USPSTF Recommends Physicians Routinely Screen Teens For Depression

The Los Angeles Times (2/8, Healy) “Science Now” blog reports that yesterday, the US Preventive Services Task Force “recommended that physicians routinely screen children between 12 and 18 for depression and have systems in place either to diagnose, treat and monitor those who screen positive or to refer them to specialists who can.” The USPSTF’s recommendations now “bring depression screening for adolescents into line with recently issued depression-screening recommendations that apply to adults.”

Reuters (2/8, Seaman) reports that the recommendations were published online Feb. 8 in the Annals of Internal Medicine.

According to CNN (2/8, Storrs), the USPSTF has decided that “for children younger than 12, there is not enough evidence around which tests work and which treatments are effective to recommend that doctors screen all individuals in this age group.” For children 12 and older, the USPSTF supports “the use of antidepressant medication for treating adolescents who have depression,” in addition to cognitive behavioral therapy or a combination of CBT and medication.

Related Links:

— “Adolescents should be screened for depression too, federal panel says,” Melissa Healy, Los Angeles Times, February 8, 2016.

Posted in In The News.