46 research outputs found

    Training of child and adolescent psychiatry fellows in autism and intellectual disability

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    Patients with autism spectrum disorders and intellectual disability can be clinically complex and often have limited access to psychiatric care. Because little is known about post-graduate clinical education in autism spectrum disorder and intellectual disability, we surveyed training directors of child and adolescent psychiatry fellowship programs. On average, child and adolescent psychiatry directors reported lectures of 3 and 4 h per year in autism spectrum disorder and intellectual disability, respectively. Training directors commonly reported that trainees see 1-5 patients with autism spectrum disorder or intellectual disability per year for outpatient pharmacological management and inpatient treatment. Overall, 43% of directors endorsed the need for additional resources for training in autism spectrum disorder and intellectual disability, which, coupled with low didactic and clinical exposure, suggests that current training is inadequate

    Normative Data for Female Adolescents with Eating Disorders on the Multidimensional Anxiety Scale for Children

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    Objective: To provide normative data on the Multidimensional Anxiety Scale for Children (MASC) for female adolescents presenting for eating disorder (ED) treatment. Method: This study is part of the Helping to Outline Paediatric Eating Disorders Project registry (N ~ 1,000), a prospective ongoing registry study comprising consecutive pediatric tertiary ED referrals. Female adolescents (N=278; 13–17 years) with EDs completed the MASC at intake. Results: Summary data including percentiles are given for the MASC total and subscales. MASC scores were higher than community norms as expected and increased with age (p<.001) and an anorexic spectrum diagnosis (p<.001). Discussion: The norms reported will aid clinicians in the understanding and interpretation of individual MASC scores among female adolescents with EDs and could assist future research to better understand the role of anxiety in the onset and maintenance of EDs
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