TeenScreen
 

   
Schools & Communities Screening Steps & Best Practices


The goal of TeenScreen Schools and Communities is to ensure that all parents are offered the opportunity for their teens to receive a voluntary mental health checkup through school and community based locations. The program’s primary objective is to help identify mental health problems, such as depression, before they develop into more serious conditions.


TeenScreen Schools and Communities creates partnerships with schools and communities across the nation to implement their own screening programs for youth. The program is designed to be flexible to accommodate the specific needs and resources of each community interested in developing a local program.

Mental health screening can take place in any number of venues, including schools, clinics, foster care settings, juvenile justice facilities—in short, anywhere that a group of teens is present.

  1. Parent Consent and Teen Assent
  2. TeenScreen Schools and Communities is entirely voluntary. Parent consent must be obtained before screening is offered to a teen. Parents receive a letter explaining the nature and process of mental health screening and what will happen if the screening results indicate that their child may benefit from a complete mental health evaluation. After parent consent is obtained, teens are given a description of the program and informed about their rights to confidentiality. A youth must also give written assent to participate in the screening.

  3. Completion of the Screening Questionnaire
  4. Participants complete a 10-minute, pen-and-paper or computerized questionnaire. The questionnaires, which are scientifically tested, cover anxiety, depression, substance and alcohol abuse, and suicidal thoughts and behavior.

  5. Debriefing Interview/ Clinical Interview
  6. Youth who report no mental health problems on the questionnaire are seen briefly by program staff and then dismissed from the screening. If the results of the questionnaire indicate that the youth may have a problem, they proceed to a brief clinical interview with an on-site mental health professional to determine if further evaluation is needed. The screening does not involve diagnosis or treatment and TeenScreen Schools and Communities does not recommend or endorse any kind of treatment for youth who are identified by mental health screening.

  7. Parent Notification, Referral, and Case Management
  8. If the mental health professional decides that a more complete evaluation would be beneficial, the parents are notified and offered assistance with obtaining an appointment with a healthcare provider in the community. Treatment decisions, if any, are always left to parents.




 
 
 
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