TY - JOUR AU - L. Durette AU - C. Oden AU - N. Rudig AU - N. Parikh A1 - AB - OBJECTIVE: The authors aim to measure differences in primary care clinicians' (PCC's) perceptions of managing pediatric mental health before and after launch of a child psychiatry access program (the access program) and identify the impact of engaging trainees from child psychiatry, pediatrics, and family medicine in administration and use of this program. METHODS: Child psychiatry fellows provide coverage of a grant-funded state-wide access program and engage trainee-peers in learning how to use the program. A survey measuring PCC's experience managing children's mental health conditions was administered before and after the child psychiatry access program launched. Rotation evaluations collect trainee's feedback. RESULTS: Statistically significant differences are identified before and after the program's launch in PCC's perception of access to child psychiatry (U = 294.5, p < 0.001) and between PCC's perceptions of the impact of behavioral health problems in their patients in those with less than 4 years post-residency training compared with those with 4 or more years post-residency (U = 524.5, p < .01). Trainee evaluation of the rotation is consistently positive (average 5:6 rating). CONCLUSION: The authors conclude that (1) the presence of a state-wide access program positively impacts PCC's reported access to child psychiatry; (2) child psychiatry fellows rate the clinical rotation experience favorably; and (3) there appears to be an association between less time out of primary care residency training and perception of improved access to child psychiatry and less clinical burden from behavioral health issues. Further research is required to understand the impact of a training in this model. AD - Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine at UNLV, Las Vegas, NV, USA. lisa.durette@unlv.edu.; Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine at UNLV, Las Vegas, NV, USA.; Center for Community Solutions, Las Vegas, NV, USA. AN - 37749445 BT - Acad Psychiatry C5 - Healthcare Disparities; Education & Workforce CP - 3 DA - Jun DO - 10.1007/s40596-023-01860-z DP - NLM ET - 20230925 IS - 3 JF - Acad Psychiatry LA - eng N2 - OBJECTIVE: The authors aim to measure differences in primary care clinicians' (PCC's) perceptions of managing pediatric mental health before and after launch of a child psychiatry access program (the access program) and identify the impact of engaging trainees from child psychiatry, pediatrics, and family medicine in administration and use of this program. METHODS: Child psychiatry fellows provide coverage of a grant-funded state-wide access program and engage trainee-peers in learning how to use the program. A survey measuring PCC's experience managing children's mental health conditions was administered before and after the child psychiatry access program launched. Rotation evaluations collect trainee's feedback. RESULTS: Statistically significant differences are identified before and after the program's launch in PCC's perception of access to child psychiatry (U = 294.5, p < 0.001) and between PCC's perceptions of the impact of behavioral health problems in their patients in those with less than 4 years post-residency training compared with those with 4 or more years post-residency (U = 524.5, p < .01). Trainee evaluation of the rotation is consistently positive (average 5:6 rating). CONCLUSION: The authors conclude that (1) the presence of a state-wide access program positively impacts PCC's reported access to child psychiatry; (2) child psychiatry fellows rate the clinical rotation experience favorably; and (3) there appears to be an association between less time out of primary care residency training and perception of improved access to child psychiatry and less clinical burden from behavioral health issues. Further research is required to understand the impact of a training in this model. PY - 2024 SN - 1042-9670 SP - 233 EP - 237+ ST - Clinicians' Experience with a Graduate Medical Education Implemented Child Psychiatry Access Program T1 - Clinicians' Experience with a Graduate Medical Education Implemented Child Psychiatry Access Program T2 - Acad Psychiatry TI - Clinicians' Experience with a Graduate Medical Education Implemented Child Psychiatry Access Program U1 - Healthcare Disparities; Education & Workforce U3 - 10.1007/s40596-023-01860-z VL - 48 VO - 1042-9670 Y1 - 2024 ER -