Mission Statement of The Division of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry of
St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center
St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center is a two-sited voluntary hospital that serves as the
provider of both primary and more specialized medical care for a socio-economically and
ethnically diverse population of over 500,000 people. In addition, it is an academic medical
center, with medical specialty and sub-specialty programs, health professional training programs,
and a commitment to research.
The Division of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry reflects this orientation. The mission
of the Division as a whole is to provide a full range of accessible, coordinated and clinically
sophisticated child and adolescent psychiatric treatment programs, which meet the needs
of a diverse community, while also maintaining state-of-the-art standards of treatment
and quality assurance. These programs deliver a coordinated continuum of care including
outpatient services, school-based day programs, home and community based services, blended
case management services, as well as crisis and emergency intervention. In addition, the
Division is committed to helping to assure the future of child and adolescent psychiatry,
by producing well-trained, experienced and community-minded child and adolescent clinicians
including psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers, creative arts therapists and others through
its training programs. The Division includes research activities in the treatment of child and
adolescent psychiatric disorders, and outcomes research among other areas.
The Division serves individuals from birth to age twenty-one, their families and individual adult
family members in our program who require psychiatric services.
In each setting, the orientation is to provide rapid and accurate assessment and subsequent
placement in an appropriate treatment program, with a comprehensive treatment plan, appropriate
to the clinical, cultural and social characteristics of the patient and their families,
consistent with standards of quality treatment.
Since potential patients might have their first contact with the Division in any number
of settings, first-rate assessment skills are expected of staff in all locations to
assure appropriate diagnosis and treatment planning. Further, programs endeavor to maintain
or develop social supports for individuals to assist with school, family and community
integration and reduce stigma that can result from having a psychiatric treatment history.
Also, the interdisciplinary approach to treatment is encouraged, which is reflected in
treatment planning, and is aimed at assuring that clinical objectives are well-articulated
with social, education, medical, vocational, habilitation and other goals. The Division?s
consultation/liaison services provide the same level of support and expertise to patients
who are receiving care in other hospital pediatric units, including the HIV Center,
the Pediatric Obesity Clinic and Pediatric Sickle Cell Program.
In sum, the Division embraces the hospital's mission to provide outstanding health care,
to provide the highest quality of education to health care professionals and to further
research medical knowledge and develop medical excellence in health care delivery.
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