Moving Integrated Care for Pediatric Somatic Symptoms into Primary Care: An Innovative Approach.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
11-2025
Publication Title
Journal of Clinical Psychology in Medical Settings
Abstract
Integrated behavioral healthcare has addressed common pediatric primary care concerns including anxiety and depression, but is infrequently applied to somatic symptoms (e.g., chronic pain, fatigue, or syncope unattributable to organic causes), which affect one in three youth. Developing an integrated care model for primary care-where most youth with somatic symptoms first present for evaluation and management-may increase access and positively impact child health. This manuscript summarizes the literature surrounding integrated care for pediatric somatic symptoms and proposes an adapted model for primary care. Drawing from the Pediatric Psychosocial Preventative Health model and cognitive-behavioral protocols for somatic symptom management, we propose that youth with mild to moderate symptoms can be effectively co-managed in primary care by a primary care provider delivering psychoeducation and facilitating team coordination, and an embedded behavioral healthcare provider conducting a brief, targeted intervention. This innovative approach leverages shared clinical responsibilities, as well as youth and families' trust in the primary care setting, to accessibly deliver care for mild-moderate symptoms otherwise unaddressed in current management approaches. Implementation likely requires developing clinician support tools and identifying sustainable billing practices, but may result in accessible, holistic, care that curtails symptom persistence and/or progression.
Recommended Citation
Senger-Carpenter T, Barber Garcia B, Sieplinga K, Cunningham N. Moving Integrated Care for Pediatric Somatic Symptoms into Primary Care: An Innovative Approach. J Clin Psychol Med Settings. 2025. doi: 10.1007/s10880-025-10115-y. PMID: 41307604.
DOI
10.1007/s10880-025-10115-y
ISSN
1573-3572
PubMed ID
41307604
Comments
Helen DeVos Children's Hospital