifically to dialogue with me about how they’re gonna have a conversation with the teacher that says, “I missed this work. What do I need to make up? What do I need to prioritize?” We dialogue it. We practice it. Then they say those things. Or we compose an email together and say, “This is what I need to do.” They learn those skills, so, in case it does happen again, they’re not alone. They have the skills to transfer back into a job, or a college class, or a relationship. You know what I mean? | |
| Teacher | A lotta that is really on the student, too, because here’s how it goes. I say this a lot, and it is true. Students get the teacher they ask for. If the student is a good student, then chances are their teachers cut ‘em some slack. If the student was a pain in their rear end, chances are they don’t. Fair or not, that’s the way the world works [laughter]. It works that way in high school too. | |
| Social Worker | I took a parent to court for attendance and I found out in the courtroom that her son had been hospitalized. She didn’t tell us… She told us in court and so it was like, “That would’ve been somethin’ that would’ve been excused. We would’ve wanted to know to support you and we could’ve avoided this.” We felt like she was just keepin’ him out of school. She wouldn’t respond to us. | |
| 2.2 Interventions | School Counselor | Let's make sure everything's good for their schedule. Let's set up a time they're gonna come see me again as we follow up and just check, just kind of a check-on bases. Then I'm usually talking with the student. When's your next appointment? What are your plans? Has your mom followed up? Is she still taking you to therapy? It's so important you continue to do that. |
| 2.3 IEP/504/Behavior Plan | School Counselor | It could be a 504 plan. It just depends on the situation. I'm prepared in all these situations to potentially do a 504 plan, but there are parents that have not brought any kind of documentation. |
| 3.1 Family | School Counselor | Okay, I’ve got a kid who’s had surgery before. They come back, and they have—and again, this is up to the parent to share with me, but the parent shares with me what they’re capable of doing. I had one in a car accident right before school started last year, and she transitioned back in where she came one day for first and second and the next day for third and fourth. We had things in place for her, use of the elevator. When a kid comes back for mental health, what is their expectation? What’s too much for them? |
| School Counselor | I think my most frustrating thing is, unless I already have a relationship with the student and the parent, I'm not necessarily gonna know that they've gone to the hospital. That is incredibly frustrating. | |
| School Psychologist | If they [the student] feel comfortable we’ll contact the parents, but sometimes they don’t want us to do that because the parent doesn’t want us to know we were there—they were there. Usually we will contact the parent to try and find out. | |
| 3.2 School Professionals | School Counselor | Any time I talk with a parent about anything, I always say, “Is it okay for the teachers to know?” There’s certain information that should not be shared. If there is a kid who the teacher has no clue what’s goin’ on, they might totally miss what we would think would be a very visible sign that something’s not right. They might just think they’re havin’ an off day when in fact, it’s much more than that. |
| School Counselor | There’s some situations where I email it out, and then there’s some situations where I go and talk to the teacher privately. “Hey, I have a situation I need your help with.” Again, I know the teachers. The doctors don’t know. The parents don’t know. | |
| Teacher | Because that is gonna show in the class. You know? If the teacher is the first one—like on a daily basis with the child—if the teacher is aware of that, I think there is an extra help that that child can have it. | |
| Social Worker | The principal will communicate with the teacher and say, “Look. This is goin’ on with this kid. I need your help in workin’ with them to get this done.” He encourages them to meet, to speak individually and say, “Okay, this is what we need to do.” Sometimes they’ll even waive work. The teachers will go above and beyond if they know what’s goin’ on and how they can help, I feel like. | |
| 3.3 Outside Providers | School Psychologist | Parent will sign the release usually. Then if we have concerns we’ll communicate back and forth with the parent and the therapist so that everybody is on the same page. We’ll even sometimes set up a Google form—a sheet that’ll go back and forth with everybody so people know what’s going on. |
| 3.4 Awareness of Hospitalization | Social Worker | If we know that they're brought to the ER or ED and we know that they're waiting in the hospital, we typically don't know when—we never know when they're—what the resolution to that visit is. Sometimes I'll just happen to be in the hallway and see them walk by. "Oh, what happened?" They'll let me know they were in the ER for 12 days or whatever. |
| School Psychologist | When I sit there, I ask what worked for the child at the hospital, and what they think that they need now to be successful coming back to school. I try to talk about the strengths of that child and build upon those strengths to put a plan in place for that kid. I ask them what they need. I don't try to just throw accommodations at them or ideas at them without hearing from the kid. | |
| Social Worker | As well as, okay, at what point—there's also some limit setting that we have to do. At what point in time do we need to potentially look at more serious steps if that ends up becoming a problem. In other words, if you're making threat of harm to self, at what point are we activating the system again that maybe got you in the hospital in the first place? Because, just 'cause a kids says, "Hey, I wanna hurt myself," doesn't mean that at that exact moment in time you're calling in the Calvary. It may be this is a regular thing for this student, at which point, someone who is trained in it has an opportunity to do a basic suicide assessment to see where they're at. | |
| School Counselor | Just trying to normalize that, trying to say, “If your student came back from a car accident, and they had a broken leg and crutches, I would need to know what we need to do. I would need to know how the school can best help them. Do I need to have their lunch brought to them?” Normalizing it more, drawing the analogy between a mental health concern and a physical health concern and trying to help them understand because, again, a lot of them—sometimes it’s even at the parent level. The kids are more willing to talk about these things than the parents sometimes because it’s—there’s shame, or there’s guilt, or there’s something associated with it. | |
IEP Individualized Education Plan
Themes and illustrative quotes related to perceptions of student and family experiences of reintegration
| Topic and Theme | Participant | Quote(s) |
|---|---|---|
| 1.1 Perceptions of Treatment in Hospital | School Counselor | Like I said, they usually come back and say they feel better. Of course, they're happy to be home. For the most part, I don't think it's a wholly unpleasant experience, but they're ready to have a little freedom back as well. |
| Teacher | Unfortunately, a lotta kids have come back after the 72 hours, or they come back and they have a different cocktail of medication. You know what I mean? | |
| 1.2 Perceptions of Student Feelings in School | Teacher | She seemed a little lost from being away for so many days. Other than that, she said she was coping better with her problems. That’s what she told me. |
| Social Worker | They feel very overwhelmed. | |
| 1.3 Perceptions of How School Members View Student | School Counselor | The students were also talking about this other young lady and said, "Wow, we hadn't seen her the entire semester and she just showed up one day in our math class." The teacher didn't have a seat for her and they were talking about her. Her perception that people were talking about her is probably accurate. It is really difficult. How do you explain to people that you're struggling with mental health and that's why you've been absent or that you're hospitalized or where you've been? |
| Teacher | I’ve only had to do it classwide three times because it was a schoolwide knowledge. So-and-so got on social media and said that they were gonna kill themselves or something. If it’s gone schoolwide, social media, then I do a class. “Write it down. What are your questions? I’ll address the ones that I can.” If it’s not necessarily schoolwide, but it’s only groups, I’ve had students come to me and say—and I think it’s because I’m somebody who’s going to answer their questions the best I can without stepping over any—or by therapizing. I joke with my kids. “I’m not the therapizer.” You know what I mean? “I’m your teacher who can get you to the people that can help, so I just want you to—if you have any questions, I’m here.” Small groups would come to me and ask, and that’s when I would deal with it in a small-group situation, also. Especially the kids who are the ones who reported it, or if they reported it to me, they’ll follow up and say, “Well, what’s gonna happen?” “Well, they’re gonna get the help that they need. Hopefully, they get the help that they need, and we’re gonna do everything to support it, help them transitioning back in.” | |
| Social Worker | When you have a kid who has a connection, a routine connection and a staff—an adult that they know they can go to that genuinely cares, that meets them with the right verbal and nonverbal language and you have extra support and you have a parent that’s involved, that’s your winning combo. If you don’t have that, then I haven’t seen that much success. | |
| Social Worker | Some of our families have got—we all have our skeletons in the closet, every one of us. Some of those skeletons in some folks' closets are bigger than others, and they don't want that out. As a result, they may not want to share the appropriate information because they see it as an invasion of privacy, or they see—there's an embarrassment of some type that's associated—some negative stigma that's associated with them sharing information rightfully or wrongfully so. I definitely see some barriers with some of our families. | |
| School Counselor | They're suicidal. You make a phone call. The mom says, "She just had her cell phone taken away last night. She's not suicidal. We've had her to the doctor. He said there's nothing wrong with her." I've gotten that a few times. The e-mail alert came through the support services. They shared it with the three of us. I was somewhere else, so the counselor—one of my colleagues grabbed her. She was thinking about hurting herself, so she calls the mom that day and says, "Listen. This is the e-mail alert that came through." The mom still didn't believe it, did not come to school, had not taken her to therapy. That night, the girl takes pills, and the mom ends up finding her and takes her to the ER, and she's hospitalized for the, the next couple days. That's frustrating. It happens in white and Black. It doesn't matter the nationality. | |
| Social Worker | It put things into perspective for me because I never thought, number one, that I’d be goin’ through it, but then when I did, I could—I sit with people and I just—I know what they’ve been through. Sometimes you don’t wanna tell the school because they look at you like somethin’s wrong with your kid. I get why parents don’t wanna tell the school and I get why people don’t wanna go to the hospital because it’s just—it’s a broken system, but I feel like it can be helpful if they get resources. We had outpatient. We’ve done inpatient. This, that was eye-openin’, goin’ through it yourself. | |
| School Counselor | Again, the stigma I feel like lies within the kid’s family, not from us. | |
| Social Worker | It seems like we've come—we've either come a long way, or we're beginning to have come a long way in terms of with younger folks, with students attaching that negative stigma to mental-health stuff and hospitalization. I think the bigger stigma is probably with the adults to tell you the truth. That's why we look at it at a case-by-case basis because we have some teachers and adults that are—they're in a great place as far as not attaching that negative stigma to mental-health stuff. We have other folks who are like, "Yep, that one's bat-ass crazy and blah, blah, blah." You know what I mean? They have got that typical old-school. | |
Steps for preparing for school re-entry following discharge
| 1 | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | Consider the following modifications that may require an IEP or 504 Plan, tailored to each student’s needs: Consider the following interventions that are only available in some schools, tailored to each student’s needs: |
| 5 |
Although available supports and services may vary by school, * indicates a modification that may commonly require an IEP or 504 plan and ** indicates an intervention that may commonly vary according to school resource availability
IEP Individualized Education Planning