
Rising demand and short primary-care visits leave little time for understanding the extent of psychosocial history. Often adolescents under-report and parents over-report.

The need to sift through multiple sources increases administrative time on young people's data collection, reducing time on care. Instead of one shared record, parents and clinicians juggle many.

Financial burdens means families can delay seeking treatment and children present at crisis. Bills build barriers and crisis triggers the prescription.
