Emotional Disorder definition

Emotional Disorder. – means the diagnosis of a mental disorder from the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders - in its fourth and subsequent editions, (DSM IV), including the biological etiology. All of these disorders have episodic, recurrent or persistent signs, although they vary in terms of severity and level of disability, and shall be present at the time or during the previous year. It is applied to children between ages zero to seventeen (0-17), where childhood is demarcated, between ages zero and twelve (0-12) and adolescence, between thirteen and eighteen years of age (13-18).

Examples of Emotional Disorder in a sentence

  • The parties, therefore, agreed to do away with this designation once sufficient level of confidence has been built towards eternal peace.

  • Specific to DCR’s BJS, the SME received a document titled Detention Referrals to Children with Serious Emotional Disorder (CSED) Waiver Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) dated February 24, 2022, with a footnote that the document is a BJS SOP.

  • The State’s planned updated to Chapter 531 includes language on linkage to HCBS: “The facility is responsible to educate residents, families/guardians, and other involved entities on the available services in their community including but not limited to CSED Waiver (Children’s Serious Emotional Disorder Waiver, Safe at Home, Mobile Crisis Response, Intensive Outpatient, and other Outpatient Services” but does not provide further detail on how the State intends to monitor and oversee the requirement.

  • Activities: West Virginia’s Children with Serious Emotional Disorder 1915(c) (CSED) Waiver was approved by CMS on December 19, 2019 and became effective March 1, 2020 for three (3) years.

  • Pre-Existing Medical Condition: Any Sickness, disease, Mental, Nervous or Emotional Disorder or disorder for which any one of medical advice, treatment, service, prescribed medication, diagnose or consultation, including consultation to investigate and/or diagnose (where diagnosis has not yet been made) was received by the Insured Person or would have been received by a prudent individual with in the twenty-four (24) months immediately preceding the Effective Date of coverage.

  • Pre-Existing Medical Condition: Any Sickness, disease, Mental, Nervous or Emotional Disorder or disorder for which any one of medical advice, treatment, service, prescribed medication, diagnose or consultation, including consultation to investigate and/or diagnose (where diagnosis has not yet been made) was received by the Insured Person or would have been received by a prudent individual with in the twenty-four (24) months immediately preceding the Effective Date* of coverage.

  • December 2021 notes that as of January 2022, “staff are trained to incorporate the Assessment Pathway screening into calls when appropriate to help individuals further connect to key services to meet their needs.” The Bureau of Juvenile Services (BJS) Detention Referrals to Children with Serious Emotional Disorder (CSED) Waiver Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) details the steps needed to refer children to the assessment pathway but does not include explicit timelines.

  • The facility staff are required to start discharge planning that is to include education for residents, families/guardians, and other involved entities on the available services in their community including but not limited to services available through the Children with Serious Emotional Disorder Waiver, Mobile Crisis Response, Intensive Outpatient, and other Outpatient Services.

  • Amid these challenges, we note that West Virginia has issued several memoranda expanding access to services via telehealth, and that the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) approved the State’s application for Appendix K related to its 1915(c) waivers, including the relatively new Children with Serious Emotional Disorder Waiver, and a Section 1135 Waiver to grant additional flexibility in administering its Medicaid program.

  • The facility staff are required to start discharge planning that is to include education for residents, families/guardians, and other involved entities on the available services in their community including but not limited to services available through the Children’s Serious Emotional Disorder Waiver, Mobile Crisis Response, Intensive Outpatient, and other Outpatient Services.