Technology Matters: Emerging technologies in clinical informatics to support child and adolescent mental healthcare safety
Technology Matters: Emerging technologies in clinical informatics to support child and adolescent mental healthcare safety

Technology Matters: Emerging technologies in clinical informatics to support child and adolescent mental healthcare safety

Child Adolesc Ment Health. 2026 Apr 6. doi: 10.1111/camh.70094. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

Electronic health records (EHRs) can support patient safety across medical settings but require thoughtful adaptation to serve specialty care. This article provides an overview of how EHRs intersect with safety in child and adolescent mental health care, showcasing three distinct clinical domains: psychotropic medication safety, self-harm risk mitigation, and monitoring of restrictive measures, including involuntary detainment. While innovations demonstrate promise, challenges persist, including alert fatigue, implementation variability, nascent adaptation for child and adolescent mental health, and emerging evidence of algorithmic bias in detection of high-risk youth. The rapidly evolving landscape of EHR-interfaced artificial intelligence (subsuming ambient documentation, machine learning prediction models, and large language models) advances faster than evidence accumulation. Development of effective safety technologies requires active collaboration between child mental health clinicians/practitioners and clinical informatics teams to ensure new tools are clinically valid, evidence-based, acceptable, tailored to mental health care, and developmentally appropriate. Translation of new EHR technologies to better safety outcomes necessitates purposeful involvement of young people and their families alongside mental health clinicians.

PMID:41937617 | DOI:10.1111/camh.70094