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Provider News

Seattle Children’s Mental Health ED Patient Surge

October 16, 2025

Seattle Children’s is seeing very high numbers of pediatric patients with mental and behavioral health emergencies who require care in our Emergency Department and/or psychiatry inpatient unit.

Patients experiencing a medical emergency, including those at imminent risk of harm to self or others, should seek immediate care at the closest appropriate ED.

A significant number of patients presenting with mental health concerns are having to wait more than 24 hours in the ED for the next step in care, which may be an inpatient bed in our Psychiatry and Behavioral Medicine Unit (PBMU), a transfer to an outside facility or a discharge plan.

We are asking that you:

  1. Continue to identify and manage lower-acuity complaints in outpatient settings to help maintain ED capacity for higher-acuity concerns. Please see our Healthcare Professionals site for Resources for Community Providers.
  2. For urgent mental and behavioral health concerns not needing the care of an emergency department, inform families they can visit Psychiatric Urgent Care to make an in-person appointment or get in the virtual line for a video visit.
  3. Before sending your patient to the ED, contact our Mission Control team with as much notice as possibleat 206-987-8899.This helps us plan for your patient’s arrival. In appropriate instances, we may be able to directly admit your patient to the hospital or arrange an urgent ambulatory clinic visit in lieu of an ED visit.
  4. Please be aware that our inpatient PBMU has limited capacity. Patients seen in our ED who need inpatient psychiatric admission will be referred to all appropriate inpatient pediatric psychiatric facilities in Washington. Patients will be re-evaluated daily and may discharge directly from the ED once clinical stability is reached.
  5. Help set realistic expectations about an ED visit and/or inpatient admission with children, families and partners.
    • Patients and families should be prepared for potentially longer wait times.
    • An ED visit for mental or behavioral health typically involves an evaluation to determine if the child needs an inpatient psychiatric admission or is appropriate to discharge home.
    • As noted earlier, referrals to the PBMU could experience significant wait times and may not result in admission; we are asking all external partners to consider referring patients who need inpatient admission to all appropriate inpatient pediatric psychiatric facilities in Washington and consistently re-assess need for inpatient admission.
    • An inpatient psychiatric admission is typically 5 to 10 days and focused on acute crisis stabilization. It is not a long-term placement.