Children’s
Hospital of Atlanta at Egleston
General
Description
Egleston,
a part of the recently merged Egleston and Scottish Rite Children’s
Hospitals now called Children’s Hospital of Atlanta (CHOA),
is a 230 bed private teaching hospital that serves as one of the primary
inpatient facilities for the Emory Department of Pediatrics. Egleston
provides both primary care for children, adolescents, and their families
in metropolitan Atlanta and tertiary care for patients throughout
the Southeast. At this time the only child psychiatric service at
Egleston is an active consultation/liaison service highly focused
on children with chronic illnesses.
CLINICAL
SERVICES
Egleston
Pediatric Consultation/Liaison Services
Medical Director: Adolph Casal, M.D. who is a CHOA employee on the
voluntary faculty of the Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry/Department
of Psychiatry
Location: ECH — Dr. Casal also directs the C/L services at CHOA
- Scottish Rite (SR). Emory residents do not presently participate
at Scottish Rite Hospital.
Faculty and Staff
Teaching Attending: Sandra Sexson, M.D.
One part-time Clinical Psychologist (Emory faculty paid by Egleston)
One part-time Clinical Nurse Specialist
Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Residents (1 FTE)
Psychology Trainees
Emory and Visiting Medical Students on elective (average about 4 annually)
The ECH
Pediatric C/L Service provides diagnostic, consultative and treatment
services for emotional and behavioral symptoms in children and adolescents
who are patients on the medical/surgical services at ECH. A particular
focus of this service is the emotional component of the total care
of the acutely or chronically ill children and adolescents and their
families. The C/L Service sees approximately 30 consults per month.
Most consultations except for those to the emergency services are
on-going and require a minimum of two contacts and frequently daily/QOD
contacts for weeks to months. Automatic consults occur on most organ
and bone marrow transplant patients. Child and adolescent psychiatry
residents on rotation consulted on almost 200 patients during the
2000-2001 academic year, with age range from 2 to 18 years, with the
most frequent diagnoses being adjustment disorders, depression, conversion
disorders, and psychological factors affecting a physical disorder
with a small but significant number of psychotic disorders. Child
psychiatry residents backed up by Emory faculty attendings cover the
Egleston emergency room at nights and on weekends.